Steve was just sitting there on the tailgate of
his pickup, looking out at the world and thinking he’s doing all
right. The two little kids walking down the sidewalk saw their
favorite cowboy sitting there and grinned.
“Hi Steve!”
“Oh hey there, Bobby … Sylvia … how you kids doing these days?”
“Had a good Thanksgiving. Yep. Getting ready for Christmas. Bobby
was telling me just a while ago that he wants to train horses, like
you, when he grows up.”
“I told you not to say anything, Syl, but there you go again. Now
Steve will think all I want is horse training lessons.”
“Horse training lessons?” Steve said. “Now that would be a good
idea, actually. It’s always a smart thing to learn from others’
mistakes before you make the same ones.”
“Mistakes?”
“See this scar on my arm?” They both nodded. “Barbed wire fence at
27 miles an hour. Horse didn’t have a mark on him.”
“That was a mistake?”
“Sure was, Bobby. I wasn’t supposed to ride that horse. I was about
12, and they told me to ride something gentler.”
“But you didn’t, huh?” [to top of second
column] |
“No, Sylvia I didn’t, because
when you’re 12, you already know more than the grown-ups around you.
It was great, being that smart when I was only 12.”
The kids examined every inch of the scar. “I bet you learned, huh?”
“Oh sure, I learned never to run a fractious horse along a
barbed-wire fence. And I learned other stuff, too. My right leg’s
been broken once and I couldn’t work for almost two months. My left
foot was stomped on and two bones broken by a draft horse I was
shoeing, and this scar on the back of my neck? Low branch on a tree
and a runaway colt. And on this other arm … see these? That’s all
from a horse jerking his hoof while I was shoeing him and I hadn’t
clinched the nail yet.”
Bobby thought for a minute. “That’s a lot of learning, Steve. Did it
hurt?”
“Every one of them and a couple I don’t show to anyone. Are you
ready to learn how to be a cowboy? Need some scars?”
“I …. well … I guess I’d better ask my folks first.”
[Text from file received from
Slim Randles]
Brought to you by A Cowboy’s Guide to
Growing Up Right. Look it over at
www.riograndebooks.com.
Avuncular tips from a guy who made lots of mistakes.
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