Showing posts with label dreams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dreams. Show all posts

Saturday, August 7, 2010

I Wanna Be a Cowboy


The ad read:

"Ranch outside Gardiner, Montana is looking for a full time year-round experienced wrangler/ranch hand. You must have excellent knowledge of horses and tack, have general equine medical knowledge, trail clearing and packing, have the ability to maintain neat horse records and report routinely to ranch manager."

I think I'll cry myself to sleep tonight and try not to think about frying my eyes out in the cube farm on Monday.

Or maybe I'll quit the cube farm and find myself a ranch job. We only live once.

Monday, June 7, 2010

Insanity

Do you ever feel like life, or at least self-awareness, is really just some cruel game dreamed up by a bored god looking for some cheap entertainment?

Today I learned that there is talk - serious talk, mind you - of detonating a nuclear weapon in the Gulf of Mexico to plug the oil leak. For the record the American government is saying no way, but there are plenty of people who seem to think this is a good idea.

Summer is here. We're actually having record heat this spring, and the rivers are overflowing their banks because the snowpack in the mountains is melting so quickly. I've been passing the time with travel. A couple of weeks ago Gerard and I spent five days in southwestern South Dakota, exploring the Black Hills, Mt. Rushmore, the Badlands, Deadwood and other cool places. It's beautiful, South Dakota. The wildlife there is extraordinary - our first morning we weren't a hour out of camp when we saw herds of free roaming bison, pronghorn, mule deer, wild turkey. Later in the day we saw bighorn sheep and a mountain goat. Unfortunately, however, South Dakota doesn't think native predators are as good for tourism as herds of bison, so they've quietly allowed the grizzly bear and the wolf to remain exiled. That means humans have to round up some of the bison every year and ship them off to meat packing plants.

Last weekend we hiked about ten miles through a mountain ghost town called Homestead Meadows. The decaying remains of cabins dot tens of hundreds of acres of open meadow and woodland near Mountain Lion Gulch. It's easy up there to forget about florescent lighting, office cubicles, artificial deadlines, Sara Palin and nuking the seas to plug oil spills.

Tonight when I close my eyes, I will go home.

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Message

In the wee hours this morning I found myself fighting to stay asleep, to continue a dream I didn't want to wake from. But as it is with these things, my body would have none of it, and I was extracted from my fantasy despite my best efforts.

I dream a lot, and my dreams speak to me. But it isn't often I get a message like this.

I dreamt I was a character who was a hybrid between myself and Jack from the story Brokeback Mountain. I was taller, lankier than my actual self, with blended features both physically and emotionally. I was dressed in a dark brown, comfortably weathered cowboy hat, boots, a blue and white plaid shirt with the sleeves rolled up, faded wranglers and a worn leather belt with a big buckle.

I was floating in a river on a black inner tube, fully dressed. This river was lazy and murky and looked much like the Guadalupe. It flowed through forest and town, through places unknown to me. I remember the sky was dark and gloomy, but I could see. The time was neither night nor day, neither dawn nor dusk, but rather some perpetual, oppressive twilight.

I drifted silently down the river through dark forest, past farms and ranches, past suburban tract-house developments and back through the dark forest. I could see but drifted unseen. I passed one ranch where a fit, strong young cowboy was roping horses. He was completely naked but for his hat and roping gear. He roped a horse by the tail and dragged it to the ground. It lay panting and sweating in the dust, and the cowboy jumped off his horse and strode proudly around it, the glow of his lilly-white skin cutting through the dust that hung in the air.

"You're not a real cowboy!," I scoffed. "A real cowboy would never rope a horse by the tail!"

Other cowboys, fully dressed, gathered around to congratulate him on his accomplishment, seemingly unaware of his state of undress. My protests went unheard, and I was envious of his beauty and success. I drifted on past other homes and ranches and cowboys, past people walking dogs and having backyard barbecues, and no one took any notice of me at all.

Eventually I emerged from a section of dark forest and I drifted by a small house siting near the bank of the river. A familiar looking woman with a ghostly white face and thin red lips was standing in the back yard. As I passed she looked at me and asked with a soft country drawl, "Where ya goin', cowboy?"

"I don't know. I'm just waiting."

"Waiting for what?"

"I don't know."

"Well why don't you come on 'round the house while you're waitin'. I've got some wild stallions need ridin.' They're mostly gentle now. Mostly," she winked and turned away.

I hauled myself out of the river and walked around the front of the small ranch house. There was a dirt drive with a gate across it, which I passed through to get into the back yard. Lights were on inside the house, so I peeked in. To my shock, Memaw was standing in the window looking out at me. She was dressed very smart in a suit and looked healthy and strong. Behind her I could see happy people eating at a long table, but I couldn't see their faces. It looked so comfortable and inviting, but I didn't want to join them.

Memaw looked at me with a stern but concerned look, then walked away from the window.

The pale faced woman pulled an old van into the driveway and up to the gate. I ran to open it, and she drove in. Always she had this seductive smile on her face when she looked at me. It kinda weirded me out.

A moment later Memaw was standing next to me. "She's a washed up old celebrity," Memaw said to me of the pale faced woman. "She's got her eye on you, but you just mind your business and let me deal with her."

"Yes ma'am," I said, and she vanished again.

I spent hours riding the pale faced woman's wild stallions. I rode those broncs like nobody's business. They were beautiful and wild indeed - mostly shades of black and dark brown, with shiny coats, flowing manes and muscled bodies. They were full of the Sprit of the West - wild, magical, untamable. One could put their bodies in a corral, but one could never cage their spirit.

At first I was afraid, but in those moments when I sat atop the first wild horse, the cycle of life and death became clear to me in a way it had never before been. Death was as beautiful and precious as life, for they were two sides of the same coin. The Creator who had given the gift of life had also given the gift of death. They were not the beginning and the end, but rather doorways to different states of being. To waste a moment fearing death was to squander a moment of life. And so, fearlessly, I gave myself completely to the moment and for the first time lived my life to the fullest. I truly felt what it meant to be alive.

When all the horses had been tired out and had no fight left in them, I dropped to my feet and I leaned against the rail, dusty and exhausted, bruised and happy. The pale faced woman approached me. "I noticed you had a particular interest in that wild one there," she said, pointing to a yellow dun with an exceptionally free spirit.

"Yes ma'am," I said, looking into that horses eyes. I'd indeed made a connection with that one. We'd found something, some common ground, something in our souls I can't put to words. He was mine and I was his, and that's all I could articulate.

"Well," said the pale faced woman, "you'd better get him ready. I suspect it's a long journey home."

"What do you mean?" I asked.

"He's yours. You gotta take him with you. When soulmates meet nothing can part them. That's how God made it, see."

"But have no place to ride or keep him! I don't even own a..."

A voice from behind interrupted, "What he meant was that he'd be delighted to take that horse." I turned and Memaw was standing there. "Now you go get that horse ready to take home with you," she said to me.

"But Memaw I don't have..."

"Do it now and don't back talk me," she said. "Go on."

"Yes ma'am," I said and walked to get the horse. Later Memaw was next to me again. "Memaw, you know I don't own anything but the shirt on my back. You know I'd love nothing more than to have a ranch and take this horse, but..."

"But nothing," she interrupted. "You've got a ranch. All of the arrangements have been made."

Her face softened. She leaned in, kissed me on the cheek, and whispered, "That's why Memaw is here. I'm always here looking out for you. Now you saddle up that horse and ride home to that beautiful ranch in the mountains just like you always dreamed. Don't ever look back, don't have any regrets. I love you." And with that, she disappeared.

I started to wake up then, but as the dream faded I could see from the back of my yellow dun a vast ranch in a green valley ringed by forested, snow-capped mountains. There was an elk herd grazing by a clear, cold stream. A small cabin sat off in the distance, with warm yellow windows and a thin stream of smoke coming from the chimney. There was no human development for as far as I could see in any direction. There was no traffic, no strip malls, no pollution, no greedy corporations and no office cubicles. There were no clocks. It was just me and my horse, clear blue skies and a wild, unspoiled wilderness. The whole thing hummed to the timeless cycles of the seasons, was beautiful for its own sake, and answered to no one but God. It was heaven, and I was home.

Monday, October 26, 2009

Blast from the Past


Yep. That feels real good.


Thursday, October 1, 2009

Cowboy Up

Today I went to the Boulder Horse & Rider to buy a pair of jeans. It's Boulder's version of a feed store. In Texas, feed stores are generally huge and carry all sorts of farm and ranch supplies, clothing, animal feed, hay and some sell tractors and other machinery. Boulder's version isn't quite that. It's a very small shop with bagged "specialty" horse feed, a small selection of grooming supplies and clothes, some books, saddles and a few other odds and ends for the discriminating Boulder horseperson. It's locally owned, and they're one of only two clothing retailers I know of in the entire city that don't sell $200 designer jeans - and they're the only retailer that sells Wrangler (which are made in the USA.)

The owner is usually there when I drop in. She's nice, at least from what I gather in our short chats during my irregular, infrequent visits. She's the outdoorsy type, though I get the impression she's a bit pretentious and probably a gossip. She was there today. I walked in and she immediately started chatting me up. "So are you enjoying this gorgeous fall weather!?" she said with a big grin. I smiled and nodded. She kept talking but I wasn't really listening. I'm normally more chatty but I wasn't in the mood today. Eventually the chatter faded and I found my jeans.

I browsed some art she sells by a local farrier named Andrew. He's a young guy with a gift for painting. When he's not shoeing horses, he paints himself, his wife, horses and his cowboy friends in watercolor. I've been collecting his art, but there was nothing new today.

I browsed some saddles. I know of one saddle maker on the entire Front Range who still makes saddles the old fashioned way by hand. I haven't met him yet, but I'm keen to interview him and get a tour of his shop. These were not those kinds of saddles. They were all shiny, mostly made of synthetic materials, amply stuffed with synthetic padding so that they ride more like a pillow than a proper saddle. They were machine stitched and I could picture them rolling off an assembly line in China. They looked like something you might find in a furniture mega-store; lots of black pleather and chrome-esque bobbles. They were godawful ugly and modern looking and had no personality. They don't even look like they belong on a horse.

I was about to checkout when a book caught my eye. It was a book about packing, and there were several photos on the front of cowboys packing up horses and mules in some dreamy mountain wilderness. I perused the pages for a long while, looking through black and white photos of cowboys, probably in the 1970's, demonstrating the various stages of packing, leading, trail clearing, tracking, camping, cooking. I didn't see anything terribly modern in the photos. From the canvas bags on the mules to the hats on the cowboys, these guys and their equipment looked "all natural." To my great pleasure, I noticed they specifically mentioned what we today refer to as the "leave no trace" philosophy. They may have been just a bunch of horse-packin cowboys, but they had respect for nature and keeping the land clean and minimally impacted. I had to buy it.

At the register the owner asked, "Are you a packer?"

I didn't look up. "Just dreaming," I mumbled.

"Oh you need to go! I just came back from a packing trip up in Montana! It's so gorgeous! You need to take your horses up there! This is the prettiest time of year!"

Her words grated on me, probably because I don't have any horses to take anywhere. She was a publisher in her previous life. She made a lot of money then decided she wasn't happy, so she sold everything and moved to Boulder and bought herself a million dollar ranch, a herd of horses, and opened this little store for something to do when she wasn't riding. It's people like her that keep people like me out of the running for land around here. She doesn't have to work. I do. But instead of buying her dream ranch out in the wide open spaces of West Texas or Montana or Wyoming or less populated parts of Colorado, she's right here playing in my back yard keeping property prices higher than working people can afford. Consciously I can't blame her, but subconsciously I'm ripping her a new one. I'm just being a crybaby.

Just then a BMW pulled up and a short thin 40-ish woman dressed in expensive synthetic riding clothes came in.

"Babs!*" the owner cried.
"Sweetie! It's been too long!" Babs replied, opening her arms wide. Kissy-kisssy, huggy-huggy.
"Oh Babs, how's the new darling treating you?"
"Oh," Babs exclaimed with a comically dramatic exasperation, "I've been riding Sasha now for what, two weeks? Well, you'll just never believe blah blah blah..."

I walked out the door. These people have every bit as much right to own land and horses as I do, and it isn't their fault or their problem that they ended up with the riches to do so and I haven't (yet, anyway.) I still can't help that it pisses me off, and I can't help feel that I'd make better use of the land and appreciate it more than these spoiled Californians who just come out here to play. That doesn't justify anything and nobody ever said life was fair. I realize it's irrational and wasteful to let it piss me off. These people don't deserve my scorn, so I just brood quietly to myself or let it leak out in this blog. This weekend when Babs is out being frustrated with the nuances of her new $100,000 polo pony, I'll be reading my little book and dreaming that I'm one of those cowboys in those old black and white photos, packing up a $300 mule and a $1,000 horse for a long trek into the serenity of some distant mountain wilderness.

*Babs wasn't her actual name, though it was something equally cutesy and pretentious. I just can't recall it.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

It Begins

Farriery has been on my mind big time since my experience with Mr. Masterson. I think about it day and night, and I talk about it to anyone I can rope into listening. Last night I dreamt about it. I was standing in a golden field. My truck was there, properly outfitted. Horses were standing around grazing. The sky was blue and the mountains were behind me. I was hammering shoes, and the only sound I could hear was the wind. I was alone, making my own way in the world with the tools of raw creation. I was my own boss, working in the Great Western Outdoors, master of an arcane trade - simple in its concept, complex in its subtleties. I was utterly at peace, and all the world was right.

I sat bolt upright in bed, and it took me a moment to realize it was only a dream.

I called Mr. Masterson on the phone this morning.

"Hello," he answered plainly.

"Mr. Masterson? Billy Roberts here," I said.

"Why Billy Roberts!" he said, his voice suddenly coming to life. "Great to hear from you! How are you doing, man? I'm really looking forward to working together!" His reaction was as if he were hearing from an old friend, which I found to be both comforting and reassuring - if not slightly unexpected.

We talked a little about work (his and mine), the weather, his application to vet school and some other small talk, then talked a lot about farriery. Seems I'll be his first apprentice and he's as excited about it as I am.

"So let's see," he said. I heard papers rustling on the other end of the line. "I could use you all day Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday of next week. Then the week after that..."

"Whoa," I said. "I do have a full time job and I'm a full time grad student, so my schedule isn't that flexible just now." We ended up scheduling two full days' work back-to-back to get things rolling. "We'll get you under a horse right away," he said. He told me to wear my boots and jeans and bring leather gloves, and that he had an extra pair of chaps I could wear. I'm to meet him at the crack of dawn at the horse barn, to get things setup before the horses start coming in. He said I should plan on shoeing a whole herd's worth of horses. Well, I won't be doing the shoeing. I'll mostly be doing the grunt work: cleaning and trimming and learning the detailed anatomy of a horse's foot. Some of this I know already. I do basic hoof maintenance and horse grooming every week before and after riding, and at the two horse rescues where I've been volunteering. But soon I'll be using knives and files and learning things I don't even know I don't know. "Just knowing how to hold a horse's foot without wearing out your back is the biggest challenge for new guys," he said. "But you'll get it in no time."

Do you ever get the sense that something big, some significant and exciting new thing has just popped into your life? That's how I'm feeling. I keep trying to explain it away or brush it off, but I can't shake it. I've felt that way about all of the big things that have come into my life and enriched it or changed its course for the better: Texas A&M, Austin, Gerard and Colorado to name a few of the biggest. I think - I hope - I'll eventually be able to add this experience to the list.

Dang. I'm excited.

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Home

The time is 6:48 PM. The date is July 29. The temperature is 53 degrees.

Say what?

I'm in one of my moods again. You know the one: I'm listless, quiet. I go out of my way to avoid conversation, crowds, individuals, anyone at all. I find a quiet place, close my eyes, and find myself in my cozy log cabin somewhere deep in the mountains. Outside the window there is a wide grassy meadow, divided by a cold mountain stream. The meadow is ringed by a think pine forest, and the whole thing is guarded by a wall of mountains.

The horses are over by the barn. There's elk meat curing in the smokehouse. There's a fire crackling in the hearth and two dogs sleeping on the bear skin rug in front of it. There's an elk roast simmering in the cast-iron dutch oven.

I'm standing by the window in my favorite flannel pajama bottoms, a warm mug in one hand. I can feel the cool evening air pushing through the glass. It's going to snow. In the distance I can see a large bull moose by the creek. I watch him for a long time until he finally ambles into the green-black wood. I turn away from the window and the pine floor quietly creaks beneath my bare feet. Dinner's ready.

If heaven exists, this must surely be it.

Friday, June 12, 2009

Colorado Dreaming

I found my dream ranch. If I saved my entire paycheck month after month it would only take about 350 years to put back enough to buy it. I'm going to need a bigger piggy bank.






Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Dreaming in Color

A preview of my dreams tonight...









Sweet dreams.