Personal Growth

The Horse Whisperer Whispered Something To Me

August 14, 2012

If any of you have ever seen the movie “The Horse Whisperer” you will remember the part of the horse whisperer being played by Robert Redford.

horses

The actual horse whisperer, the one that the movie was based on, is a man named Buck Brannaman. A documentary was done on Buck recently, appropriately called Buck, that told his life story. I watched it and my life will never be the same.

This is a man who has allowed his less-than-perfect past to push him into becoming something great.

Growing up, Buck was a trick roper and traveled with his brother and dad entertaining people with their roping skills.

Buck had a nightmarish home life, however. His father would beat him and his brother routinely. He would drag them out of bed at night just to beat them. He would beat them if they didn’t do a perfect show. Buck grew up in constant fear of his father.

Then, his mother died. Had he not been pulled from his home in the middle of the night by local authorities, Buck says his father would have beat them to death.

Why am I sharing this story?

Watching this documentary made me realize the importance of letting our struggles propel us forward.

You have two choices in life. Either you let hardships make you stronger, wiser, and let them bring clarity and forward momentum, or you let them handicap you and leave you wasted and lifeless. A shell of a person.

I see those people everywhere and it makes my heart sad.

Buck let his pain drive him to forgiveness and then onward. He let his past shape him in a healthy way. He changed. He became a person he wanted to be. He also pursued work that resonated with his heart. For him, it was horses.

He is now a highly sought after trainer and travels the country doing horse clinics. He trains horses, or people, depending on how you look at it.

After watching his story, I thought about my own life and the lives of countless others.

For a long time I talked about why I “couldn’t” do something. I was depressed at who I had become. I didn’t like myself, but yet, didn’t change. I blamed my circumstances, I blamed my upbringing, I blamed my husband and I blamed myself. I was always waiting for someone else to change first.

I finally realized I was where I was because of me, not because of anyone else. I needed to accept responsibility, learn from my past, and change myself. At that moment, my life changed.

This documentary reminded me that life is too short to blame. It is also too short to stay where we are and not change. We know we have bad habits, but we don’t change them. We know we should ask someone for forgiveness, but we don’t. We usually also know what is in our hearts to pursue, but we don’t.

Buck’s story made the message resonate loud and clear for me that I am most effective and will make the most impact in the world when I forgive, move forward, and do something that I am already passionate about.

It is already in us, that gift, that something that comes natural. It just needs to be pursued!

We get tripped up on such small things in life and then it passes. It is over before many of us get to sing the song that is really inside of us.

We get stuck blaming and waiting. We cripple ourselves by focusing on the past and the immediate pain or hardship in front of us. There is more, and we are more than our minds lead us to believe.

Buck is leaving in his wake healing, perspective and clarity. Here is a man using his past and his gifts to lead a life of impact. He pursues it with pride and excellence.

I want to lead a life no less impactful, and I have no doubt that you do as well.

“Be gentle in what you do, firm in how you do it” -Buck (tweet that)

Question: What song is inside you? Are you pursuing it?

 

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  • Donna Yates August 14, 2012 at 8:18 am

    Beautiful story Claudia.   Seems like when we get stuck, if we place the blame on others or our circumstances, it then takes the responsibility off of us.  I know I have had so many fears and doubts in the past that I just became paralyzed.  If I could blame my non-movement on someone else, then I didn’t feel so bad.  How sad is that!  I am trying to change that by taking full responsibility for what I want my life to look like and then pursuing it.  Thanks for the reminder that others are doing the same. 

    • Claudia Good August 14, 2012 at 4:38 pm

      Right there with you Donna!
      I heard something interesting today about fear… fear resides in looking into the future and predicting what will happen based on the past. It is important to look to the future, but if we stay more focused on the present it takes the equation of fear out of the picture. Make sense? It really spoke to me! I am a futuristic thinker and along with that I often develop fear as well…

      Yes, and your point about blaming non-movement on others is so true and so common! It makes for quite a sad existence for us when we do that doesn’t it? That would mean the outcome of my life is totally and completely dependent on other people… NOT TRUE!

      Thanks for your comment… thinking of you as your special day draws near! 😉 

      You are one special and courageous lady!

  • Michael Wright August 14, 2012 at 10:02 am

    This post got me all sidetracked….I loved the trailer and found it on Amazon rental for 99 cents.  We’ll be watching it this week I promise ya…then had to find the song on the trailer and ended up with my guitar in my lap learning a new Pearl Jam song.  Thanks!

    Buck sounds like a wise counselor and loved that he helps train people, just as much as the horses.  I don’t tweet but I love the quote.  Sounds a lot like Jesus to me.  Yes, I got some songs inside me and I try to learn the chords and lyrics more each day.

    • Michael Good August 14, 2012 at 10:21 am

      Michael, that’s awesome that you’re learning the song from the trailer! It’s a cool one and one I wasn’t familiar with. 

      I haven’t seen the movie yet either, but want to do so. Let us know how you like it! 

    • Claudia Good August 14, 2012 at 4:28 pm

      hahaha, sorry about that Michael! 🙂 Glad you got to strum your guitar though! Are you a country boy at heart?

      Hey, did the trailer play all the way through for you or did it stop? I was having trouble with it stopping in the beginning…

      • Michael Wright August 14, 2012 at 4:35 pm

        I am at heart, yes!  Grew up on a dirt road….yes, it did stop, but I got it to play on the Amazon.com website.

        • Claudia Good August 14, 2012 at 4:48 pm

          Haha I thought so!!

          Oh interesting… thanks for the tip!

  • Ann Musico August 14, 2012 at 11:28 am

    Claudia – how inspiring!  And I hate to admit this to you (but how can I be anything but honest with you?) but I tend to think about why I can’t do something first – it seems to be my ‘default’ setting – maybe from growing up with that mindset.  But thankfully, I have slowly but surely learned to switch that thought off and look at how I can.  My kids have been HUGE in teaching me that.  My daughter played basketball (she’s 5′ 2″) and volleyball throughout middle and high school – in fact on the volleyball varsity team as a freshman – and never thought twice about her height or athletic ability!  My son Matt was told for years he was too short to be a first baseman yet was one of the best every one of those coaches said they every saw!  He always told me it just made him get mad enough to prove them wrong.  That’s the right attitude!  

    • Claudia Good August 14, 2012 at 4:42 pm

      Ann,
      Thanks for your honesty! Hey, at least you know where you stand and you can move from there!

      I know some of us with the more detailed/planner personalities have that disposition more than others with the love of taking risks 😉

      Oh, your kiddo stories always put a smile on my face, what awesome determination they had and still have! That is awesome that they still pursued and achieved what they set out to do even though they had discouragement along the way!

      I’m sure they had some pretty great cheerleaders on the homefront too! 😉

  • Rob Clinton August 14, 2012 at 3:40 pm

    Incredible, I’ve never seen the movie, but Buck sounds like an incredible story. We all have a song to sing, and we can allow the struggle of our past to hold it back or we can use it to propel us forward. My song is getting louder and louder each year, and the harmful things of my past are becoming more of a strength than it is my weakness; slowly by surely…

    • Claudia Good August 14, 2012 at 4:56 pm

      Love it Rob,
      I can feel your passion for your life jumping off the screen whenever you write! 😉

      I think the tough past is a gift that lets us sing loud and clear in our present and future!

      • Rob Clinton August 15, 2012 at 9:22 pm

        Thanks Claudia 🙂 But Absolutely! A gift; I love how you put that… The past probably acted as sort of our vocal conditioner, so eventually we could sing our hearts loud & clear.