If You Get Bucked Off; Get Back On

Thu, May 27, 2010

Entrepreneurship, Leadership

Growing up on a small farm had a lot of advantages.  Living with my grandparents through my high-school years, in Snowflake, AZ, also had its privileges.  In addition to learning the fastest way to clean stalls filled with horse manure (my grandpa always told me that you can learn a lot from the end of a shovel) and how to mend a broken fence I was privileged to learn from a generation removed and learn, to some degree, how things were done in the “old days”.

My grandpa, Glen Stratton, had a way of teaching things using analogies and with sayings of his that we frequently called “Glenisms”.  One of his most popular sayings was, “I wouldn’t throw stones at your outhouse like that”.  I’ll let you figure out that one.  I’m not sure if he purposely meant for his instructions in one area of life to be applied to several areas of life, but they did leave lasting impressions.

My grandpa taught me to have a love of horses and also taught me how to team rope.  In learning how to ride horses and to rope there was always a guarantee that at some point you were going to be bucked off.  With that guarantee there was also a guarantee that no matter how small you were or how big the horse was you ALWAYS got back on.  This was not negotiable.  In fact, if you didn’t get back on it taught the horse a bad lesson; that it could buck someone off and be okay with it.  Try being the next rider on the horse after it’s formed this bad habit.

Isn’t this the same with life?  At some point we are guaranteed to be bucked off and if we don’t get back on what have we taught ourselves or learned from the lesson?  In fact isn’t getting back on an empowering action that strengthens us while if we were to stay off it would be a disempowering action that would weaken us.

There is a favorite poem that I have framed, hanging in my bedroom, entitled “Don’t Quit”.

Don’t Quit

When things go wrong as they sometimes will, when the road your trudging seam all uphill.

When the funds are low and the debts are high, and you want to smile but you have to sigh.

When care is pressing you down a bit, rest if you must but do not quit.

Life is queer with its twists and turns, every one of us sometimes learns.

And many a failure turns about, when you might have won had you stuck it out.

Don’t give up, though the pace seams slow; you may succeed with another blow.

Success is failure turned inside out; the silver tint of the clouds of doubt.

And you never can tell how close you are; it may be near when it seems so far.

So stick to the fight when your heart is hit; it’s when things seem worst that you must not quit.

I would like to hear about your greatest triumph and the feeling that came from conquering.

And as always, if you enjoyed it, please share it, digg it, stumble it and retweet it…

I am a hard working, family loving, freedom fighting capitalist with a passion for entrepreneurialism.
Kyle Clouse
View all posts by Kyle Clouse
Kyles website

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  • http://www.ChrisBernardoBlog.com Chris Bernardo

    Kyle,

    Great story about your grandpa and horses, I know for me one of my greatest triumphs was being able to buy my first home on my own when i was 24 years old. Everyone was saying i couldn't do it because wasn't making enough money, was too young, etc but i determined and found a way to make it happen! Thru Saving since i was 18 years old, being smart and not giving up on true independence!

  • http://KyleClouse.com Kyle Clouse

    That is awesome Chris! Part of being an entrepreneur is seeing the possible when everyone else only sees the impossible.

  • http://www.kelliefrazier.com Kellie Frazier

    Hi Kyle,

    I absolutely loved this story. I don't normally post a link in my comments but I recently wrote my greatest triumph and how not quitting got me through it here–>> http://bit.ly/9PT6Jz and it's too lengthy to write again. To sum it up, deaths, brain injury, closing my company and much more were my bucking horse. Loved the analogy and the Glenism about the rocks and the outhouse. Thanks for sharing the poem to. :-)

    Kelle

  • http://KyleClouse.com Kyle Clouse

    Kelly, what a powerful story! It brings a lot of perspective. I love how you just “lived for the moment”. It goes to show how precious life is.

    My grandpa also gave me a poem on my 8th birthday. I thought that you might like it.

    Believers Creed: Today is the very first day of the rest of my life. This is the beginning of a new day. God has given me this day to use as I will. I can waste it…or use it for good, but what I do today is important, because I am exchanging a day of my life for it. When tomorrow comes, this day will be gone forever, leaving in its place something that I have traded for it. I want it to be gain, and not loss; good and not evil; success, and not failure; in order that I shall not regret the price that I have paid for it. I will try just for today, for you never fail until you stop trying.

  • kimberlywagner

    I feel my greatest achievement was running my first half marathon because I didn't really think I could do it at the time. I was amazed that I did the training and finished it. Finishing the first one means more to me than the others I've run.

  • http://KyleClouse.com Kyle Clouse

    Kim that is awesome! I actually have a triathlon on my horizon. I have never ran a marathon or a half but I know a lot of people who have. It is not something that you just decide to do. It takes a lot of training and discipline.

  • http://askolivertausend.com Oliver Tausend

    Hi Kyle,
    you're also a master of analogies – awesome. And I like the poem, it's simply the truth. Thanks for sharing that.
    Take care
    Oliver

  • http://www.facebook.com/angelakgiles Angela Kay Giles

    Kyle,
    Great post. Quitting just has to NOT be an option!

    Love this quote 'And many a failure turns about, when you might have won had you stuck it out.”

    Ange;-)

  • http://www.kathysammons.com/ Kathy Sammons

    Great advise, being a cowgirl myself, I know how important it is to get back on, for you and for the horse. Maybe that is where I got the staying power that it takes to make it in this industry. Whatever the reason, it has served me well.
    Thanks for this message.
    Kathy
    Kathy Sammons Dot Com

  • http://loritisot.com/?page_id=2 Lori Tisot

    Great analogy, Kyle! Being a horse person since about the age of 7 I learned the great value in getting back on :) Once you decide to do something, there will surely be obstacles that can get you derailed – the most important thing is to get back on track!

    Thanks for sharing this!
    Lori

  • kimberlywagner

    A triathlon has its own training as well. I've done a tri-a-tri and a sprint triathlon just to finish and your legs feel so strange when you switch from biking to running! It's good to practice the transitioning. Now I have shin-splints developing and I must do a return to running program instead of running. :-( It's frustrating because in terms of strength, cardio and endurance, I am fine.

  • http://prometheanlife.com Kevin Tyler Smith

    Kyle,

    Great post my friend. Your grandpa was a wise man.

    One of my greatest triumphs in my life was making my dad
    proud when I changed the oil in my car for the very first time
    when I was a teenager.

    My dad was an auto mechanic and caring for cars was his
    passion. Naturally, he wanted to teach his son the craft.

    When I was successful at changing the oil, he was proud.
    You would not believe the feeling of triumph that manifested
    within me. That feeling was…..SWEET.

    Take care,

    Kevin Tyler Smith
    Promethean Life

  • http://KyleClouse.com Kyle Clouse

    Thanks Oliver. I'm glad you liked it.

  • http://KyleClouse.com Kyle Clouse

    Thanks Angie. You never fail until you quit trying.

  • http://karatesoul.com/about/ John Steczko

    Very nice metaphor with that horse story. We get “bucked off” all the time in our lives. People must be strong and never give up.

    Greetings

    John Steczko

  • http://annajohnston.com.au Anna Johnston

    Loved your analogy and being taught lessons from another generation of people who had some great words of wisdom while they taught us. I especially liked the way your grandpa taught about “why” you should always get back on the horse if it bucks you off. Your right…., for everytime we don't get back on the horse (of life) we've somehow given it permission to throw us off again :)
    I like it. Thanks
    Have an awesome day!
    Anna

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