Sunday, December 06, 2015

I Could Have Died in Colorado

     Some of you may have read my disjointed, incomplete, and poorly written blog about my experience in Colorado.  I wrote it in a fit of recollection, and with a need to get some things off my chest and out into the Interwebs.  Its conception was spurred by two things: the anniversary of the day a giant mechanical bird had carried me back to the safety of home after that unbearable summer was over, and a proliferation of nightmares wherein I had somehow chosen to return and thus found myself face-to-face with 16 weeks of fresh torture.

     There was, however, one very vital thing that I left out of that blog, for whatever reason, when I wrote it more than three years ago.  This incident happened on June 30, 2011, on a Thursday, at about 5pm, in the middle of a thunderstorm.  I came closer to dying that evening than I ever have before or since.  Had things gone differently – by as little as an inch – I would likely either not be here typing right now, or at least the last four years of my life would have gone very differently.

     I had a page and a half of a paper left to write for Dr. Swartz, and the deadline for her to turn in the grades for my Independent Study on Sherlock Holmes was fast approaching.  In fact, it was the very next day (although she informed me later, mercifully, that she had recalled the paperwork incorrectly and that I actually had an additional two weeks to complete my paper.)  Bad storms had started in the early afternoon – I almost had to dismount my 1 o'clock ride and tie up the horses so we could wait out a lightning storm – with hail and sleet and rain.  As a second storm front was approaching, Hannah was next on the roster to take out the last ride of the day, but somehow she had managed to talk the managers into making me take it instead.  Knowing that I was in desperate need of finishing my psychological profile on Sherlock Holmes, I was forced to approach her in the barn and plead with her to take her own ride out, which she grudgingly agreed to (though she didn’t actually tell me this – I discovered it when I walked out into the corral and saw her preparing her guide horse.) 

     Three of her five riders were mounted, one was preparing to mount, and one did not yet have a horse.  Whiskey, the gelding that had been assigned to the last rider, was standing by the barn, his lead rope tied to the hitching rail that ran along the barn’s long side, about three feet from the wall.  I rushed into the beginnings of a hail storm to tighten his cinch and bridle him (rides go out rain or shine as long as the clients consent.)  As I got the bit into his mouth, an extraordinary lightning strike lit up the entire corral with two rapid-fire flares of light.  I had only enough time to imagine what the accompanying thunderclap would be like when it exploded overhead in the kind of deafening roar I had only read about in novels.

     To this day I have no idea how any of the other horses in the corral reacted to this sudden assault on the senses, because my entire world was suddenly consumed by the creature I was touching in that moment.  Whiskey spooked, rather predictably under the circumstances, as I was stretched upward with both of my hands between his ears, attempting to fix his headstall in place.  He reared up in primal terror and jerked back from the hitching rail, naturally dragging me with him, my hand still gripping his unsecured browband.  He then of course discovered that he couldn't run away because his head was tied, which terrified him even more. His jerky, prancing steps churning up the corral sludge under him, he pivoted his back end toward me and I heard one of the other wranglers shout, "Get away now!"  I started to scramble backward, but I either slipped and fell or Whiskey knocked me over, because suddenly I was landing hard on my back in the cold mud.  My first thought was, "Roll under the hitching rail so he can't step on you.  He won’t be able to get you if you roll under the hitching rail."  A moment later, however, I realized the fall had disoriented me; I had no clue where the hitching rail was or which way to roll to get myself to safety.

     Then I felt the impact of his hooves landing heavily in the mud on either side of me.  He had backed up over top of me after I fell, and all I could think then was, "He is going to crush you."  I expected to feel blinding pain at any moment, but it didn't happen, and to this day I don’t know how he could have missed me.  I flipped myself over, crawled away and was on my feet in what must have been just a few seconds.  I had aimed for the hitching rail but when I opened my eyes I discovered that I was actually crawling away from Whiskey, and away from the hitching rail by about 50 degrees.  Another wrangler shouted to me to get into the barn, then handed me two still-saddled horses while the rest of the crew hustled to get the tacked horses either untacked or into the barn so their leather saddles wouldn’t be ruined in the downpour.  I stood there holding Happy and Sawyer, trembling and taking stock of the mud I was carrying on my shirt and jeans.  Looking past the tie stalls, I noticed in a fleeting moment that Whiskey was not where I had left him, and imagined him running across the corral while his lead rope dangled from the hitching rail with a broken snap.  What actually happened, I don’t really know.

     I remember sitting on the bench in the barn after someone took the horses from me, and I remember Jen asking if I was okay and me replying with something about being more freaked out than anything.  The adrenaline was still proliferating; the pain in my arms and hip was dull and numb, but my palms had started to burn where the mud had scoured them. The thought "I am going to die" had not entered my mind until I was on my feet and walking away, and did not enter it again until later than evening.

     I was denied leave to clean myself up, nor was I excused from barn duty that night.  I put away saddles and filled grain cans and raked stalls and picked manure with everyone else, unaware of the broken skin under the mud on my palms and forearms.  I was also not excused from kitchen-cleaning duty, or entitled to any special treatment the next day at work.  This affected me not only because of the visible limp caused by my severely right bruised hip and ankle, but because of the emotional toll that a near-death experience can have on a person.  I do not recall any of the managers asked me how I was, but I do remember, quite vividly, being yelled at for not moving fast enough.

     When I had finally climbed into the shower that evening, the pressure of the homesickness, the pain, the stress, the shock, and the dread of going to the barn’s sister stable that Saturday pressed in on my chest and I had an emotional breakdown, sobbing alone in the bathroom.  After my customary Thursday night of Ryan-thinks-he’s-a-good-cook-and-I-should-just-clean-up-after-him-on-the-night-we-share-kitchen-responsibilities, I pulled out my laptop with the hope of finding Jennie on AIM or Skype.  I broke down again while telling her what had happened, and making her promise not to say anything about it to Mom or Cindy.  I knew that Mom would freak out in a world-bending way, and that Cindy could probably not be trusted to keep it to herself, under the circumstances.  (My original plan was to not tell any of my family members what had happened until I was home safe, yet on my first day off after it happened, I called my dad – as I always did – and the first words out of my mouth were, “I almost died on Thursday.”)

     I have never thought about it before writing this blog, but I wonder if the person who was supposed to ride Whiskey that evening remembers this.  I wonder what he or she was thinking, and if he or she ever relates the story to friends and family or wonders whatever happened to the girl who almost got trampled by the young chestnut in a thunderstorm.

     I learned later, from my bunkmate Caroline, that Whiskey had bad knees despite his young age and wasn’t expected to return to Colorado the next summer.  In fact, her determination as a horseman was that he was not fit to be ridden every day over rough terrain as it was, and that from the looks of things, the company (which shall remain nameless throughout this blog for obvious reasons) was likely going to continue pushing him through the trails until his knees gave out entirely.  I cannot attest to this as fact, given the crumbling nature of my memory and the second-hand nature of the information, but to be honest it doesn’t seem unlikely given my own experience with these same managers.  While I was never quite comfortable bridling Whiskey after he almost killed me, I couldn’t help but feel sympathy for his circumstances.  I had myself been thoroughly used and often treated less like a person and more like an instrument of profit, much like a shovel or a wheelbarrow – necessary for the functioning of the business, but not deserving of much regard.

     But this facet of my experience is for another time.  My managers had organized sight-seeing trips for us throughout the summer and taken us out to dinner two or three times, and if you have read my Colorado Nightmare blog, you’ll know that two of my managers especially deserve recognition for seeing their employees as humans and not strictly assets for profit.  I should probably keep these few bright spots in mind while writing about how terrible the business was to work for, but gestures of kindness mean significantly less when one’s everyday behavior is so callous and inhuman.