Friday, October 30, 2009

A Reflection On What Could Have Been Avoided

By Andre Hansen

You choose to take a few classes to coach you how to ride. Your first day of class, you told that you're going to discover how to inspect and maintain a saddle. You will learn the part of western saddle and how they're used.

You wanted to learn how to ride, why do you need to study doing maintenance on a saddle? You are saddened to learn that you need to learn the rest before you will be taught how to ride. You raise your hand and ask why it is so crucial. Why can't you find out how to ride? You are told that you'll learn the answer to that question the following day. Great, now you have got to wait.

All night you are brooding about why you cannot just ride the horse. To you, it seems that you've got to do insignificant work that you don't need to know anything about. It can't be somebody desiring to be told how to ride, they're in a wheelchair. You are told that there will be a special guest presenter today. This guest will tell them why taking care of hardware is so significant. This makes you even more curious.

You are told that there'll be a special guest presenter today. This guest will tell them why looking after hardware is so significant. As the instructor is telling you about the guest, the person in the wheel chair comes in.

He remembers meeting with his friend and they made a decision to take the horses to a creek to get some water. They were forced to go over some coarse terrain to get there. The next thing he remembers is feeling something break, he started falling and then everything went black.

He woke up in a surgery room to everyone around him crying. He thought the fall just knocked him comatose for a little and they took him to the emergency room. He will never be in a position to walk again. He learned that his accident might have been stopped if he just took a minute to test the parts of western saddle. Now you understand why derrick is there. He is living explanation you need to be careful; he's the height of what not to do when it comes to horses and gear.

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