Thursday, November 24, 2011

Taking the right attitude


Where to start? Probably a good starting point would be how happy I am to have both of my horses back from their vacations. I think people may actually confuse me as normal now that I have somewhere to center all of my energy too.
Anyways, it has been great to get back in the saddle on something that trots straight and canters kind of straight and turns...decently. All of these baby horses I have been riding really make you appreciate your somewhat well tuned horse that is growing in barrel size from the mass amounts of grass he is consuming in the field. With that being said, I had a great jump school on both of the boys yesterday and am looking forward to the help Phillip has to bring me on Monday.

Hopefully the program I have been staying on for the past year will continue to bring me some good luck and good rides going into the winter and spring. The boys feel good and the winter is full of huge opportunities! Hopefully the new opportunities will help me out in the show jumping ring so that I can get a hold of my own mind, and put my horses in the placings where they belong!
I'll keep you posted on that progress, we all know how hard that can be.

Enjoy the leftover turkey!!

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Insight

I was cruising Eventing Nation and saw this beautifully written speech by John. If you have a chance, please read it. It is full of great insight that could teach all of us a thing or too.

Linda guided me through some of the most important and formative moments of my early riding career and indeed life in general and for that I am deeply fortunate and thankful. I could stand here all night and tell you stories about how Linda's positive influence helped me to get to where I am and who I am today. I can say the same for many friendly faces around this room as well as Michigan eventing as a whole and it's a great privilege to express that gratitude.



My public speaking professor in college strongly suggested that I become a writer, presumably, as you can see, so that I would spend as little time speaking publicly as possible. As he put it, it's harder to put your foot in your mouth with a pen in your hand. I imagined that it would be even harder to put my foot in my mouth with a computer in my lap, but nonetheless I manage to do so with a startling degree of regularity.

One of the few things I did learn from that public speaking class is that the Gettysburg Address is comprised of 268 words so you all will be relieved to hear that I am a strong believer that a good speech is not by definition long. Along those same lines, my father used to take me golfing as a child and he always taught me that if you are playing golf poorly then play fast out of mercy for your fellow competitors, which is why I talk fast and also probably why I ride fast.



We are gathered here tonight to celebrate the achievements of Michigan's best riders and horses. Ten years ago I sat where you now sit at this very awards banquet. I took home several awards that night, which in retrospect can only be the result of very narrow awards categories. I won an award for being the grand champion of all of Michigan for 12 year old boys with blonde hair and brown eyes who rode a buckskin pony at the novice level. But I did dominate that category.

When I look back on my life since that night I realize that horses have had a huge impact on every twist and turn and decision that my life has taken. My decision to go to Lexington, Kentucky for high school, my decision to attend the University of Virginia for college, the decision to go south each winter to work with Phillip and David, my decision to nearly kill myself falling off at Jersey Fresh, and of course my decision to start Eventing Nation have all been determined by horses. I think it is safe to say that horses have been a large part of every major step my life has taken. The amazing thing is that everyone here can probably say the same and, perhaps more importantly for our purposes here tonight, will be able to say the same 10 years from now.

Eventing is unique among all other sports in the net impact it has on the lives of its participants. To illustrate my point--if you become a professional rider your financial future will be determined almost exclusively by riding, if you are an amateur rider then horses will likely have the second or third largest financial impact on your life behind your career and whether or not you have children. Of course, this impact that I am talking about reaches past the worldly and into the deeper aspects of shaping our personalities and who we are as people.

As an example, consider a situation that I see a lot in the programs I train with. A young rider with a very promising 4* prospect horse has had great success at the 1* and 2* levels, perhaps even the 3* level and they are working with a national coach. If the rider is very lucky, they might have a horse that people consider a "once in a lifetime" horse. They are also of course approaching the age of attending college. The conflict is whether they should pursue their horse's promising young career or let their riding take at least a small step back and attend college. There is rarely an easy answer to this issue and it's a question that we will revisit later.

On the other side of the age spectrum, you may have read on Eventing Nation that Dr. Mary Alice Brown passed away earlier this week after 55 consecutive years of eventing. 55 years. What other sport has competitors of 55 years? Mary Alice wasn't even a professional rider. The crazy thing about eventing is that Mary Alice probably didn't even hold the active record for eventing.

As we have already seen, we are all products of our environment, and, if you are an eventer, eventing is your environment. Think about what that means for a moment.

I would postulate in one, albeit run-on sentence, that this means that eventing has the power to dramatically affect your life for good or ill and, as a result, few things are more important than making sure that eventing positively influences our lives as much as possible.

It's clear to me and to Mary Alice's friends that she lived a long and happy life in harmony with eventing. The life of that young rider who is trying to decide whether to pursue riding full time or go to college depends upon whether or not they figure out the best role for eventing in their life. **I want to talk a little bit about this issue of living in harmony with eventing and then after that I'll try to talk about something relevant.

So the question that defines our tumultuous relationship with eventing and a good part of our life in general is: how can we live in harmony with eventing?

I have four points that I believe are key to answering this question. I will focus on the first in some detail because it is so important to me, and then move through the second, third, and fourth more briefly.

1. Focus on the process rather than the goals.

We are all too familiar with the negative aspects of riding--the heartbreaks.

In my opinion, the single variable with the highest correlation to happiness as an eventer isn't success, it isn't the number of great horses someone owns, it isn't how popular someone is at the barn--it's whether that person focuses more on the process of eventing or the goals of eventing.

David O'Connor is an Olympic champion, a Rolex Champion, the USEF President, a team WEG silver medal coach, and the US coach in waiting--perhaps no one has accomplished more goals as a rider, statesman, and coach in the history of US eventing. But I can guarantee you that one very simple principle defines David's happiness with horses more than all of those achievements. David loves to work with horses.

To illustrate my point, I would guess that if you took David and a number of other riders who love the process of riding, such as his student and a good friend of mine, Lauren Keiffer, Boyd Martin, EN writer Coren Morgan, Visinoaire, and if you put them on a palatial Caribbean island filled with boats and golf courses and roller coasters and everything else that you could imagine along with a small field of horses with a few jumps in it, those people might go try the golf course or roller coaster for a few hours, but they would soon make their way back to the pasture with horses and start riding. Importantly, I don't think it would matter if they would ever go to another competition. They just love working with horses--they love the process of building a relationship with the horse and for them there doesn't need to be anything else other than that moment on horseback.

On the other hand, there are riders, and I would include myself in this category, who enjoy pursuing our goals with horses more than the process of riding. Let's face it, competing and winning is great fun. It doesn't necessarily need to be a competition goal--it might be a skill goal, a fitness goal for our horses, or mastering a new movement. But we are always striving to make our horses and ourselves better because of the goals in front of us rather than simply enjoying the process of riding each day.

That's not to say that people whose first focus are the goals can't enjoy the process or riding or that people who enjoy the process can't be competitive--far from it. Of course, most of us fall somewhere between the two extremes. We enjoy riding but it's also important to us that we get to compete on the weekends and other variables such as our friends at the barn are important motivations for riding.

But most people fall towards one or the other and the sooner that you evaluate whether you enjoy the process or the goals more the sooner you will be able to take what I think is the first step towards living in harmony with horses.

Your horse comes in from the field before a lesson with a missing shoe. Your horse suddenly decides to freak out at the judge's gazebo in the middle of your until then perfect dressage test, your horse develops an abscess just days before your three-day, or your horse goes lame one day before you are supposed to ship out for the Pan American Games and you have to watch the US team win a gold medal without you.

I would say more than any other sport, in eventing our ability to compete and our competition results are determined by factors that are beyond our control. It's not just that our goals with horses are sometimes ruined, it's that our goals with horses are sometimes (oftentimes) ruined by factors that are completely our of our control. As a cognitive science major in college, we were taught that that subtle difference makes all the difference.

It wouldn't be right for me to present such a bleak issue without proposing a simple solution that we can all easily apply in a matter of moments, and indeed I already have. Focus on enjoying the process not just the goals. Our goals in riding are often influenced by things outside of our control but the process of being around horses and riding horses is forever a positive part of eventing. Wherever you are on the aforementioned sliding scale of goals versus process, if you can learn to put a greater emphasis on the process I think you will be a much happier eventer.

Ok--focus on the process over the goals--that's the first point to living in harmony with eventing and, as promised, we'll move through the next three much more quickly.

2. Service

In my opinion, eventing is missing a big opportunity right now. We are not making enough of the opportunity for eventing to serve our fellow eventers and our communities as a whole. The United Way for the NFL, the junior golfer initiative for the PGA Tour, these are examples of sports reaching out beyond the confines our their competitions and helping to make better communities and ultimately a better world. Eventing has this opportunity and right now, we are missing that opportunity.

Each and every one of us has an individual opportunity to serve our fellow riders. I thank volunteers as much as I possibly can on Eventing Nation, but I'm embarrassed to say that I can't remember the last time I volunteered at an event. Last year Denny Emerson was volunteering at the start box at Southern Pines and sent me out on course on both of my horses. I invite you to think of service as much more than just volunteering at an event and look at it as a day to day responsibility to serve your horse, your family, your friends at the barn, and your fellow competitors.

Service is hard to find time for but it's always rewarding. When we give back to something we invest in it and we feel a sense of pleasure in that selflessness. I would assert that it is impossible to live in harmony without service. Of course, I'm hinting at higher things such as marriage and friendship, but the same principles apply to eventing.

3. Riding is about more than riding.

The third principle about living in harmony with eventing is to understand that riding is about more than riding.

Riding is about building people. One of the great appeals to me about eventing is that it is filled with wonderful people, many of whom I am very fortunate to call friends. Eventing teaches kids a great work ethic, responsibility, toughness, teamwork, and hopefully how to focus on the process and not just the goals, and how to live a life of service. I can't overstate the value of the lessons that eventing teaches us.

If I had to point to one aspect of eventing where we could get better about building people, I would say that in my opinion, some coaches are too negative with their students. I think that extends well beyond eventing to coaching in general as a profession. We have all seen the coach screaming at their student in the warm up, telling them everything they are doing is wrong.

I think that a lot of this negativity in coaching comes from something called the regression fallacy. At the risk of getting way too nerdy, I'd like to delve a bit into the psychological elements of the regression falacy. In one psychological study that Thomas Gilovich writes about in his book "How We Know What Isn't So," researchers took subjects and put them in the role of teacher. They sat them in front of a computer and gave them data points that represented students being late, on time, or early for the start of school. The teachers could "punish" or "reward students" based on a daily performance and then the next day's late, on time, or early result was shown, and so on. Although the teachers didn't know it, the fictional student results were completely random, meaning that the teachers' actions had no influence on the results they were seeing. Nonetheless, at the end of the experiment the teachers were on average punishing the students something like 70% of the time. Recall that since the results were random the students were only late on average 50% of the time. This is explained simply by the principle of the regression fallacy. Punishment looked more effective than rewarding to the teachers because when a student was late they would be more likely to be on time the next day and vice versa--recall that the punish/reward had no impact on the actual results, but it would seem to the teacher like the punishment worked better than the reward.

This all runs contrary to what I think is a body of very compelling psychological evidence that students respond better to positive rather than negative feedback.

My feeling is that the same principles apply to the rider in the role of teacher with the horse and over time we run the risk of becoming negative with our learning and our riding.

On a personal level we need to ask ourselves if we think our current situation--whether that is the barn we ride at, our coach, our friends--is having a positive or negative impact on who we are not just as riders but as people. Some people are natural optimists and others, like me, are natural pessimists. Being more positive in every aspect of riding isn't always easy but it is crucial to living in harmony with eventing.

My aforementioned public speaking professor in college told me to always let the audience know when I am approaching the end of a speech so that I might revive hope in their souls. So, I'm telling you right now that I am almost finished.

4. Remember where you came from.

My fourth and final suggestion for living in harmony with eventing is to remember where you came from. Remember where you came from because every achievement in your life will be defined by these contexts.

This point is very important to me as I return to Michigan and this awards banquet. I'll never forget sitting in Applebees one night about ten years ago eating dinner with Linda and the rest of her students and their parents. Linda mentioned a rider who had moved on from Michigan and was then training with a top national coach. Linda said "I think they have forgotten where they came from." From that moment forward I committed myself to never forgetting the path that has brought me to where I am today. I'm sure I have failed at this goal countless times, but remembering that principle as much as possible has certainly helped me to live more in harmony with eventing.

I think that if when you look back on your life with eventing you can say that you enjoyed the process as well as the goals, that you served your fellow eventers and your horses, that you allowed eventing to have a positive impact on who you are as a person, and that you remembered where you came from along the way that you will be able to truly say you have lived a life in harmony with horses.

I want to thank everyone again for having me here tonight. Congratulations to everyone on a great year of eventing in Michigan.


Ride on.

Tuesday, October 18, 2011


I feel like the past seven months of my life have flown by with not a single stop for gas, or bathroom break. At times I would have been happy to take a flat tire to slow things down or even just a convenient stop sign to help me catch my breath. None the less, I was granted no breaks and have been going full force, burning up the roads on the East Coast with two horses in tow and my life as a travelling gypsy taking on a whole new meaning.

Now that the season is coming to an end and my first CCI** is under my belt, I am happy to say I am glad we didn’t have a stop sign after all. I have finally gotten the chance to sit down and breathe (aka, I am in STATS class writing and blogging instead of paying attention, oops!) and reminisce on my year and accomplishments. There were times when the road got bumpy but we always stayed straight and on course, making it around the Fair Hill CCI** last weekend on my mount of 12 months, Fernhill Cubalawn.

Making it around is a huge accomplishment in itself, but with everything in life, the adventure to this point has taught me a lot and I’d like to share my new found knowledge with you:

New life rules:

Rule 1: Be happy with what you have in life no matter what.

As Carl Bouckaert mentioned, “Our lives are pretty great, we could be refugees in Afghanistan.”

If you ever need a pick me up, Carl is full of great words of wisdom plus an overly positive outlook that we could all benefit from.

Rule 2: Always listen to your horse.

Cuba has been cruising around the Intermediate the last five months, making me very optimistic about going out and having a speedy round at Fair Hill. Unfortunately, Cuba’s fitness was not ready to endure the deep footing and cold weather compared to his hard ground and warm breeze back home. He was a pretty tired pony by minute seven, and I had to take off the gas and nurse him around the last third of the course finishing with a bit of time but atleast I had a horse to show jump the next day. If I had kept kicking for time, there could have been a good chance I would not have made it through the finish flags. That would have been a long drive home if I had kept pushing for time, and I’m glad I took care of my horse out there and helped him when he needed it.

Rule 3: Remember the thanks those that have helped you.

Where to begin? Mom and dad, you guys rock. None of this would have been possible without your loving help and constant support… Even when the going gets tough you two are there for me. Julie, without you this would have not been possible either. I am truly proud to say I am your student. My riding continues to improve because of the tedious work and constant effort you put into making my horses and I better. We can always be better and thanks to you my goals continue to be achievable. These are many more important people in my life that I owe a thank you too. Can't forget to mention my wonderful friends and talented horses that have helped me through the finish flags day after day.

All in all, it has been an extremely successful season and I’m hungry for it to all start back up next year!

Safe riding,

Alex

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Vacation Time. Ready. Set. Go.

Horses can make your life stressful. When it storms you stay up all night worried to death about your fancy horse out in the rain. Sooner or later you will finally get to the point that you have exhausted yourself enough to sleep, but before you know it you are up at 6am driving to the farm to check on that special little animal. I know I'm not the only one that does this but lets face it, after all the work we put into training these horses the last thing we want to happen is for them to get hurt running around in the rain.

Rugby gave me a bit of a scare yesterday when he came in with a massive right hind fetlock. My mind was racing, terrified that it was from his stellar cross country round at Chattahoochee this past weekend. Luckily, after some quick looks the little man just has a bit of fungus brewing on that leg. Some stall rest, antibiotics, and icing will be all he needs to get back to his normal annoying self.

Over the past couple months I have been busting my rear end to get ready for my big move up, which was successful! Two intermediates under my belt with Cuba, and after a quick vacation we will be heading to Richland at the end of August. My friend and I are already cooking up plans to convert a head to head into three box stalls to ship her horse and my two all the way up to Michigan. We will of course be doing all of the driving, I would prefer for you to not think I am crazy, Id rather be considered as a dedicated eventer.

Other than horses, normal life for Alex Green has been quite uneventful to say the least. If you took the horse world from my life you would think I was the most boring person alive. It is amazing how these little creatures can take over all of your time! Luckily, I prefer it that way.

Will have some pictures from the last couple months of riding for everyone.
Safe riding,
-A.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Red Hills Pictures

I got a lovely email a couple of days ago from Shannon Brinkman with my Red Hills pictures. I must say, she is a joy to buy from and (in my opinion) takes the best pictures I have seen at a show. Kudos to Brinkman Photography.
I am happy to admit to the fact that I did not mind spending a bit of money on horse show pictures because they were such great quality.
You are welcome for the free advertisement, Shannon Brinkman Photography.
Here they are!








Sunday, March 27, 2011

PARENTS! I have found the perfect horse for your COLLEGE STUDENT..



Mick may be named after the very famous Mick Jagger, but do not let the name fool you he offers an educational experience for your child that you can not pass up.
Am I not right? What better way to get your child to look over his or her notes, then to buy them a horse to do it on!
Just kidding... But if eventing is not the future for this four year old big, fancy, and talented horse.. I guess a study buddy will be a great career as well.

Friday, March 25, 2011

Meet Pica



Isn't he adorable?
He is the new addition to the Dry Ridge Farm family (aka he is Juan's dog).
I know he looks a bit ravenous in this picture but he really is a sweetie. If you would like to come out to the farm and meet Pica, I suggest calling his name when you see him. He tends to run like mad at you and plow straight into your legs. Can't wait to see what damage he causes when he is bigger!
Also- for those of you who are not into foreign language Pica in Spanish means 'spicy'.