Dr. Stephen Fullmer
English 1010
17 May 2012
My Eventful Summer
“Cowgirl” has been my name ever sense I was put on a horse. Being involved in rodeos, 4-H, and been around horses my whole life is what got me into the sport of rodeo. My freshman year was my first year of high school rodeos, and they have been very successful ever since. The most exciting times of my life have come from the sport of rodeo, but also my lowest of lows. The summer of my Junior year proved it. I took a deep breath as I walked my horse, DJ, into the Winnemucca, Nevada Arena. Telling myself just to relax, and make a clean, run to be the High School Barrel Racing Champion was not easy. I had placed second in the first round, and third in the second …show more content…
After hours of lying in the most uncomfortable bed in the world, no feeling in my hands, and medicine in me that made me so sick, the doctor came in with the news. He told me that I had broken my back, and more importantly that a piece of my spine had broke off was very close to my spinal cord.
By this time I was ready to be done. Maybe rodeo really wasn’t for me. I thought things had already been bad, and now they were even worse. My emotions were so high, I was a complete wreck. I tried having a positive attitude, but I wasn’t sure if there was anything to be positive about. Three months in a back brace and almost a month in a wheelchair was the start of my junior year of high school. The summer of my junior year had not been what I had expected.
A few months of living in front of the TV in a lazy boy chair my doctor informed me that I could slowly start getting back into the swing of things. I wanted to get back on a horse sinse the day I came home from the hospital, and that day had finally come. I kept feeling the same way that I did when I was leaving for my first rodeo by myself, so nervous. Learning or doing something new always makes me a bit nervous, and getting back on a horse was no