All of us, no matter
who we are, go through times when we run up against a brick wall.
When nothing - no matter how hard we try - is enough to break
down that wall, and set us free. It can be some kind of political
red tape we can't get around, bills we can't pay or love leaving
us forever.
When I was growing up, I remember asking myself "What can
I do in life?" I guess I was a pretty serious kid, to be
wondering about such things back then. But, I wanted to do the
most with my life, and there were so many people I wanted to know.
People I read about, or saw on TV or in the movies. People I heard
on the radio. The dreamers of the world.
As time went by, I discovered that I was meeting some of those
people. I was meeting them because they had horses or dogs and
all kinds of pets in their lives. Often, I never knew who they
really were until after we started talking. Who would think a
skinny farm kid, from a town most people never heard of, would
make friends with the treasurer of CBS? Or the secretary of Dag
Hammershold? How about getting to know the top banking family
in Italy, the people who started Volkswagen, or speaking about
horses with a prince who would become king of Saudi Arabia? Certainly
not my classmates in school.
It was our interest in purebred animals that opened the door.
We met at the races, at shows or just through the networks of
the breeds we are interested in. After all, a fine horse or dog
is an incredible thing, respected and admired all over the world.
I'm not sure how many of us, today, realize how quickly things
are changing around us. Some of the most sweeping laws are being
enacted that affect our privacy and our hearts. By "heart,"
I mean our love and inspiration. Or, to be more specific, the
inspiration and "centered-ness" we get from the animals
we own. Yes, I said "own." And years from now, as society
continues cutting "passion" out of our lives, the works
of people like me will be banned for it. Banned like the work
of Albert Payson Terhune, one of the most popular dog writers
of all time, for using words of his time that are not "allowed"
in public libraries today because they offend the NAACP. Were
his words vulgar like so much in books and on the screen today?
Hardly. Were they in every story? No. But, they were enough to
get him on a list of banned writers - and now there are whole
generations who don't know the sentimental and romantic story
of "Lad: A Dog." But, you might. And I do.
So, fine. I use the word "owner" instead of "custodian"
or "guardian" like they are being forced to use in Colorado
or maybe California, too, by now. I use the word "owner"
because it is a stronger word, evoking more passion.
Passion is what animals are all about! They fight and love and
cry and run and holler as hard as they can! They show us it's
OK to do that in a world that wants to make us numb, bland and
tone us down.
Getting back to those roadblocks along the way . . . we all come
up against them. And, I'd like to say there's always a way around
them. I'd like to say that, but, I can't. All I can say is, those
of us who love - really love the sporting life with our horses,
our dogs, our pets of every kind . . . those of us who love racing
and the circus and the rodeo and books and movies and singing
cowboys . . . who ride on trails through the woods, go to the
Zoo and dream of dancing Lipizzan Stallions and magical dolphins
leaping into the sky - must hang on to it. Treasure it. Because
these things stir our blood. These things excite us, and show
us what we - as living, breathing, feeling creatures ourselves
- can do. That is passion. And that - at all costs - is what we
are protecting as the world grows ever more afraid of those who
can dream.

The 600 page novel includes an appendix of documented animal
rights terrorist acts dating all the way back to 1984. If
anyone has ever doubted what the real motivation of the
animal rights movement is all about, they will never again
wonder after reading Ron
Hevener's HIGH STAKES! |
===================================================
Reprinted with permission. Author/Artist, Ron Hevener, is owner
of one of the oldest kennels in the U.S. - Lochranza Kennels.
He is the author of "The Blue Ribbon" - "Fate of
the Stallion" and "High Stakes." His collectible
figurines and watercolor prints are sought at dog, cat and horse
shows everywhere. See more at www.ronhevener.com
