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Wednesday, January 15, 2025

the year ahead

Back in the golden age of equestrian blogging, posting goals was popular and ubiquitous, with many the ambitious rider routinely committing to quarterly and even monthly goals. 

That trend faded over time (along with the waning popularity of long-format platforms in general...), and my last year of posting traditional annual and quarterly goals was 2018 (final wrap up post here). 

Obvi I didn't abandon the long-format platform (otherwise, uh, I wouldn't be writing these words right now LOL), nor have I given up on “planning” lol. So it was something else that made me move away from such structured well-defined goals, at least in the traditional sense. 

excited for the next year with this sweet biscuit
Namely, upper level rider Matt Brown wrote a series of compelling and thought provoking essays for Chronicle of the Horse in late 2018 that I found to be deeply influential. 

I wrote out my thoughts and impressions based on his essay in this post here, but have continued to mull over the ideas ever since. Including reading (and re-reading) a book called The Confidence Gap by Russ Harris & Stephen Hayes PhD (available for free through your Audible account or with a trial), which I believe to be some of the primary source material Matt references in his essay.

A big theme in this material is the distinction between process and outcome. Or, to take it a step further, values and outcomes. That an 'outcome' is a bit like the destination of a journey, like going to Paris. Or, more topically, riding in the Championships or earning your Bronze Medal. And the process is the way we get there, step by step.

These outcomes may very well be things we want -- but the fulfillment from such a destination or outcome is by its very definition a transient and temporary sensation. And, more to Matt's point -- we ultimately have very little control over ever achieving certain outcomes. As every horse person knows, there are virtually no promises with horses.  

So the idea is to focus on staying guided by our values, deriving fulfillment not only from where we plan to go, but from the steps along the journey itself. To get passionate about the process, rather than obsessing about the outcome

not sure exactly what’s ahead of us yet but it’ll hopefully be fun!!
And as Adam Grant notes in his book Think Again, (also seems to be available for free with an Audible trial, for those of you who like listening to books while driving!), "passions are developed, not discovered."

Most of us are already pretty far along in the whole “passionate about horses” thing… But ya know, the process of actually improving our riding, developing our skills, conditioning ourselves to the correct postures and exertions etc… Not even mentioning the other half of that equation — the horse itself and all that goes into devoting ourselves to pursuits with an entire other sentient creature… Well. Turns out, riding is hard

Sometimes it’s a real grind, or deeply frustrating. Failure with horses is almost inevitable in one way or another, it seems. There are so many ways things can go wrong — bad rides, lamenesses or injuries, lack of skill or training or ability. External forces like shitty weather or bad ground or plain old limited resources….

Some days it’s easy to say, “ya know what, I just don’t feel like it.” Which… Honestly, imo is totally fine. I’ve had to learn to give myself some grace (and space) for those days. 

But I’m also working to shift my mindset a little bit too. Namely, working to understand that motivation isn’t some magical drug that allows us to succeed in our endeavors. It’s not something that you either “have” or “don’t have” — it’s just a reflection of we want. The desire to act

words to live by
In this mindset, ‘discipline’ and ‘will power’ become nothing more than figments of the imagination, mere constructs rather than something that defines or describes me as an individual. What we are really describing with those words is a pattern of committed action. 

Doing the thing even when I don’t feel like it. Going through the motions, the process, bc that’s how we get where we wanna go. Or, if necessary, reevaluating the intended outcome entirely if the process of getting there doesn’t inspire joy or fulfillment. One thing I learned from my competition journey with Charlie — it’s hard to engage fully in an activity if I’m distracted by fear or anxiety. 

So. For the year ahead, I’m re-committing myself to the values of persistence and self development. To the process of practicing my skills, assessing the results, and modifying as needed — recognizing that sometimes failure is a wonderful teacher. 

I want to put one foot in front of the other, day after day, hopefully to get somewhere pretty special, but definitely enjoying the journey. Happy new year, y’all!

14 comments:

  1. Oh yes! I like this a lot. And agree, failure is a great teacher.

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    1. I’m trying to get better about learning the right lessons from failure LOL — not letting it stop me from trying again or whatever

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  2. I love your philosophical posts. They resonate with me.

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    1. Ha thanks! I can’t claim most of it as original material, much of the above is inspired from both the linked books and other recent readings… it’s helpful for me to sit down and write out my thoughts on the material tho!

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  3. Thank you for writing this, as it gave me ideas for a path forward with all the thoughts of goals and plans for the new year I've been having. I've done formal goal setting meetings with my coach, formulating SMART goals for short and long term and documenting them in my beloved journal... but life happens. Horses happen. Pyro changes shape and I can't get the fitter out... Missy's arthritis shows up in a new joint... I get another concussion... I've spent so much energy laying plans that are suddenly unreachable, which leaves me wondering "what now?". Getting "passionate about the process, rather than obsessing about the outcome" seems a more sustainable route. I'm gonna be mulling this over... Thank you.

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    1. I honestly really like the framework of SMART goals — it makes it really easy to sit down and think more deeply about how to organize our thoughts and plans. Tho idk about you, but i learned about them thru some professional development seminar where the focus was less on the *content* of the goal, and more on how to achieve the SMART framework. Bc it turns out… the content piece is what’s really hard LOL… i do think the framework could work for goals aligned with values and processes tho, and will be curious if you find a way to mesh the two!

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  4. I love this, even as I posted my outcome goals this year. And retrospectively, believing the pony is invincible is surely setting myself up for an even bigger emotional drop when he proves himself to be immortal!

    I'm currently reading the book "Essentialism" that I think would fit in well with your readings from this post. Adam grants book is going to be my next library request because I've enjoyed his podcast a lot.

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    1. Ooooh i’m adding that book to my list!! And honestly I LOVE outcome type goals, but am retraining myself to think of them more as ‘plans’ vs ‘goals.’ Like, I’m PLANNING to do show xyz, or PLANNING a schedule that will be in support of some big year end activity or whatever. It’s much easier for me to mentally think about ‘rerouting’ from a plan if something goes awry, vs ‘failing’ at a goal, ya know? But i do love having stuff on the calendar to look forward to and plan around!

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    2. *proves himself to be mortal, see I still can't let go of it lol

      Planning is a good way to think of it, routes on a road map that can be rearranged if need be.

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  5. Love these concepts--honestly changing from focus from outcomes to process has brought me far more fulfillment that I ever expected.

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  6. Thanks for the inspiration for me to write my "year ahead" post!

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    1. Oooh excellent, i look forward to reading it when it’s live!

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  7. Great post, Emma. Beautiful thoughts and reflections and so relatable.

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