Secrets of the Horsekeeping Housewife

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    Sometimes when I step outside my immediate neighborhood, away from the bridle paths and the pick-up trucks adorned with AQHA and APHA bumperstickers, I feel alone. Almost alienated. And then, when I least expect it, I’ll cross paths with another horsewoman who’s trying desperately to blend in, yet whose mannerisms and comments give her away. Such an instance happened yesterday.

    I was in Target—don’t we all buy our barn t-shirts there?—shopping for pajamas. I like the soft, stretchy ones with the drawstring waists. Yet they also have to be a particular color like heather gray or navy, or of some kind of wild print. That’s not because I’m especially fond of those colors. It’s because it takes me a while to get up and going in the morning. Don’t tell anyone, but I often stumble outside just after dawn, half-awake, and toss hay to Joey while still I’m wearing my pajamas. And I’ll also admit that I often clean Joey’s stall in those very same pajamas, although I do step out of my slippers and don my muck boots. (Well, most of the time). So you see, I can’t have some foo-foo pink or daffodil yellow PJ’s. They just wouldn’t work. Alfalfa flakes and shavings stand out like exclamation points on those pastels. It’d be too obvious to Ron that his demure wife had been shoveling horse manure in the very same clothes she sleeps in.

    So there I was, perusing the pajamas when I struck up a conversation with another woman who was also picking through the PJ’s. Without any prompting, she volunteered this: “I have to have a dark color so it doesn’t show the dirt. Lots of times I clean the horse corrals in my pajamas.”

    “You do?” I gushed. “So do I!”

    And then we both started laughing over the fact that sometimes we were really naughty and didn’t bother to wash our pajamas immediately afterward. Once in a while—wouldn’t our mothers and our husbands just die—we wear the same pajamas again! The two of us stood there and snickered like a couple of tarnished angels.

    That was a moment of true revelation. Apparently there are other horsewomen out there, walking among the civilians. I just had to learn to be more observant in order to recognize them. After giving it some thought, I’ve come up with five other ways to distinguish the horsekeeping housewife from non-horse afflicted women:

    1. At the grocery store she buys that really big bag of carrots. And it’s not because she’s brewing up a cauldron of stew.
    2. Cosmetics? That would be lip gloss.
    3. She owns more pairs of above-the-ankle white gym socks than the average male high school athlete.
    4. She’s totally noncommittal about her own hair color. Yet she hoards every box of Lady Clairol’s Warm Espresso for those occasions when she needs to reconstitute her brown gelding’s sunbleached coat right before the big weekend horse show.
    5. When she gives her husband a gift card to the local home improvement store, she has ulterior motives. It’s not so he can buy some new tool he covets. It’s because she has a whole list of barn repairs.

    Now that you know what to look for, keep your eye out for the shy, somewhat camouflaged horsekeeping housewife. She’s out there, among the native inhabitants. If you want to know where to find her, you might start looking in the pajama department.

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    7 COMMENTS

    1. haha cindy! I LOVE your blog still! I think I miss the format of its old home though on blogspot.
      I have to agree, I live in a urbanized area, and its pretty rare to see someone horsey but if you pay close enough attention you will! :p

    2. I have cleaned Mikey’s stall in my pajamas and my work clothes, including dresses and skirts. Now I know I’m not alone!

    3. Hah, funny story. I told this one to my (non-horsey)mom, and she was horrified that someone would clean the barn in PJs. It’s so funny what us horsey people are willing to do, that the non-horsey are horrified at xD

    4. I’ve done that too, but I often just sleep in a pair of sweatpants and a t-shirt. One pair of sweatpants I have is good for stall cleaning. They’ve got this soft, slippery outside so nothing sticks to it- everything just slides off. They’re as comfy as anything can get that’s not jeans. I don’t know where I got them though. They’re made of polyester, if that helps with description at all.

    5. I personally find a kinship with the woman in the grocery store with horse manure on her boots & a well placed strand of hay in her hair. I smile as I walk by with a horse slobber mark on my right shoulder from my gelding, Maverick. : )

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