Welcome back to Our American Stories! Today, we bring you a compelling tale from our regular contributor, Bill Brake, who embarked on a truly unexpected journey: learning to ride a horse at the age of sixty. Faced with personal loss and a powerful yearning to live his own life more fully, Bill found himself drawn to the world of horses, a place he’d never explored. His decision was more than just taking on a new skill; it was a brave step into the unknown, a search for connection, and a chance to prove to himself that new adventures are always possible. Join us as Bill shares how he took the reins, literally, on this remarkable personal challenge.

Bill’s interest wasn’t fleeting; it was rooted in a lifelong fascination with “lost arts” and a profound curiosity about the unique partnership between humans and these magnificent animals. He wondered about the physical experience of riding, the courage it takes, and the deep communication possible with a creature five times his size. From his very first encounter—grooming Julio the horse—Bill discovered a silent language of respect and affection. This segment captures his initial steps in this inspiring equestrian journey, from the intricate process of saddling up to understanding the unspoken wisdom of these powerful beings, all while preparing for the thrill of the trot, canter, and perhaps even a gallop.

📖 Read the Episode Transcript
This is Our American Stories, and now we bring you a story from one of our regular contributors, Bill Brake, about his experience learning to ride a horse at the age of sixty. Some months ago, I went to see someone one about a horse. Back in thirty screwball comedies, that phrase meant stepping out for a drink. In my case, that wasn’t my intention. I’d never ridden in my life. I’d been moved by two things: first, by a personal loss. Now, as in the past, grief overcame my loathing of change. Second, a concern that I’d spent my life writing about other people’s lives rather than living my own. That may be untrue, as I’ve had a few adventures, but the worry preyed on me. I knew I was comfortable with domestic animals despite the barrier of language. I knew other ways in which I could communicate my respect and affection for a thinking creature with whom I could not speak. Another was a long-time fascination with obsolescent technologies: sailing ships and steam locomotives, things that worked but had proven uneconomical against the internal combustion engine. I was intrigued by the notion that their operation and maintenance were becoming lost arts. And so, what of the horse, which had remained a commonplace of transportation into my father’s youth some eighty years ago, which for a cavalryman at the charge meant delivering a living projectile—twelve hundred pounds of mass and three feet of steel, charging at thirty miles per hour. Over thirty years ago, I’d been a staff officer in the Guard. I’d known a number of older men whose careers had begun in the pre-armored cavalry. I remembered one retired colonel whom I’d met at a funeral when he stepped out of his cab in faultless dress: blues, decorations, and saber, with riding boots, spurs, and pinks breeches in a shade of khaki that looked almost pink in the sunlight, the last three being no longer in the uniform regulations. Somebody had asked him whether he’d been in the army. He brusquely replied, “No, cavalry in those days.” This eccentricity of apparel was his privilege, as he had been trained to ride horses into battles sword in hand, and the cavalry was a romantic memory. In the army, he’d been an extra in the aerial Flynn version of The Charge of the Light Brigade. The colonel was not a sensitive man, and yet I was struck by his disgust—as became a cavalryman—of the studio’s treatment of its horses, at least twenty-five of which had been frivolously killed in making the picture. These interests intersect in early two thousand and seventeen. How do humans and horses work together? Could I deal with an animal five times my size? What was the physical experience of riding? Could I take a horse to a trot, a canter, a gallop? I take him over a fence? It was as much about my character, perhaps even the courage to get back in the saddle after being thrown. It was as much about knowledge of myself as of the animal. So I went to Stoddard, New Hampshire, where I met Julio. His stable is owned by a woman whose writings on equestrianism led me to think that she was inclined to an unsentimental yet affectionate relationship between horse and rider. This appealed to me. The basis of any relationship between horse and rider seemed to lie in grooming. Julio enjoyed having his hooves cleaned and being currycombed and then brushed with hard, medium, and soft brushes. I then went over his mane and tail with a steel brush. This took about forty-five minutes, after which Julio nudged me with his muzzle and then kissed me on the right cheek. This was the first time I’d been kissed by a male five times by weight. It did not terrify me. The instructor guided me in saddling the horse, which is a time-consuming and necessary process for the comfort and safety of horse and rider, and lent me a helmet. I was already in an old pair of chinos and rubber Wellington boots, which had enough of a heel to keep me safely in the stirrups. The helmet intrigued me. Having read and reflected on Marcus Aurelius’s Meditations, I didn’t particularly mine dying after taking a header. Whatever is intended for me thereafter is beyond my control, and the gods mean me no evil. But as a lover, husband, and gentleman, I would not want Mimi to have a drooling idiot on her hands for the next three decades. So, although the helmet was uncomfortably snug, I wore it. My instructor insisted that I placed myself either to Julio’s left or his right when fiddling with his hind hooves, hindquarters, or whatever. I thought of Copenhagen, not the dainty city, but the Duke of Wellington’s charger at Waterloo. After the day of battle, the Duke had dismounted, exhausted from some twenty hours in the saddle, riding from unit to unit throughout the day to observe, command, and inspire. He patted the horse on the rump. In the while, the horse is a prey animal. He prefers to run, but he can defend himself. I think of this from Copenhagen’s point of view. “Yeah, lots of noisy stuff today. Okay. Bullets whizzing by. Okay. A cannonball flies over my neck and takes off the arm of the nice guy to my left. Okay. The general to my right losing his leg to another cannonball. Okay. Long day, lots of stress. Okay.” For Copenhagen, it had all been “Okay.” All horses like to work. It’s their karma. Copenhagen had been trained to work in battle, to remain calm amidst gunfire, trumpet calls, and screaming men. On that day, as on many before, he had done his job, as the Duke later said of him, using a word that for the English means guts: “There may have been many faster horses, no doubt many handsomer, but for bottom and endurance I never saw his fellow.” If the Duke, an unsentimental man, had not himself been worn out, he might have sensed that Copenhagen too had spent the day suppressing his fear of shot and shell, practicing that quality we call courage. The Duke’s touch surprised the horse, who lashed out with both high legs. Happily for the Duke, he missed. Anyway, I led Julio from the barn to the mounting block, and, listening to my instructor every inch of the way, climbed up, put my left foot on the stirrup, and hoisted myself into the saddle. It took more effort than I had expected, but then I was about to turn sixty-two. With my instructor’s help, I put my right foot into the stirrup. Then, as directed by the instructor, I squeezed my legs, and Julio began walking. A rider must move in rhythm with the horse. As a beginner, I had years of learning ahead of me. We walked for a bit along a muddy path. Then the instructor had me press my legs together again. Julio began trotting. This is how one learns how to ride. I rose about an inch above the saddle and came down hard. I thought my seat had been shoved into my stern. I wondered whether Theodore Roosevelt had felt like this as he trotted Little Texas up San Juan Hill in eighteen ninety-eight. I didn’t think so. Having some self-respect, I didn’t scream. Instead, I took a deep breath, which Julio has been trained to know as a signal to stop. Then I learned to make him turn: press his left side, and he turns right; press his right side, and he turns left, and to circle. I remember once hearing someone explain, “Left spur turns to the right. Right spur turns to the left.” While I would prefer not to spur a horse, it’s still good to know. All horses will test you to see whether you’re ready to take command. If you are not, they will take command for their own safety, and the rider may become merely an inconvenient ornament to be discarded as quickly as possible. Once Julio realized that I was gently determined to command, had some physical courage, and had no foolish intentions, he deferred to me. It’s his nature. Once he realizes the rider is in control, I think we’ll get along. Then I took him back to the stable. Oddly, dismounting was more intimidating than the rest of the process. I successfully took my right foot out of the stirrup, pulled my right leg up and over Julio’s back with my weight on the left stirrup, loosed my left foot, and dropped—”fell” might be more accurate—some three feet to the ground. So I know something about caring for a horse and how to direct him. I know how much I have to learn before I can understand what a rider needs to know. I know enough to know my ignorance, which is always good. Someday I may even be a horseman. And what a delightful story by Bill Brake! And what a daring thing to do in your early sixties! We fall harder when we’re older, and you’re gonna fall. That’s just what’s going to happen if you ride a horse. “It was as much about knowledge of self—the knowledge of the animal,” Bill said. And that is true. That is the big part to that game: commanding the horse and doing it without speaking. Bill Brake’s daring new hobby, riding horses. A beautiful story. Bill Brake’s story here on Our American Stories.