Sometimes we are asked the question, "What have been the best   three days of your life?"
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Among the three best days of my life was a beautiful, crisp   April day when I was invited by two older work colleagues on a   trip to a dude ranch in upstate New York for horseback riding.
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I was in my mid twenties and had never been horseback riding   in my life. Indeed, my only interactions with horses were   the occasional offerings of carrots to the carriage horses in Central   Park. -- in other words, I was a complete novice, knowing virtually nothing   about horses.
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I was in jovial company during the car trip upstate and   the scenery was beautiful. 
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When finally arriving to the dude ranch, I was first   struck by the sense of being out of New York entirely.  Country music   played over the sound system and everyone walked around in cowboy gear. It felt   like the middle of Texas -- a place I loved visiting and staying in for six   months, when a child. 
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One of the men I was with was a very experienced horse rider   and known to the ranch and so we were allowed to leave the premises with our   rented horses.  
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Herb gave me some basic pointers on horse back riding 101 and   though perhaps a little nervous in setting off on what was for me, a new   adventure, I was reasonably confident and relaxed.
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The horse I was riding was a smallish, black horse named,   Gypsy who also appeared very confident and relaxed. 
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At first we navigated through some worn horse trails at a slow   and leisurely pace. Everything felt beautiful -- the cool, crisp air, the sun   shining brightly and the soothing clip clop of horses' hooves on dirt paths.   
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But we eventually entered a wooded area and it was then that   the experience transformed into some wondrous, fantastic dream that one   could never imagine in real life.
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As if on some unknown cue, Gypsy broke into a   fluid and seemingly fast moving canter as did the other two horses. -- So   fast, that Gypsy's hooves seemed not to hit the ground at all.   
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Suddenly, we were literally "flying" through the woods,   sunlight flickering through the fast spinning trees and me feeling like I   was, in one moment, transfixed and one with the horse and the universe entire.   
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It was a feeling I never experienced before or since -- a   sense of time stopping and yet swirling forward towards eternity. I perhaps   should have felt frightened, but I wasn't. On the contrary, there was   simply this overwhelming sense of peace, oneness and flying through time and   space itself. 
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It was a feeling and experience I never wanted to end.   
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I don't know whether it was a few minutes or an hour later   when we departed the woods and the horses again slowed to a walking   pace. But I was speechless as all sense of words or reality had long since   left.  I was transfixed in bliss.
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Finally returning to the ranch, we dismounted the horses and I   stood a while just petting and offering carrots to Gypsy and thanking him   for what was an experience I could not put into words either at the time or even   now. 
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But when it comes to interactions and relationships between   horses and humans, it seems words are not needed.  Though he could not   speak, I could sense that Gypsy felt proud and even happy that I was   so pleased. He had a "job" to do and he obviously did it well and he seemed to   know and take great delight in that. 
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Herb, Hal and I then had lunch at the ranch and I   couldn't believe how much I was enjoying the country music playing in the   background (I was normally a rock fan). Everything was just so perfect   and harmonious that day.  Great friends, great horses, great weather   and even the country twang of the music.  It just all fit.   
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It was nightfall by the time we finally made it back to the   city. But, during the two or three hour drive back, I am not sure I   said anything at all as I was so transfixed in trying to relive again, the   memory of flying through woods on a crisp, sun-filled day on a horse named   Gypsy. (Indeed, the only regret from that day is that I did not bring a camera.   But the images and feelings are forever imbedded in brain and spirit as if they   occurred yesterday. -- A feeling of oneness and   spiritual partnership with a horse.)
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It has been decades since one of the three most wondrous   experiences of my life. (The other two?  The day my daughter was born and   the night my grandmother accompanied me to a Bob Dylan concert.) 
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Herb sadly died from cancer a few months after our   horseback riding trip.  He was one of the funniest and most warm   hearted people I've ever known and his loss was profoundly felt by all who   knew and worked with him.
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I did go horseback riding (locally) a number   of times after the initial and mystical experience. Though   always fantastically enjoyable, it was never quite the same as that magical   day of flying in upstate woods with Gypsy and where   everything was so harmonized and fitted right down to the country music and   cowboy gear. Nothing could ever come close to equaling the sheer perfection and   bliss of that beautiful day, particularly as exemplified in the proud and joyeus look   on Gypsy's face at the completion of the ride. 
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But, perhaps it is that experience that lives within me today   in the struggle to keep our beloved carriage horses in New York City.   
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The same look of confidence and pride in a job well   done observed and felt so many years ago on Gypsy's beautiful,   soft face is the same look seen a couple of weeks ago on a carriage horse   named Harry's face.
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Whether in country woods or city streets, the partnership and   connection between humans and horses is something to be forever cherished   and jealously protected and guarded. It is to never   be dismissed as to do so is to banish the possibility of perfection, bliss   and yes, the splendor of the dream. -- PCA
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