Ron Baker

When the Horse Is Running the Rider

“Most of us aren’t living our lives

we’re being carried by our thoughts.”

There’s an old story about a man riding his horse at full speed through a village. The horse is charging forward—fast, intense, completely focused. A villager sees him fly by and yells out: “Where are you going in such a hurry?” The man turns back and shouts: “I don’t know
 ask the horse!”

It’s easy to smile at that story. But if we’re honest
 it’s not really about the man on the horse, it’s about us. How often are we moving through our days like that? Rushing from one thing to the next. Thinking, planning, reacting. Carried by momentum we didn’t consciously choose.

We wake up, and the mind is already moving. We drive, and thoughts are already racing ahead. We sit with someone, and part of us is somewhere else entirely. And if someone were to stop us and ask: “Where are you going?” Most of us wouldn’t have a clear answer. Because we’re not fully choosing the direction. We’re being carried away by the horse which is the mind.

The mind is powerful. It generates ideas, solves problems, replays conversations, imagines futures. But it also does something else, something quieter, but far more influential. It creates the feeling that movement equals purpose. That if we’re thinking, we must be progressing. If we’re busy, we must be getting somewhere. But noise is not direction. Speed is not clarity. And thinking is not the same as living.

There’s a subtle shift that can happen. Not dramatic. Not loud. Just a small moment where you realize: “I’ve been carried away.” You notice the mental noise. You notice the urgency that isn’t actually necessary. You notice that your body is here, but your attention hasn’t been. And in that moment
You are no longer just the rider. You become aware of the ride and are able to guide the direction.

Presence doesn’t mean stopping the horse completely. Life still moves. Thoughts still come. But something changes in your relationship to them. Instead of being pulled unconsciously
you begin to guide gently. Instead of reacting automatically
you begin to respond intentionally. You don’t fight with the horse. You simply take the reins, and sometimes
 you able to slow down. You don’t need a perfect environment. You don’t need silence or stillness around you. You just need a moment. Right now, wherever you are:

  • Take a slow breath in.
  • Feel it fully.
  • Let it go just as slowly.

Do it again.

And as you do, notice: The body is here. The moment is here. Life is happening now—not in the rush of the mind. The horse may still be moving
But you’re no longer lost on the ride.

Most people spend their lives asking the horse where it’s going. But clarity doesn’t come from the noise. It comes from the space beneath it. Because the truth is: You were never meant to be carried through your life. You were meant to be present for it

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