I know certain things to be true, yet I fall for the same
mistakes time after time. I feel like Charlie Brown with Lucy, trying to kick
the ball.
For example, I know that nobody has it easy. People who “have
it made” don’t just fall into their current situation. They had to work hard,
to gamble, to risk it all in order to be where they are. You don’t get
extraordinary results by doing the ordinary.
You have to be obstinate. You can’t do only what’s expected
of you, what everybody else is doing. You have to do the unexpected, the
unasked for. You have to act up. The key word being “up.”
How in the heck does this relate to Secretariat? When I
first heard that there was a movie about the famous horse and his owner, I
thought what challenges could a rich horse owner face? What obstacles did a
spoiled, wealthy brat have to overcome? Poor little rich girl.
As I’ve had to admit so many times in my life, “Boy, was I
wrong?”
Penny Chenery, the owner of Secretariat, was put into an
uncomfortable position and had to risk everything – her father’s farm, her time
with her kids, her relationship with her brother and sister, and her marriage –
in order to succeed.
She was on the spot even before the horse was born, losing a
coin flip but winning the horse she wanted, the one she believed in before his
hooves hit the earth.
Even after Secretariat was named horse of the year, Penny
didn’t have enough money to keep the farm and pay off the huge estate taxes.
Everyone, including her husband and her brother, demanded that she sell
Secretariat before he became Secretariat.
Yet, she didn’t. She stuck to her guns. She didn’t win it
all by stubbornly refusing to change the way she did anything. She couldn’t win
the game the way it has always been played. She didn’t have the money. So she
adapted. She changed the game.
With help and expertise from a longtime family friend, Penny
syndicated shares in the horse for breeding purposes. At first, they didn’t
sell. They stuck with it. For the syndication to pay off, Secretariat would
have to win the Triple Crown, which hadn’t been done in twenty-five years.
Penny believed. She hustled. She sold the shares in the horse.
I was the sucker. Penny was not. She was not a spoiled rich
kid at all. Penny was resourceful. And determined. And persistent. And tough. And
she had faith. And in the end, she won.
The movie “Secretariat” is not perfect. Like any movie, some
facts have been “Hollywooded” in the name of the story. That didn’t stop it
from reeling me in like a huge chub.
Secretariat Lesson #2: Keep an open mind. Do your homework.
Be resourceful. Be persistent. Have faith in what you believe and in yourself.
Do all of this and you just might win.
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