Is the Glass Half Empty or Half
Full?
This was quite an inspirational
story I came across of this amazing woman in Germany and it reminded me of how
fortunate I am and the power of one’s outlook. Is the glass half full or
half empty?
I saw this photo today and it took a
while for my brain to register what I was seeing… Take a look.
Look closely...
Yup. No arms. Her name is Bettina
Eistel and her horse is Fabuleax 5.
What is even more compelling than
the fact that she can brush her horse with her feet, is that she competes, very
well, at the Paralympics in dressage.
Bettina didn’t just overcome her
disability, she walloped it!
(Kinda makes me feel ridiculous for
complaining about anything having to do with just about anything…)
Cantering
Saddling
FAST FORWARD
Bettina doesn’t let her disability
stop her. After all, this way of being is all she has ever known…
As an aside, another disabled
Olympian was explaining the difference between being born with a disability
versus being born “whole” and acquiring the disability. This concept is an
interesting topic. You probably can come to some of your own conclusions here.
Bridling... look at him drop his
head.
Anyway, as a small child, Bettina
learned how to use her feet and toes as her hands and fingers. As a youngster,
she started in horseback riding lessons. (Thank goodness her parents supported
her and let go of their fears around this.) She wears riding boots with
cut-outs in the toes so she can have ‘hands’ (imagine how cold her toes must
get … and how often they clip a branch or a fence board – ouch!). She can
saddle, bridle, hose down, wrap, blanket and do just about anything else that
is needed for her horse. And, she rides by steering with her legs and holding
the reins in her mouth. IN HER MOUTH. Try that… I tried to hold my brush in my
mouth while braiding my girl’s hair and I ended up drooling all over the place
in about a minute. I have no idea how she does it. Amazing.
Oh, and besides all those horse
riding feats, she can text, write and put on mascara with her toes!
They say Bettina is a master at hose
water fights!
“After highschool in
1979, Bettina studied the History of Art, Archaeology and Ethnology in Hamburg,
followed by an eight-year study of psychology. During her psychology studies,
she participated in a project with Hamburg’s home for children. In 1989 she
completed her studies with a diploma and has since worked as a graduate
psychologist in a Hamburg counseling center for children and family therapy.”
PARALYMPICS:
“Eistel was formerly
Vice-Europe and Vice World Champion (two silver and bronze at the European
Championships in Portugal in 2002 and three silver at the World Championships
in Belgium in 2003) and won two silver and one bronze medal at the 2004
Paralympics in Athens , she won also three times the German championship. As
the most recent successes are the bronze medal in the required tasks of the
individual competition and the silver medal in the team standings at the 2008
Paralympics in Hong Kong.”
Not bad even for a girl WITH arms…
With her dressage medal
HER HORSE
You have to really think about the
kind of horse who would let this kind of a rider be his partner. Really… what
temperament is needed to perform at high level dressage as well as take care of
a disabled rider? Wow. I wish I knew if they looked high and low for him… or if
they simply trained a good horse to understand this rider? (I need to read her
book.) I mean, did they find a horse and say to him that this is the way we are
going to do it now? Or, does the Fabuleax 5 ‘know’? I often hear that certain
horses are much more gracious with disabled riders than with regular riders. I
know that my Gwen is much nicer to children than to me… I wonder how that
happens? Is it the horse or the quality/feel/spirit of the disabled rider/child
that effects the horse? Dunno.
Taking a treat from Mom
Bettina says she trained her horse
via voice commands, head movement and leg aids. Funny, I bet hardly any of us
would think it was even possible to ride a horse without arms.
From where I sit, I would like to be
in the presence of the wonderful Fabuleax 5. He is a saint in my book. Fabuleax
lets Bettina ride him in the only way she can… with the reins in her teeth and
the other set of reins between her toes. And, he does his job. Simple. Gosh.
Impressive.
If you notice in the photos, he
lowers his head to be bridled and to be brushed. Atta boy!
Beautiful boy
TELEVISION HOST
Bettina also landed a gig as a Talk
Show Host. With a weekly show on German TV station ZDF, Bettina is something of
a media star. They say her popularity is because of her engaging and optimistic
personality… but one cannot ignore her amazing ability to do everything,
literally everything, with her feet..
Bettina as talk show host
HER WEBSITE
Her website (linked
here) is in German… Babelfsh can translate for you. On her home page, on the bottom
right corner is a word “Kontakt” which mean Contact. You can email her there.
AFTERTHOUGHT
I wanted to bring this story to you
because I think sometimes we give up too easily. Or maybe it is just me… maybe
I think I give up too easily or don’t push through my/my horse’s issues or
don’t get over myself/my fears or don’t put as much effort/time into training
my horses as I could. Reading about Bettina was a good shot in the arm for me…
I sure don’t feel like making any
excuses or complaining…
I cannot even imagine folding the
laundry with my feet, let alone living 24 hours without my hands. Wow. Very
inspirational.
What a great team!
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