Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Horse of the Year? Why Not My Horse?

In the horse world, we're a buzz whether Rachael Alexandra will be named the Horse of Year even if she doesn't run in the Breeder's Cup Classic. Since Summer Bird won the Travers and is running in the Breeder's Cup Classic, some think he should be horse of the year if he wins it. I don't really care. I just know that none of my horses will be since none of them have hit the board this year, much less won. I mentioned all this stuff trying to maximize good search words in the first paragraph.


All three horses are still in training; slow, but in training. We went out to watch them yesterday. Walter, our faithful trainer, said he wished they were faster.


I was hoping that yesterday was going to be a momentous day for us. It was the first day AFTER what I hoped was the lifting of the "mirror falling off the wall and breaking" hex . While I know that usually means seven years of bad luck, I was hoping that since we were in the midst of really bad horse luck, that the new hex would only be a year long. I can't point to any event yesterday that makes me believe I'm right about the shortened hex. I'm willing to give it a couple of days, though. I really need to be right about this.


So far, this blatant attempt to find a publisher for my book, now 97 pages long, hasn't worked either. But, 10 of you have signed up to "follow" my blog--with an equal number of family members and non-family members following. I don't think signing up to "follow" me notifies you that I've put something out there, so I'll let you know otherwise. I appreciate those of you who signed up. Others of you let me know you read it, but didn't sign up to "follow" it. Others of you reported technical difficulty. I'm sending each of you an e-mail to let you know there is a new post. I feel it is the least I can do. Since I sent an e-mail to my Horse Alert group that now numbers 210 and exactly four of you signed up to follow my blog and I heard from another seven of you, it makes me wonder how many of the other folks actually read the Horse Alerts.


I have gotten some hits on the publishing end, though. A couple of those Horse Alert folks actually know publishers or writers who have been published. I'm meeting with one of the publishers after Labor Day and putting the wheels in motion to meet the author of a recently published horse industry expose. Since I'm getting some nibbles, I'm getting nervous about the fact that I need an ending--preferably one that is happy. I think that would help sell "The Diary of a Crazed Horsewoman, Volume I."


In case I'm wrong about the mirror hex, does anybody know an antidote for mirror hexes?

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