Elder M Russell
Ballard, Ensign, May 2005, “One More”
“As you reach out to them, please remember the experience of a friend of mine.
He had never owned a horse in his life until he married a wonderful woman who
loves horses. Wanting to impress his new bride, he announced one evening that
he was going to the pasture to teach a colt how to be led. He weighed more than
the colt. He knew more than the colt. He assumed all he would need to do was
pull on the lead rope and sooner or later the colt would follow. He was
confident that the process would be short and simple.
He attached the lead rope to the
halter, got in front of the colt, and pulled. The colt resisted. My friend
pulled harder, and the colt planted his legs more firmly. So he really pulled,
and the colt fell over. The process was repeated several times until my friend
made this assessment: in just four or five minutes he had successfully taught
the colt to fall over. All he had to do was get in front of the colt, pick up
the rope, and over it would go.
His wife, watching this process,
finally suggested that instead of getting in front of the colt and pulling, he
might try wrapping the rope around the colt and simply walking alongside. To my
friend’s chagrin, it worked.
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