Monday, May 20, 2013

And They're Off!

There are three things in life that I consciously—and wisely—avoid: Cookie dough, jigsaw puzzles, and horse racing.  Cookie dough is self-explanatory.  If it’s in my house it’s soon in my stomach, and then finds its sneaky way to my fat cells.  Jigsaw puzzles turn my focus knob to “fanatical” and once caused me to miss an entire Thanksgiving.  And horse racing, well, that’s what this post is about.  (“Post,”I might add, is also a horse racing term.)

Last Friday my husband took me to the races.  Literally.  Okay, first we went to a business meeting, but enough about that.  He THEN surprised me with an afternoon at Golden Gate Fields.  Now here is something almost no one knows about me: I secretly follow the Derby and cry and go crazy whenever I see a horse race. If I were a gambling woman, which I am not, I’d be staggering around like a floozy at the tracks, betting on every race and talking about horses with all the other addicts who play the odds and have their bookies on speed dial.

For 26 years Bob has had no idea.  Oh, sure, the kids know my big parenting regret is not teaching them how to ride, they’ve seen me cry at War Horse and Secretariat, and they know I had horses as a kid. But they have no idea that I’ve deliberately avoided the tracks because I am totally obsessed with these majestic creatures.  Even without gambling, I could become a race horse junkie.  So I limit it to the Derby and I swoon watching them head into the stretch.  And then I put it away for another whole year.

Until now.  This year I was already in bed when Bob came into the bedroom reading the news on his smart phone and said, “Guess who won the Kentucky Derby?”  He caught me with my guard down and I said, “Orb!  And he came from behind and won by two and half lengths—you should have seen it; everyone was covered in mud!” Oops.  Now Bob was staring at me.  “Do you know who the jockey was?”  I did.  “Do you know who came in second?” I did.  Bob was thunderstruck.  My cover was blown. 


“You like horse racing?” He was stunned.

I nodded, and happy tears fell down my cheeks as I described how Orb was on the outside, yet took the lead in the last few seconds.  What I didn’t know was that Bob (St. Bob, remember) began immediate plans to take me to a race in person.  And that’s how we found ourselves dining in the Golden Gate Fields restaurant and watching race after exhilarating race, mostly on dirt, two on turf.



At one point Bob went to the restroom and came back almost shouting, “Best View From a Men’s Room!”  I figured this couldn’t possibly be the name of a horse, and, thankfully, I was right.  Instead it was a fact, as Bob had captured on his cell phone:  A sweeping vista of San Francisco, the Bay, and the Golden Gate Bridge.


After our meal we headed to the elevators to get a closer look at the horses.  Along the way we encountered lots of women in dresses and hats, and several young men who fancied themselves fancy in fedoras and sunglasses.  We found the paddock where the horses parade by, almost close enough to touch. One horse, in particular, caught my eye.  “Look at Number Nine,” I said.  “He’s going to win.” 

Bob scoffed.  “You can’t tell that.”

“Look at his gait,” I said.  “Look at the energy, how he keeps jerking his head towards the track.  He can’t wait to get out there.”  His name was Frank and Go, and he was an exquisite thoroughbred, the color of dark caramel, his muscles gleaming, his proportions perfect.  I asked Bob to snap some photos.


We watched from the railing as the race began and my heart started pounding.  The cluster of horses rounded the curves in perfect unison, as if on wheels.  And then as they neared the finish line the crowd was screaming and it was clear: Frank and Go was leading out.  Frank and Go won!


That night I spoke to one of our sons and told him Dad had taken me to a race track that day.  “Wow,” he said, “That’s random.”  Yep.  They still have no idea.


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8 comments:

  1. Ha I totally know what you mean with the puzzles! Sounds like a great day at the race track. I wonder how many men just hang out in the bathroom :)

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  2. I'll bet it's a lot of them! Someone ought to sell binoculars just outside the men's room... would make a fortune. (And glad you relate to my "puzzle problem!")

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  3. I love this. Something about the adrenaline at the races...so unique! When I was a girl my dad would do chariot racing on the weekend. We got to ride around with him before the races, cheer for him, and then try to find the whites of his eyes after wards! Good memories! Miss you!

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  4. Thanks Rachelle-- what a lucky kid you were to be raised around horse racing! Let me know if you ever want to revisit your youth! xo

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  5. Shut the front stall! Why is it I'm just finding out about this?!? How could I not know you had horses as a kid? I was there, remember!!! I'm with Nicole, I'm stunned at this revelation, stunned I tell you, STUNNED! And if you kept THIS a secret, what else are you hiding?!?! Enquiring Minds want to know! You even knew the jockey's name?!? Who are you and what have you done with Joni!!!?

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  6. Ha ha ha-- you crack me up. I had horses when I lived in Logan! And I loved them more than most people (still do). Watching them run-- even walk-- is poetry in motion. Bob and I rode horses on the beach in Acapulco when we were newlyweds and he was amazed when I took off on one, galloping as fast as I could. (Maybe that's why I drive so fast!) I wish the track would let me come and pet the horses for free, the way the pound has people come in to pet the puppies and kittens. I'm not hiding much else. You know about my spy life in Europe and my Ninja work in Asia, right? But enough about that.

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