Everything I Know, I Learned from Cows

Oct
8

In the past several days, I’ve made a couple pounds of butter, several batches of mozzarella, sour cream, and cream cheese. You can tell I have a retreat coming up this weekend! I’ve been milking Glory Bee twice a day. This morning after milking I turned her out, and she went running out to the pasture, literally kicking her hooves in the air, calling for Moon Pie and Dumplin. Sometimes she makes me feel guilty for milking her. But I’ll bring her back in tomorrow evening–she’ll be teaching attendees how to milk this weekend. And yes, really, the cow is the teacher, of so many things. I wrote this post a year ago and am re-running it today because my book just came out in paperback this week. This post is as true now as it was then, except cows have been teaching me for five years now instead of four. And I still have a lot to learn.

I have a new trick I’ve been playing when I milk Glory Bee. I hook on the milking lines then I run back out of the barn to fill her water tubs. This little double-time game where I’m milking and running water at the same time probably saves me a whole five minutes.

Sometimes I’m just an embarrassment to myself.

Glory Bee taught me a lesson the other day by kicking off one of the lines while I was outside running water. The day’s milk was ruined and I had to do a lot of extra cleanup. Glory Bee finished up her feed and sauntered back to the barn yard as usual. After all, it’s not her problem if I’m a moron.

Cows have been teaching me lessons for going on four years now and, obviously, I haven’t learned them all yet.

Cows have taught me to never blame anyone else for my problems. If my cow is mad, it’s probably my fault. And the sooner I get that through my thick head, the better, because my cow isn’t going to cooperate until I do. Cows come with quiet expectations they express with big, soft brown eyes and the occasional kick. They ask only for necessities and a kind hand. They demand patience, consistency, and an honorable work ethic.

A cow can be a joy or a burden, a blessing or a curse, depending on how you choose to view it. Some of the most peaceful, beautiful moments of my life have taken place at the udder of a cow, hand milking. The steady rhythm of the movements, one hand, then the other, working in fast tandem, the silent magic of my fingers playing down her teats, the music of those long squirts hitting the bucket, steam from the udder-warm milk in winter air, the sound of birdsong around me in the spring, morning sun beating on my back in the summer–those are the things I think about when I think about hand milking my cow.

I was at my cow’s udder when I found out Weston had had a car accident and totaled the car–with Morgan by his side. (They were both okay.) I remember the morning I knew my mother was brain-dead and was going to die–and I picked up my bucket and went to milk my cow. I milked my cow when I was sad. I milked my cow when I was scared. I milked my cow when I was happy, and I milked my cow when I was exhausted. It didn’t really matter what else was going on in my life or the world, I milked my cow. Sometimes my cow tested me, other times she comforted me. Sometimes she irritated me, but most of the time she calmed me down. In any case, she was there, and that meant so was I. She taught me every day that the world didn’t really revolve around me. It revolved around her.

From my book: “A cow was an experience–work and hardship and challenge. Everything I’d been looking for when I’d come to the country.”

At Stringtown Rising, I started out milking Beulah Petunia in the meadow bottom. I’d carry her heavy bucket of feed across the meadow, through the sometimes-swollen creek in my boots that were so worn, they had holes and my feet would get wet. I’d come back across the creek with my bucket of milk. My cow had already reminded me not to hurry, and I’d stop to watch the birds swoop low between the trees. My arms and back and legs were strong from milking and carrying buckets. I was poor, all right, but I was rich, too–and I knew it.

I taught Jennie how to milk the other day. She’s Morgan’s friend who is staying here with us while her family gets re-situated after a fire. I showed her how to hand milk, then I showed her how to use the machine. I told her that I milked by hand for over a year before I got a machine. She said, “Why did you wait so long?” I told her the machine was expensive, and I’d had to save money for it. And then I told her, “Everyone should milk a cow by hand for at least a year. You can learn a lot from a cow.”

After Glory Bee kicked off the line while I was double-timing her with the water tubs, the next day I went down to the barn with a bucket. You know, ye olde milking bucket, the kind that has no milking lines and vacuum hoses attached. Because at least for a day, I needed to sit at my cow’s udder, know life at her beat instead of my own, hear the thunk of goats moving around in their house across the barn yard instead of the pump of the vacuum. I’m out of practice and no speed milker, but cows are usually pretty generous with their time as long as you bring them enough feed. Glory Bee didn’t really care what I was doing down there anyway–as always, a cow is quick to tell you that it’s not about you, milk maid. It’s about them.

Even as I try to let her teach me a lesson, my cow reminds me that she doesn’t really care if I learn it or not.

And that’s when she teaches me the greatest lesson of all.
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This life is not about me, but it is always, every day, up to me.

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Comments

  1. judyg says:

    You have a beautiful way with words.
    Your writing style makes me feel calm and comfortable. Like we’re old friends.
    It’s such a pleasure to read your writings.

  2. Joell says:

    :happyflower: :happyflower: :happyflower:
    Nice repost, it is as nice to read it today as the first time, life is a learning lesson daily, if one ever gets to the place where they think they know it all and life has nothing more to teach them, I feel truly sorry for that person.

  3. holstein woman says:

    I used to do things like that and one day one of the cows pulled the suctions off and then another cow peed in the parlor and I lost all the milk and had to clean the whole thing and start all over. Just a warning.. Love U bunches. :cowsleep:

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