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760 - Born to Run: Why Playing It Safe Is Costing You Your True Potential
Description
The Wild Horse and the Farmer
A young stallion, swift and strong, roamed the open plains, its hooves striking the earth with power, its mane flowing in the wind. It had been born to run, to navigate the wide expanse, and to test its strength against the forces of nature.
One day, a well-meaning farmer saw the horse and admired its beauty. “You are too wild,” he said. “The open plains are dangerous, and running free will only wear you down. I will care for you and keep you safe.”
He led the stallion to his farm, where he enclosed it within sturdy wooden fences. The farmer clipped its mane short, so it would look tidy. He filed down its hooves, believing they were too rough. And, rather than letting it forage and run, he fed it grains from a trough, thinking it would be grateful for the easy life.
The stallion grew restless. It pawed at the ground, feeling the strength still within it, but each time it tried to run, the fence stopped it. “This is better for you,” the farmer would say. “You don’t need to work so hard anymore.”
One day, the farmer hitched the stallion to a plow. “You can still run,” he said, “but with purpose now, helping me till the land.” The stallion obeyed, but the weight behind it slowed its stride, and the wild energy that had once made it feel alive began to fade.
At night, as it stood in the stable, the stallion longed for the wind against its face. It remembered the feeling of pushing itself to the limit, of racing against nothing but the horizon.
One evening, a gust of wind rattled the stable door, and something inside the stallion awakened. With a powerful kick, it broke the latch. It leapt over the fence, hooves pounding against the earth, faster and faster, until the farm was nothing but a memory behind it.
The farmer awoke to find the stallion gone. “Foolish horse,” he muttered. “It will never find an easier life than the one I gave it.”
But out on the open plains, the stallion ran—not for ease, not for safety, but because it was born to do so.
The Well-Meaning Limitations of Others
Maybe you’ve never lived on a farm, but in many ways, this story is about all of us. Whether we realize it or not, we’ve all been the wild horse at some point—full of potential, yet surrounded by fences built by well-meaning others. The question is, do you see yourself in this?
The farmer represents the people in our lives—parents, teachers, friends, or even society as a whole—who believe they know what’s best for us. They see our wild energy, our ambitions, and they try to “tame” us, offering a safer, more predictable path. They may not mean harm, but their guidance is based on their own experiences, fears, and preferences, not on what we are truly meant to be.
The Stallion’s Natural Drive
The wild horse symbolizes that inner force within us—the part of us that feels an undeniable pull toward something greater. Whether it’s a dream, a career, a personal calling, or simply a way of being, it is something uniquely ours. When that drive is confined, when we are forced into roles that don’t align with our nature, we feel restless, unfulfilled, and disconnected from ourselves.
The Comfortable Trap
The farmer gives the stallion food, shelter, and what appears to be a stable, secure life. This mirrors the way many people are conditioned to believe that working hard—not for passion, but for security—is the ultimate goal.
“Keep your head down. Work the plow. Build your savings. One day, you’ll have enough to finally feel safe.”
But what if that feeling never comes?
Many people spend their best years trading their natural drive for productivity, their deepest desires for financial stability, always preparing for some uncertain rainy day that may never arrive. And in the process, they sacrifice the very th