The miniature horse, a stout creature named Barnaby with a coat the color of a bruised peach, isn’t budging. My boots are sinking into 17 inches of damp sawdust, and I can feel the familiar prickle of a phantom panic attack climbing up my spine. We are in the center of a circular pen that smells of old hay and repressed anxiety. There are 27 spectators behind the wooden slats, mostly donors with too much jewelry and too little to do, waiting for me to demonstrate how a therapy animal can sense human emotion and respond with grace. Barnaby, however, has decided that his current mission is to become a 497-pound paperweight. He isn’t angry. He isn’t scared. He is simply opting out of the choreography. And in that moment, sweating under the glare of the 7 industrial lights hanging from the rafters, I realize I am doing exactly what he is refusing to do: I am performing a version of effort that yields nothing but the appearance of movement.
The Weight of Being Watched
“
I find myself adjusting his halter for the 37th time. I don’t need to adjust it. It’s perfect. But the donors are watching, and my supervisor is leaning against the gate with a clipboard, so I have to look busy. I have to look like I am applying some sophisticated, invisible technique that only a professional therapy animal trainer with 17 years of experience would know. It’s a lie. I am just fidgeting to avoid the judgment of being still. This is the core frustration of our current existence-the terrifying realization that if we aren’t vibrating with visible activity, we are perceived as broken. We have collectively decided that the hum of a spinning wheel is more valuable than the silence of a completed thought. I remember a Tuesday not long ago when the facility director walked past my office and I spent 7 minutes intensely staring at a blank spreadsheet, clicking cells at random, just so I wouldn’t be caught staring out the window at the clouds.
The Spreadsheet Lie
The clouds were actually giving me a better idea for the equine curriculum than the spreadsheet ever could, but the spreadsheet looked like ‘work’. We are obsessed with the optics of the grind.
We have turned our lives into a series of 67-second clips of productivity, edited to remove the pauses. But the pauses are where the actual healing happens, both for the animals I train and for the humans who eventually pet them. Barnaby knows this. He is currently standing so still that a fly has landed on his nose and remained there for 17 seconds. He is achieving a level of zen that I can only dream of, while I am out here simulating a 7-stage process of ‘connection’ for an audience that wouldn’t know a genuine connection if it bit them on their $777 designer vests. The contrarian truth that no one wants to admit is that laziness-or what we call laziness-is often the only sane response to a system that demands infinite growth on a finite planet. True efficiency isn’t about doing more; it’s about having the courage to do absolutely nothing until the right action becomes unavoidable.
The Harvest Cycle Statistics
The constant, often invisible, extraction of value from time and rest.
The Atmosphere of Busyness
“
I once spent 87 days trying to train a particularly stubborn goat named Gregory. I tried every technique in the manual. I used 27 different types of treats. I consulted 7 other trainers. Nothing worked. Finally, I got so fed up that I just sat in the pen with him and ignored him for 117 minutes. I stopped trying to ‘train’. I stopped trying to look like a trainer. I just existed in the same space. By the end of the session, Gregory walked over and rested his head on my knee. He didn’t want a trainer; he wanted a companion who wasn’t trying to harvest a specific result from him. We are constantly harvesting each other. We are harvesting our own time. We are turning our hobbies into side hustles and our rest into ‘recovery’ so we can go back to the harvest tomorrow at 7:07 AM.
“He didn’t want a trainer; he wanted a companion who wasn’t trying to harvest a specific result from him.”
The temperature in this barn is currently 97 degrees, and the air is thick enough to chew. It’s the kind of heat that makes your thoughts turn into molasses. I often think about the climate of our work environments, both the literal and the metaphorical. If we don’t have the right atmosphere, nothing thrives. In my home office, where I write the training manuals that nobody reads, I finally broke down and looked into climate control solutions that wouldn’t break the bank. I found that installing something like MiniSplitsforLess was the only way to keep my brain from melting into a puddle of 77 different useless ideas. It’s hard to be a philosopher of animal behavior when you’re sweating through your third shirt of the day. But even with the air conditioning, the internal heat of performative busyness remains. We are constantly under the magnifying glass, and the sun is always out.