Behati
Member
Hi All,
I used to have horses when I was younger and pretty much had to give up when I went to study in Uni due to pressure from parents.
I'm in my 30s now and my dream never changed, to have my own horse again.
The only problem is I can't find a way of logistically making it work. I work 9am to 5:30pm. My commute is an hour and a half each way to work, so getting home at 7pm is fairly regular to me, assuming I leave on time which again isn't always possible due to demands. I don't have flexible hours, work from home or anything like that. My husband works for the same place and has a similar demanding job so there's not much room for him to help either.
I can afford a horse on DIY livery, but full livery is simply too expensive and also seems a lot of money to spend on something you'd never really have time to do. Especially in the winter when the nights are dark from about 4pm. I'd thought about loaning the horse out, but then if they dropped out i'd be pretty much out of workable options.
How do people even balance this? Open to any suggestions.
Is my only option to sacrifice my career?
I used to have horses when I was younger and pretty much had to give up when I went to study in Uni due to pressure from parents.
I'm in my 30s now and my dream never changed, to have my own horse again.
The only problem is I can't find a way of logistically making it work. I work 9am to 5:30pm. My commute is an hour and a half each way to work, so getting home at 7pm is fairly regular to me, assuming I leave on time which again isn't always possible due to demands. I don't have flexible hours, work from home or anything like that. My husband works for the same place and has a similar demanding job so there's not much room for him to help either.
I can afford a horse on DIY livery, but full livery is simply too expensive and also seems a lot of money to spend on something you'd never really have time to do. Especially in the winter when the nights are dark from about 4pm. I'd thought about loaning the horse out, but then if they dropped out i'd be pretty much out of workable options.
How do people even balance this? Open to any suggestions.
Is my only option to sacrifice my career?