I don’t usually lose my cool over strangers—but the man at the feed store almost did it. He chuckled when I said I needed fencing wire and mineral blocks, then asked if my “husband” would be loading the truck.
I told him my husband walked out five years ago—and funny enough, the cows haven’t complained since.
People see a woman in muddy boots and a braid and assume she’s just “playing rancher.” They don’t see the 240 acres I run solo. They don’t see me pulling calves at 2 a.m., hauling hay in August heat, or elbow-deep fixing busted water lines. They just see a woman and assume she needs a man to get the job done.
Then came the note—nailed to my barn:
“I know what you did with the west pasture.”
At first, I thought it was a prank. That pasture is my pride, restored acre by acre after my ex left the land stripped and broken. But then I saw footprints by the pond. Fresh scratches on the barn door. And one night, a shadow near the fence line trying to break in.
This wasn’t a joke—it was intimidation. A land developer had sent someone to snoop, to scare me into selling. Wrong target. I called the sheriff, rallied my neighbors, and made sure the whole county knew what was going on. They backed off fast.
Here’s what I learned: Real strength isn’t doing it all alone—it’s standing your ground and knowing when to let others stand with you. I’m not surviving out here. I’m thriving.
So the next time someone underestimates you? Let them. Then show them who you really are. Not with words—with work. Every damn day.