Bo Eason
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And my dad goes, yeah, that dog does the work of 10 men. And the reason you love that dog is because before you ever met that dog, it was a little puppy and it was born to the prior ranch dog who used to work on the ranch. So when the working ranch dog has puppies, the rancher does something.
The rancher takes all of the puppies, except for the runt of the litter, the smallest puppy born in that litter, he takes that puppy and he ties a little piece of yarn, like a pink yarn around its neck and then puts it back with his bigger brothers and sisters and watches that puppy grow over the next six, eight, 10 weeks.
The rancher takes all of the puppies, except for the runt of the litter, the smallest puppy born in that litter, he takes that puppy and he ties a little piece of yarn, like a pink yarn around its neck and then puts it back with his bigger brothers and sisters and watches that puppy grow over the next six, eight, 10 weeks.
The rancher takes all of the puppies, except for the runt of the litter, the smallest puppy born in that litter, he takes that puppy and he ties a little piece of yarn, like a pink yarn around its neck and then puts it back with his bigger brothers and sisters and watches that puppy grow over the next six, eight, 10 weeks.
And the whole family is watching all of these puppies and keeping their eye on the rut with the pink yarn around its neck. And my dad says, do you know why the runt of the litter becomes the next working dog on the ranch? And I said, no.
And the whole family is watching all of these puppies and keeping their eye on the rut with the pink yarn around its neck. And my dad says, do you know why the runt of the litter becomes the next working dog on the ranch? And I said, no.
And the whole family is watching all of these puppies and keeping their eye on the rut with the pink yarn around its neck. And my dad says, do you know why the runt of the litter becomes the next working dog on the ranch? And I said, no.
He said, because it is the smallest, it is the weakest, and it has to battle and it has to compete for food and survival against its bigger and stronger brothers and sisters. Well, eventually after eight, 10 weeks, they take all of the puppies from the litter, except for the runt and they give them away to other ranchers that in, in the, in the area. but they keep the runt of the litter.
He said, because it is the smallest, it is the weakest, and it has to battle and it has to compete for food and survival against its bigger and stronger brothers and sisters. Well, eventually after eight, 10 weeks, they take all of the puppies from the litter, except for the runt and they give them away to other ranchers that in, in the, in the area. but they keep the runt of the litter.
He said, because it is the smallest, it is the weakest, and it has to battle and it has to compete for food and survival against its bigger and stronger brothers and sisters. Well, eventually after eight, 10 weeks, they take all of the puppies from the litter, except for the runt and they give them away to other ranchers that in, in the, in the area. but they keep the runt of the litter.
And I said, why do you keep the smallest one? And he said, because the smallest one's heart is the biggest. And if he can survive or she can survive those eight, 10 weeks, then that is going to be the smartest, the fastest, the most determined dog that you have. And you can't afford to keep all the dogs. So you give them away to other ranchers and that is your dog.
And I said, why do you keep the smallest one? And he said, because the smallest one's heart is the biggest. And if he can survive or she can survive those eight, 10 weeks, then that is going to be the smartest, the fastest, the most determined dog that you have. And you can't afford to keep all the dogs. So you give them away to other ranchers and that is your dog.
And I said, why do you keep the smallest one? And he said, because the smallest one's heart is the biggest. And if he can survive or she can survive those eight, 10 weeks, then that is going to be the smartest, the fastest, the most determined dog that you have. And you can't afford to keep all the dogs. So you give them away to other ranchers and that is your dog.
And that's the dog can do the work of 10 men. And he said, you're the runt of our litter. Like I had four older sisters and one older brother. So he said, I bet on the runt every time. And once he told me that story, I knew what he meant. I was like, oh, okay. He's telling me that they ain't getting rid of me. Like I'm going to be around because I've made it this far.
And that's the dog can do the work of 10 men. And he said, you're the runt of our litter. Like I had four older sisters and one older brother. So he said, I bet on the runt every time. And once he told me that story, I knew what he meant. I was like, oh, okay. He's telling me that they ain't getting rid of me. Like I'm going to be around because I've made it this far.
And that's the dog can do the work of 10 men. And he said, you're the runt of our litter. Like I had four older sisters and one older brother. So he said, I bet on the runt every time. And once he told me that story, I knew what he meant. I was like, oh, okay. He's telling me that they ain't getting rid of me. Like I'm going to be around because I've made it this far.
And that was always my way, even though I was small body, that was always my way to compete. I always knew because when your dad tells you something like that, you believe it. He said, your heart is the biggest. And I go, okay, I'm going to count on that. And eventually my body, as I grew up through high school and then to college, my body actually grew up to my heart size. You know what I mean?
And that was always my way, even though I was small body, that was always my way to compete. I always knew because when your dad tells you something like that, you believe it. He said, your heart is the biggest. And I go, okay, I'm going to count on that. And eventually my body, as I grew up through high school and then to college, my body actually grew up to my heart size. You know what I mean?
And that was always my way, even though I was small body, that was always my way to compete. I always knew because when your dad tells you something like that, you believe it. He said, your heart is the biggest. And I go, okay, I'm going to count on that. And eventually my body, as I grew up through high school and then to college, my body actually grew up to my heart size. You know what I mean?
My body caught up with myself. And that's when I was really able to excel and really able to achieve the dream and make it come true. But that moment in that pickup truck, boy, when you have a parent or a coach or somebody that sees your greatness, which is pretty rare, most of them do like your coach did, like you're too small, like my coach did, or you're too slow. My coach said I was too small.