Horse Eden Eventing Game
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Year: 204   Season: Spring   
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Thu 02:54am  
Stables Online:  62 
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Honey Moon
02:54:23 Honey
Yeah I think that's how it works Min. Makes sense, at least in my case
Minerva
02:51:48 Min
Yeah I think its the colour/gelds/random keepers that drag LB placings down as it's done on the average. If you only breed a few high quality foals a year you'd probably do better than someone breeding 10 WWWs but also 600 PPPs they keep back
Ashcroft Park Stud
02:51:46 Ash
-HEE Click-

This is my favourite keeper, also attempting to get some dun going xD
Honey Moon
02:50:48 Honey
Yes she's still pretty! I love the silver
Ashcroft Park Stud
02:49:38 Ash
Yeah that's what I mean by promptly. A month vs a year is quite significant 😅
Deep Ocean
02:49:09 ♘Tosk
My only keeper and I have no hopes for him

-HEE Click-
Ashcroft Park Stud
02:48:56 Ash
Dun or not, she's lovely!
Deep Ocean
02:48:35 ♘Tosk
She's so pretty Honey
Deep Ocean
02:48:20 ♘Tosk
Fodder foals get deleted during the following RO. So they stick around for a montg
Ashcroft Park Stud
02:47:13 Ash
But fodder foals get released/deleted quite promptly don't they? Whereas geldings stick around for like.. a year
Honey Moon
02:46:30 Honey
-HEE Click-
I'm still sad she dodged the dun :c
Deep Ocean
02:46:20 ♘Tosk
I don't know. I also produce fodder foals here.
Honey Moon
02:45:37 Honey
I produce tons of AAs for geldings, but maybe that's bad for my LB placement? xD
Deep Ocean
02:45:27 ♘Tosk
Oh nevermind. Dropped off X board
Deep Ocean
02:44:55 ♘Tosk
Just checked. I'm #1 RID, WB, KNN, X and AA breeder. Lol.
Ashcroft Park Stud
02:44:15 Ash
I did get one WWW but it was a colt ><
Deep Ocean
02:43:36 ♘Tosk
I can understand the #1 KNN and #1 WB breeder.. but as for the rest?
Ashcroft Park Stud
02:43:35 Ash
I suppose if you have lots of horses that probably helps, as it says 'average stats of living AA foals'?
Deep Ocean
02:43:04 ♘Tosk
Yeh. I am also #1 X breeder as of this RO. And I wasn't even on the LB before
Dash and Duchess
02:42:41 DD | ~Squizard~
it really is a mystery lol i've got scattered AALB ladies and a pretty high boy, and i don't even think i'm on there xD

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Honey Moon
02:54:23 Honey
Yeah I think that's how it works Min. Makes sense, at least in my case
Minerva
02:51:48 Min
Yeah I think its the colour/gelds/random keepers that drag LB placings down as it's done on the average. If you only breed a few high quality foals a year you'd probably do better than someone breeding 10 WWWs but also 600 PPPs they keep back
Ashcroft Park Stud
02:51:46 Ash
-HEE Click-

This is my favourite keeper, also attempting to get some dun going xD
Honey Moon
02:50:48 Honey
Yes she's still pretty! I love the silver
Ashcroft Park Stud
02:49:38 Ash
Yeah that's what I mean by promptly. A month vs a year is quite significant 😅
Deep Ocean
02:49:09 ♘Tosk
My only keeper and I have no hopes for him

-HEE Click-
Ashcroft Park Stud
02:48:56 Ash
Dun or not, she's lovely!
Deep Ocean
02:48:35 ♘Tosk
She's so pretty Honey
Deep Ocean
02:48:20 ♘Tosk
Fodder foals get deleted during the following RO. So they stick around for a montg
Ashcroft Park Stud
02:47:13 Ash
But fodder foals get released/deleted quite promptly don't they? Whereas geldings stick around for like.. a year
Honey Moon
02:46:30 Honey
-HEE Click-
I'm still sad she dodged the dun :c
Deep Ocean
02:46:20 ♘Tosk
I don't know. I also produce fodder foals here.
Honey Moon
02:45:37 Honey
I produce tons of AAs for geldings, but maybe that's bad for my LB placement? xD
Deep Ocean
02:45:27 ♘Tosk
Oh nevermind. Dropped off X board
Deep Ocean
02:44:55 ♘Tosk
Just checked. I'm #1 RID, WB, KNN, X and AA breeder. Lol.
Ashcroft Park Stud
02:44:15 Ash
I did get one WWW but it was a colt ><
Deep Ocean
02:43:36 ♘Tosk
I can understand the #1 KNN and #1 WB breeder.. but as for the rest?
Ashcroft Park Stud
02:43:35 Ash
I suppose if you have lots of horses that probably helps, as it says 'average stats of living AA foals'?
Deep Ocean
02:43:04 ♘Tosk
Yeh. I am also #1 X breeder as of this RO. And I wasn't even on the LB before
Dash and Duchess
02:42:41 DD | ~Squizard~
it really is a mystery lol i've got scattered AALB ladies and a pretty high boy, and i don't even think i'm on there xD

You must be a registered member for more
than 1 day before you can use our chatbox.






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Forums > Rider's Lounge > Writer's Nook
   1 

Jewel Tiena: The Girl Who Never Lost September 8, 2025 02:35 PM


Sweet Valley
 
Posts: 1258
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Jewel Tiena: The Girl Who Never Loses

Jewel Tiena was born with dust in her veins and riding in her heart. From the moment she could walk, she was riding. Horses weren’t just animals to her—they were freedom, rhythm, and soul. By age ten, she was racing barrels like she was born in the saddle.

But fate had other plans.

At thirteen, Jewel suffered her first major accident. Her horse spooked during a trail ride, bolted, tripped on a rock, and threw her hard. She woke up in a hospital bed, surrounded by silence—and darkness. The impact had damaged her optic nerves. She was blind.

Doctors said she’d never ride again. But Jewel didn’t listen.

She learned to ride by feel. She memorized patterns, trained with voice cues, and built a bond with her horse so deep it defied logic. She raced again—blind—and won. Again and again. Crowds began calling her “the girl who rides by heart.” Of course, her horse knew the pattern. It wasn't too hard.

Just two years later, tragedy struck again.

During a training run, her horse slipped on wet ground. Jewel was thrown, landing hard. The blindness faded—but in its place came paralysis. She lost the use of her legs.

Most people would have stopped. Jewel doubled down.

She adapted. She trained harder. She learned to cue her horse with reins and voice alone. She rode with a custom saddle, strapped in but never held back. And she didn’t just return—she dominated.

Jewel became a phenomenon. She won local races. Then regionals. Then Nationals. She was the first adaptive rider to qualify for the National Finals Rodeo (NFR). And she didn’t just compete—she won. Year after year. Seven NFR titles. Undefeated. Still winning. Never losing.

But her legend was sealed in year six.

Mid-run, her saddle slipped. Jewel fell. The crowd gasped. But Ember—her horse—kept running. She finished the race without her rider. Fastest time of the day.

And then, in front of thousands, Jewel stood.

She stood. She walked across the arena. No braces. No chair. Just tears, triumph, and a miracle.

Doctors couldn’t explain it. Jewel didn’t try. She simply said, “Ember carried more than my body that day. She carried my spirit.”

From that moment on, Jewel wasn’t just a champion—she was a symbol. She founded Ember Academy nestled in the Colorado foothills for paralyzed riders. Her first student was a girl named Hanni Emberli.

Hanni had always felt most alive in the saddle. The rush of wind, the pounding hooves, the blur of barrels as she leaned into each turn—it was more than sport. It was soul. At seventeen, she was already a rising star in the barrel racing circuit, her name whispered with awe in dusty arenas across the Midwest.

But one summer afternoon, everything changed.

Her horse, Blaze, clipped a barrel mid-run. The stumble was sudden, violent. Hanni was thrown hard. The world spun, then went still. When she woke in the hospital, the doctors told her she’d suffered a spinal cord injury. She wouldn’t walk again. And riding? That was out of the question.

For weeks, Hanni refused to speak. Her room filled with trophies she could no longer chase. But one night, scrolling through her phone, she stumbled on a video: a woman who used a wheelchair galloping across a field, reins in hand, joy in her face. The caption read: Jewel Tiena, founder of Ember Academy, defying gravity and fate. Paralyzed once, healed twice, both by miracles.

Jewel’s story was legend. Years ago, she too had been paralyzed in a riding accident. But in a strange twist of fate, she regained mobility after another fall—a medical miracle. Instead of returning to competition, she built Ember Academy, a haven for riders with disabilities. Jewel believed that paralysis didn’t mean the end of movement—it just meant learning a new rhythm.

Hanni applied the next morning.

The academy was nestled in the Colorado foothills, where the air smelled like pine and possibility. Ember wasn’t just a place—it was a philosophy. Riders trained with adaptive saddles, custom reins, and horses specially chosen for their sensitivity and strength. The instructors, many of them paralyzed themselves, taught not just technique but resilience.

Jewel met Hanni on her first day. “You don’t have to be whole to ride,” she said, her eyes fierce and kind. “You just have to burn.”

It wasn’t easy. Hanni fell. She cried. She doubted. But she also laughed, learned, and slowly—miraculously—found her way back into the saddle. Her body didn’t move like it used to, but her spirit did. And that was enough.

Months later, Hanni entered her first adaptive barrel race. The crowd was electric. The buzzer sounded. Blaze surged forward, and Hanni leaned into the turns with practiced grace, her adaptive saddle hugging her frame. Barrel after barrel blurred past. Her timing was flawless. Her connection with Blaze—unbreakable. And when she crossed the finish line, the clock confirmed it: Fastest time of the day.

She had won.

The crowd erupted. Jewel Tiena was the first to reach her, tears streaking her face. “You did it,” she whispered, voice trembling. “You rode like fire.”

Hanni became just like Jewel. She won every race- even breaking Jewel's record. She finally ended up at NFR and won that- 8 times and still winning.

But fate wasn’t done with Hanni.

At the NFR, she was rounding the barrels. They headed home. The saddle slipped. Hanni fell off hard- after the timer stopped. Gasps rippled through the arena. But this time, something was different. As she lay there, stunned, she felt a tingling in her legs. A spark. A flicker.

The doctors called it a miracle. A rare neurological response triggered by trauma—just like Jewel’s own recovery years before. Over the next few months, Hanni began to walk again. First with braces. Then with crutches. And finally, unaided.

She became Ember Academy’s second legend. Not just for her victory, but for her spirit. For proving that fire doesn’t just burn—it heals, it transforms, it rises.

And every time she rode after that, she carried two truths in her heart:

She had won. And she had risen.

This is a fictional story of two fictional riders. Jewel Tiena- the girl who never lost. Not because she never fell. Because she always got up and mounted again.

Hanni Emberli- the girl who never lost. Not because she always won. Because she never got puffed up over her wins.


Edited at September 8, 2025 04:41 PM by Sweet Valley

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