Â鶹ÊÓƵ

A girl and her horse

Feb 22, 2022
Eliza Mack

For Year 12 Boarder, Liberty Clark, the very thought of leaving her horses to attend Boarding school was a gut-wrenching one.

“Leaving for Boarding school was one thing, but the idea of leaving my horses was a whole other level,” Liberty says.


“I was lucky to be able to bring my horses to Toowoomba. It really meant a lot when I first started Boarding, particularly because I was a bit homesick to begin with. It really helped to have my animals here. Equestrian has really helped me feel at home at school and I am so grateful to the whole Â鶹ÊÓƵEquestrian community.”


Liberty, who is the 2022 Â鶹ÊÓƵEquestrian Captain and a keen showjumper, grew up on a cattle property in central Queensland with camp-drafting parents. “We were never really a showjumping family. My parents are big camp drafters, and also musterers – the disciplines are all very different,” Liberty explains.


“I’ve been riding since I was three years old, but I didn’t start showjumping until I came to Fairholme.

“One holidays, my parents bought me a cheap saddle and I put it on my quarter horse and I jumped around a bit at home, and I loved it. Eventually my parents realised I was serious about showjumping.

“I love everything about it. I love being on the back of the horse, the technical side of the sport and the adrenaline rush of competing.”


Last year, the Â鶹ÊÓƵEquestrian team took out the Lorette Wigan Cup Interschool Champion Equestrian Secondary School. It was the first time Â鶹ÊÓƵhas won the coveted trophy. 

Under Liberty’s leadership this year, the team are hoping to go back-to-back. “We have a fantastic team who are all really competitive. Our goal is to get that trophy again.”


But to get that trophy, Liberty says it involves a team of coaches and supporters and a whole lot of passion.


“We are lucky to have passionate coaches who come out every week to train us, watch our riding lessons, help us with out positions and check on how our horses are faring.


“And then we have the whole Â鶹ÊÓƵEquestrian team who are all so encouraging and supportive and friendly. It really is a great community who want to help others learn this fantastic sport.”

But it’s the unwavering support of her parents which means the most to her. “I absolutely wouldn’t be able to do this without the support of mum and dad. They bring my horses down every term – they have supported me so much that they haven’t been able to do their camp drafting. I can’t even begin to explain how grateful I am to them.”


Being in her last year of school, Liberty has started thinking about what her path outside of school is going to look like. One thing is for sure – it will involve horses. “I’m hoping to have six months off and be with my horses and to continue to work with my trainer. Horses will always be part of my life.”



It might surprise people to know that fashion is also on Liberty’s radar. “It’s very different to equestrian, but I’m actually wanting to make an equestrian fashion label – it combines my two passions.”


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I am soaking in the delights of fiercely contested debating finals, narrow wins and losses on the courts and fields of Toowoomba where the temperature is always colder or hotter than forecast and, the unparalleled joy of Junior School girls dancing on stage without inhibition, some perfectly attuned with the music’s beat and other’s not. I am absorbing the opportunity to witness learning at its essence. Performance in sport or The Arts is a public event. If your artwork is hung in a gallery space it is ‘public’ – open to be appreciated or criticised. If one is singing, dancing, debating or playing an instrument on stage with an audience there is nowhere to hide if an error is made. And, on a court or field – one’s performance is open to scrutiny or praise – or everything in between. Becoming is core business at these times. Anthony Simcoe, perhaps best known for his role as Steve in the epic Australian film, ‘The Castle’ with lines like, “Dale dug a hole, Dad,” or “How much for jousting sticks?” was a gangly fifteen-year-old boy when I first met him at Burnside State High School in Nambour, where he was seeking to master the volleyball dig, serve and set. Who would have imagined his becoming? Even years on, Anthony would say that he learned to become an actor through washing dishes at cafes – earning money between acting jobs – learning to observe the humanness in his customers. He washed a lot of dishes and served a lot of tables in order to become a credible member of ‘The Castle’s’ Kerrigan family. In tedious hours he learned about people and about hard, repetitive work. Repetition is the underpinning pattern of rehearsal and practice. Some of us do it well, others not so. I hear it in action many mornings as I pass the Performing Arts building, I see it on mornings and afternoons in our gym and on our oval. Rehearsal. Practice. Becoming. It is far more palpable; it would seem, than our classroom learning which inhabits a far more private space: often behind a closed door. How special it was, a few weeks ago, to invite the parents of Year 12.1 English to join their daughter, Mrs Anderson and I for a Period Five Friday afternoon lesson of ‘Macbeth.’ Seated in a huge circle in the confines of G24, students directed the lesson: spelling, quotations, thematic discussions and questions, for their parent and the other class members. It was an impressive moment (from a teacher’s perspective anyway) – to see students demonstrate their knowledge in a semi-public forum. It was timely for parents, no doubt, to remember the awkwardness of not knowing an answer, the joy of accuracy as well as the discomfort of feedback about an incorrect assumption – these are aspects of learning with which our students grapple, daily … as they become. There was delight in sharing the messiness of learning, the non-linear path of knowledge and how these segue to ‘becoming.’ Although, that moment of self-actualisation we seek or reaching the mountain top does not come at the same time or in the same way for any of us. And we have to be patient from our sideline position. We have to trust the process. We have to remember also, that losing and missing out are important components of future winning. We have to remember in the words of Saint Ignatius Loyola, Spanish Priest, theologian and thinker, “we learn only when we are ready to learn.” St. Ignatius reminds us that education is not confined to classrooms; it can happen anywhere and at any time: if we allow it. And thus, as adults, as we inhabit more than our fair share of sidelines real and metaphoric, during the rundown to the finish line, let us all be gracious in allowing our young people ‘to become’ … a process that is uneven, at times uncomfortable, messy, deeply disappointing and … often wildly exhilarating. Let us enjoy each and every facet and be gracious in the spaces where alignment with expectation is not met in performance or outcome. It is here, in this place, which can feel unpleasant, unsatisfactory and uninvited that the greatest learning and hence the greatest opportunity to become, can occur. If we, as adults who should know better, don’t mess with ‘the becoming.’ “Another ball game lost! Good grief!” Charlie moans. “I get tired of losing. Everything I do, I lose!” “Look at it this way, Charlie Brown,” Lucy replies. “We learn more from losing than we do from winning.” “That makes me the smartest person in the world!” replies Charlie. Win some. Learn some. Become. 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