There is a part of me, if I am honest, a deeply romantic part, that still kneels before the image of the cowboy. I have always been susceptible to the wide horizon, the severe beauty of open country, the idea that a man and his horse might move beneath a sky so large that the rest of the world falls silent. It is the same part of me that idolizes the monastic life. The cloister. The bells marking time. The rhythm of prayer and work. Both figures stand at the edge of society. Both inhabit landscapes that promise simplicity. Both suggest that life can be reduced to essentials.
In that inner mythology, the world becomes legible. White hats and black hats. Lawmen and outlaws. Violence and heroism separated by a thin but visible line. Love purified from lust. Right distinguished cleanly from wrong. I want, at some primitive level, for the big sky to function as moral architecture.
When I look at Clark Kelley Price’s When a Little Bit Is Everything, however, that romance falters. The cowboy is not astride his horse scanning the horizon. He is prone, collapsed at the edge of a narrow stream. His hat rests beside him, no longer an emblem but an object. His body is horizontal, pressed toward the earth in exhaustion. The horse lowers its head to drink and graze with quiet steadiness. The hardpan stretches behind them, vast and indifferent.
This is not conquest. It is need.
I have begun to suspect that my attraction to the cowboy, and to the monk, reveals something psychological. There is comfort in reduction. Social psychology speaks of a need for cognitive closure,”the desire for definite answers and the relief that comes from eliminating ambiguity. Binaries simplify. They conserve psychic energy. If the world can be divided into white and black, then I know where to stand.
Large, open spaces amplify that illusion. Environmental psychology suggests that spatial scale shapes perception and identity. Expansive landscapes evoke awe, but they also diminish ego. We feel small beneath them. That smallness can feel clarifying. Fewer walls. Fewer objects. Fewer competing signals. It seems as though complexity itself has thinned.
But simplification is not the same as truth.
The desert does not clarify morality; it clarifies vulnerability. In Price’s painting, thirst erases symbolic distinction. The stream does not inquire into character. It does not reward righteousness. It answers only to gravity and drought. The horse and the man bend toward the same thin ribbon of water. Saddle and hat, myth and narrative, all of it recedes before biological necessity.
Desolate spaces have a way of stripping away the superfluous. What remains is not heroism but dependency.
This is where my romantic imagination intersects with the ancient monastic tradition. The early Desert Fathers of the fourth century, figures such as Antony of Egypt and Macarius, retreated into the wilderness seeking purity of heart. They fled imperial Christianity and urban distraction, believing that silence and solitude would reveal God more clearly. Yet their sayings, preserved in the Apophthegmata Patrum, tell a more complicated story. The desert did not eliminate inner turmoil; it intensified it. “Go, sit in your cell,” one saying counsels, “and your cell will teach you everything.” What it taught was not moral simplicity but self-knowledge. The demons they encountered were often their own thoughts—anger, pride, despair—laid bare without distraction.
The desert functioned as a psychological laboratory.
Similarly, the American West, when stripped of cinematic mythology, does not manufacture virtue. It reveals proportion. The mesas endure. The sky expands. The human body tires. In this painting, the cowboy’s posture is instructive. He is horizontal. Embodied cognition research suggests that posture shapes emotional and cognitive states. To stand is to assert. To kneel is to submit. To lie prone is to surrender. The cowboy is not posing for legend; he is negotiating survival. Surrendering to need and desire.
And yet, there is dignity in that surrender.
What strikes me most in this image is the equality between man and horse. Both are oriented toward the same stream. Both are dependent on its narrow generosity. The hierarchy implied by rider and mount dissolves at the level of thirst. The desert levels distinctions. In that leveling, there is something sacramental. “Give us this day our daily bread” is not a request for abundance but for sufficiency. Enough for today. The stream in Price’s painting is not dramatic; it is enough.
I see in this a correction to my romantic impulses. I want solitude to purify. I want the big sky to divide good from evil. I want the monk’s rule and the cowboy’s code to simplify the moral field. But the desert, whether Egyptian or American, does not guarantee clarity. It guarantees exposure.
Space, I am learning, is less solution than mirror. Maurice Merleau-Ponty argued that we are not bodies placed into neutral containers called space; rather, we are oriented beings whose perception is structured through spatial engagement. The cowboy’s orientation toward the stream reorganizes the entire composition. Need reshapes the landscape. Thirst dictates meaning.
There have been seasons in my own life when the horizon appeared wide but resources felt thin. In those moments, ambition contracts. Titles and recognition lose urgency. A small encouragement, a brief conversation, a narrow affirmation becomes everything. “A little bit” is not metaphor; it is sustenance.
The mature romance, perhaps, is not the fantasy of moral purity but the acceptance of humble sufficiency. The Desert Fathers did not emerge from the wilderness as simplistic moralists; they emerged as men acquainted with their own limits. The cowboy in Price’s painting is not mythic; he is mortal. Yet in his bending toward the stream, there is a quiet nobility.
The big sky does not divide the world into white hats and black hats. It renders them small. The open space does not eliminate complexity; it exposes it. Desolate places strip away the superfluous, and what remains is not legend but need. A need that is shared, embodied, and undeniable.
When I look again at the painting, I no longer see primarily the romance of the West. I see a man and a horse meeting their thirst at the same narrow stream beneath an immense sky. I see hierarchy dissolved into dependency. I see vulnerability without spectacle.
And I find that, in its own way, more compelling than myth.
When a little bit is everything, humility becomes the truest form of heroism.

