Texan Edge
The Texan Edge is more than a podcast — it’s a Texas state of mind.
Hosted by Tweed Scott, author of Texas in Her Own Words, each weekday brings a short burst of inspiration, common sense, and straight talk from the Lone Star perspective. Some days we’ll visit a slice of Texas history; other days, we’ll share a story or reflection to help you face the day with grit, gratitude, and grace.
Whether you were born here, got here as fast as you could, or just wish you had — The Texan Edge reminds you why the Texas spirit still matters. It’s where optimism wears boots, humor has manners, and pride runs as deep as the oil wells.
Pull up a chair, friend. Take a listen.
On Wednesdays and Fridays, we focus on a Texas historical event to showcase our daily nugget. Ultimately, it's a Texas thing!
My why with The Texan Edge is to share the spirit of Texas—the humor, grit, wisdom, and warmth I’ve lived and loved here—with people everywhere. I want to remind folks each day that they carry the strength to face life with courage, perspective, and a smile. This podcast is my way of giving back the inspiration Texas has given me, one daily nugget at a time.
Because here at The Texan Edge, we don’t just talk Texas — we live it.
The Texan Edge is "Not just a podcast, but a Texas state of mind.”
Texan Edge
That Quiet Srength Texas Carry
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Episode Description
On today’s Texan Edge, Tweed Scott reflects on a familiar Texas scene: a ranch road after a storm, a loose gate banging in the wind, and the quiet work of fixing what the weather left behind.
Behind the easy smiles Texans are known for lies a long history of endurance. Storms, drought, economic swings, and hardship have shaped generations of people who understand something important—life doesn’t have to be perfect for you to keep moving forward.
Through a simple image of a rancher walking a broken fence line, Tweed explores the Texan trait of steady resilience—the ability to acknowledge trouble without letting it steal your spirit.
Today’s reflection invites listeners to consider a simple but powerful question: instead of staring at the broken fence in our lives, what might happen if we simply started fixing the first wire?
Show Notes
Episode Title: The Quiet Strength Texans Carry
Host: Tweed Scott
Podcast: The Texan Edge
In this episode:
- A sunrise scene on a Texas ranch road after a storm
- Why Texas smiles often hide a long history of hard seasons
- The resilience forged by storms, drought, and economic swings
- A rancher’s quiet lesson in fixing one fence wire at a time
- The Texan habit of acknowledging problems and moving forward
Key Texan Trait: Resilient determination
Texans have long understood that hardship is part of life on this land. From frontier settlers to modern ranchers and small-town families, the ability to keep moving forward—one step at a time—has become part of the Texas character.
Point to Ponder
Where in your life might you stop staring at the broken fence…
and start fixing the first wire?
This isn't just a podcast, it's a Texas state of mind.
Meet Tweed Scott And The Texan Edge
The Friendly Face Of Texas
Hard Seasons Behind Easy Smiles
Forward Motion After Disaster
The First Wire Mindset
Closing And Daily Sendoff
SPEAKER_00Picture a ranch road early in the morning. The sun's just starting to climb over the mesquite, and somewhere down the fence line a gate's banging in the wind after last night's storm. That's pretty normal morning in Texas sometimes. Well, hi there, I'm Tweed Scott, and this is the Texan Edge. You know, there's something about Texans that people from other places notice pretty quickly. We smile easily. We wave from the truck or the car. We'll strike up a conversation in the grocery line like we've known each other half our lives. And to an outsider, it looks like life in Texas must be pretty easy. But hey, that easy smile can be a whole lot misleading. Because behind most Texas smiles is a long memory of hard seasons. This land has never been gentle for very long. Storms roll in from the gulf without asking permission, drought can settle in and stay for months, sometimes years. Crops fail, cattle prices swing like a gate in the north wind, and through it all, people have to keep it going. Generation after generation of Texans learn something important. You can acknowledge the trouble without letting it steal your spirit. Think about the rancher who walks his fence line after a storm. He'll find half the wire may be on the ground, post leaning sideways, and gates are all twisted up. He doesn't sit down and admire the damage, but well maybe he mutters a few harsh words, but then he grabs a pair of pliers and starts fixing one stretch of fence at a time. That habit of steady forward movement is a trait woven deep into the Texan character. You see, after floods, after hurricanes, after hard economic years, the Texans don't pretend everything is perfect because it just isn't. They just keep moving forward. Now there's something to think about today. Where in your life could you stop staring at the broken fence and start fixing the first wire? And that's today's Texan Edge for you. I'm Tweed Scott, and I'll look forward to seeing you right back here again tomorrow. In the meantime, take care of your precious selves.
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98.1 KVET-FM (KVET-FM)