Texan Edge

Cowboy Calm

Tweed Scott Season 1 Episode 197

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0:00 | 3:51

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Description
When storms roll across Texas, something remarkable often happens: the panic level goes down and the calm level rises. In today’s episode of The Texan Edge, Tweed Scott explores what he calls “cowboy calm” — that steady, grounded mindset Texans are known for when life turns dangerous, uncertain, or chaotic. 

Whether it’s a tornado warning, a family crisis, bad news from work, or a difficult season of life, this episode reminds us that courage isn’t loud and fearlessness isn’t the goal. Real strength is staying steady enough to help the people around you when things get rough. 

Practical, thoughtful, and unmistakably Texan, this episode is about choosing calm over chaos and becoming the kind of person others can lean on when storms hit.  

Show Notes 

  •  The unique Texas response to storms and emergencies 
  •  The difference between bravado and real calm 
  •  Why Texans often focus on helping others first 
  •  “Cowboy calm” and steady leadership during chaos 
  •  How one calm person can change the tone of an entire room 
  •  Fear versus panic: learning not to let fear “drive the truck” 
  •  Practical Texas-minded resilience during hard times 
  •  Why the world needs more calm, capable people right now

 

This isn't just a podcast, it's a Texas state of mind.

A Texas Storm Sets The Scene

SPEAKER_00

Hi there, it's Tweed Scott, and I'm back with another edition of The Texan Edge. Picture this. It's late afternoon in central Texas, and the sky turns that strange greenish color that we all recognize. Weather alerts are exploding on your phone, sirens are going off in the distance, and TV anchors are pointing at red blobs on their radar like it's well, like the world's coming to

Cowboy Calm In Action

SPEAKER_00

an end. And then you look across the street. There's your neighbor. He's not panicking. He's not live streaming his fear. He's quietly checking on the older couple next door, making sure that the kids down the block know where to go if the storm gets bad. That right there is what I call cowboy calm. Texans have lived through just about every kind of storm that you can have thrown at you. Droughts that cracked the ground wide open, and then there were the hurricanes that turned highways into rivers, and then there were the tornadoes

When The Storm Is Personal

SPEAKER_00

and the floods and the ice storms, sometimes all in the damn day.

Bravado Versus Real Calm

SPEAKER_00

If anybody has earned the right to panic, it's probably Texans. But the Texans that I admire most, they don't scare easy. They don't pretend the danger isn't real. They just refuse to let the fear be the loudest voice in the room. Now here's a big difference between bravado and calm. Bravado is loud. It boasts. It says, Ain't nothing gonna touch me right up until the moment that it does. Calm is different though. Calm says, Yeah, this is serious. Let's do the next right thing. Maybe your storm isn't weather. Maybe it's a phone call from the doctor or a boss who says, Well, we're gonna have to make some cuts. Or it could be the kid who walks in and says, Well, I messed up and it's bad. In that moment, everybody is watching

Fear Rides Along But Doesn’t Drive

SPEAKER_00

somebody. Somebody's reaction is going to set the tone for the whole room. A Texan understands that calm is contagious. One person who keeps their voice steady and their words measured and their head clear can pull a whole family or a whole company back from the edge. Now, let's be honest. Calm doesn't mean that you're not scared. It means that you've decided that your fear doesn't get to drive the truck. You take a breath, you take a look at what you can do and not what you can't do. You check on your people. You prepare as best you can, and you leave the drama to somebody

Share It With Someone In Need

SPEAKER_00

else. Today, if you find yourself in the middle of a storm, literal or figurative, I want you to remember that neighbor checking on folks instead of refreshing the radar. Ask yourself, what would the Texan in me do right now? Would they scream and run in circles? Or would they just say, All right, here's where we are, now let's get to work. The world already has plenty of panic. What it needs now, it's what Texas has always supplied. It's a few more men and women who don't scare easily. Hey, I want to thank you for riding along with me today on the Texan Edge. If you know somebody whose life feels like a storm right now, send this their way, and tomorrow we'll be saddling up and heading out to the cattle trail. Till tomorrow, take care of your precious selves, and we'll plan on seeing you then.

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