I have two participant spots available for my last Full Immersion Clinic of the season. It will be held at The Equestrian Center, LLC, in Sandpoint, ID, September 7-9 from 8am-5pm each day with a one hour lunch break.
Auditors are welcomed and encouraged! For details on the clinic visit http://www.learnhorses.com/Clinics/camp.htm
For registration please visit http://www.learnhorses.com/Clinics/tec_registration-non-java.html
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Chores and clocks... Changing what defines a "training session"
Over the years as I try to give people ideas on how to keep
their interaction with their horse “interesting” so not to fall into the
seemingly inevitable “patternized” routine I often suggest for folks who keep
their horses at home, to do chores with their horse.
Recently I just saw a great photo of a numeral clock with no
hands on it titled “Horse Time.” I
re-posted it on Facebook adding, “When I have a horse in training often people will
ask how long a session is, and this picture of the clock is my answer.” After posting it, I realized I ought to
expand my thoughts on what I might consider part of a “training” session.
I believe that every moment of interaction with your horse
increase or decrease the quality of your relationship based on what you “offer”
your horse. Society often likes to categorize
and contain things, and it is no different in the horse world. The 45 minute or one hour lesson. The “magic” 30 days of training. The feeding two or three times a day. Keeping horses in stalls. Tying their heads down. Changing their natural movement into
unnatural gaits. We try to contain and
suppress the horse until he becomes whatever the “ideal” goal is in our head and
all too often we take the “horse out of the horse.”
What if instead we started to question our current acceptance
of the “rules” in our head, and at the same time no longer accept the preconceived
notion of “this is how we do _______________ because that is how we have always
done _______________.” I never ceased to
be amazed when talking with a completely non-horsey person and having them
watch a session, whether ground work or riding, and their clarity of being able
to literally “see” what is going on with the horse’s behavior tends to be far
clearer than the person who has spent their entire life around horses and who
has taken a lot of lessons.
I get a lot of colts to start each year, and typically most
owners have been waiting a long time to get on their horse want to get on and “go.” I on the other hand like things really,
really, really boring. Even if I’m
galloping, it needs to feel soft, balanced and boring. Most people approach interacting with their horse
with a “survive” the ride mentality.
I believe the foundation of a horse’s education should
include him learning things such as becoming mentally available towards a person,
learning to focus on what is being presented, learning patience, and increasing
his confidence and independence while still participating in communicating with
me in a reasonable manner.
So what does doing chores have to do with what I’m writing? My “practical” mind tries to make my life
more efficient as I run a “one woman” operation so all property maintenance, training,
teaching lessons, bookkeeping, etc. are included in my day. When I have a horse in for training I’ll
often use some of his “training” session as a good opportunity do chores. By doing so, it can help present “scenarios”
that can teach him some of the things I mentioned in the previous
paragraph. Let me give you a few
examples.
For my Dressage arena perimeters I have white chain, which
can break when loose horses or wildlife crossing through the property and step
on it. I’ll often take a horse, whether
lead or riding, and find a broken link, and ask him to stand and wait while I
fix the fence. If I’m riding, it may
require I mount and dismount multiple times (from both sides,) and the horse
starts to realize the ride isn’t “over” just because I’ve gotten off. As I fix the fence, the horse needs to stand
at attention almost as if he was watching (I try to imagine I’m doctoring a cow),
so there is no mentally “tuning me out” or grazing just because he has to wait.
I have tons of weeds this year with all the crazy rain, so I
may actually have a horse that is standing at the end of the lead rope or
ground tied as I use a shovel for a few minutes to pull weeds. The motion of the shovel, the gently “tossing”
of the weed clumps, great desensitizing, and again the horse needs to be
focused on what I’m doing, either ground tied or with the lead loosely slung
over my arm.
Cleaning out/scrubbing water troughs is another great one,
especially because the “flooding” of the emptied tub makes a great muddy water
hole for the horse to learn walking through, without me leading him, never mind
the sound of the automatic waterer refilling.
Opening and closing gates is another great opportunity for
him to learn to be helpful and participate.
One time I may lead him around the gate, another send him in and turn
around to face me while I’m still standing on the opposite side. If riding it is a great opportunity to use
the initially taught literal “one step at a time” tool, also a great time to
show him WHY he needs to be able to move his front end independent of his hind
end. The clanging of the gate, the shifting
of my weight in the saddle as I fuss and fidget with the gate are also great
ways to improve his confidence of movement.
If I’ve “left” things such as halters, lead ropes, etc.
hanging on the fence, teaching the horse to sidle up the exact spot I need him,
leaning off to the side of him to reach for ropes, “dragging” stuff along his
shoulder, over the saddle, etc. as I carry it back to wherever I need it. Again, the goal isn’t to pick up my stuff,
but rather to have the horse learn how to participate in a reasonable manner
for whatever the task may be.
Changing jumps in the arena is a great time for loose horse
to learn to follow, wait, follow, wait, as I drag jump poles, standards, walk
distances, etc.
Sometimes I’ll teach a lesson to someone else while I’m
sitting on a young horse. They have to
learn to stand relaxed and wait, and yet be ready as soon as I pick up a rein
to participate.
Now further along in their education we may get to clearing
the trails in the woods. If a heavy limb
or branch has fallen down, I’ll teach a horse to drag it, just like he was
dragging a calf. Him having to learn to
shift his weight according to what he is dragging, getting used to movement and
noise behind him, etc. I can do this
whether I’m leading him or riding.
Another similar one is instead of hiking a ladder all
through the woods, I’ll sit on a horse and with small clippers I’ll trim the
slightly overgrown trails. Patience,
movement from above his head, and branches falling down. DO NOT
TRY THIS AT HOME!!!!
My point is that based on the quality of the initial relationship
and respect of how you communicate, you can use your horse as a practical “tool”
but also be improving your relationship AND furthering his education.
Now you could go through each of the ideas I’ve suggested
above, and if there is brainlessness in either you and/or your horse, there is
no point in doing the tasks. And really,
the point isn’t to accomplish the task.
The point is you have a task which mentally gives YOU intention, whether
you realize it or not, that then gives the horse the sense that what you are
asking of him is “important.” Also, by
specifically having to accomplish the task, it will help you slow down and
assess where your horse is perhaps starting to tune you out, offer less than
100% brain and effort, etc.
BUT REMEMBER… If your horse isn’t “doing” what you want,
always, always, always, stop and assess what YOU are doing and offering your
horse in terms of clarity. Most times
the horse doesn’t “get it” because the human is unclear. If you’re feeling stuck, start describing (out
loud ) first what you want from your horse, and then literally how and what you
are going to do to communicate each “step” in order to get him to understand. If you horse gets “stuck” a portion of the
way through, check to see if you may be “trying to do it for him” without
realizing it, and therefor may actually be accidentally preventing him from
accomplishing what you want.
At clinics I often do an exercise where I have a human “play”
a horse, and another human play a “rider”.
The rider has only a lead rope held lightly in the human-horse’s hands
across the front of their waist, to communicate to their horse (whose eyes are
closed) and certain tasks I’ve assigned to the rider (the human-horse doesn’t
know what they are.) No voice, no
clucking, no physical touching of the human-horse, no nothing except using the
lead rope to communicate. Afterwards
everyone who plays the part of the horse talks about how they had to keep
guessing at what the rider wanted. The
riders, all usually say it took a huge amount of mental effort to figure how to
communicate and be specific. Then I
remind people that what they felt as a “horse” is usually what their real horse
is feeling, and I always ask that if they addressed their real horses with as
much mental effort as they did their human-horse, they’d probably see a big
difference in their relationship.
Now what did this blog have to do with clocks without
hands? Well for all the ideas I
suggested above, none I would every present in a “we have to get it
accomplished in this amount of time” manner.
If it takes three minutes until we find quality, fine. If it takes a lot longer, so what? My goal is quality, not quantity. So if I have to take a lot of “baby” mental
and physical steps in order to accomplish a task, so be it. When there is quality, your horse should feel
like putty in your hands. Light,
sensitive, responsive, reasonable, participative, curious and much more.
So if you’re a rider who is used to only have a certain
amount of time to be with your horse, try and experiment with perhaps changing
when you work with your horse so that you don’t feel the “pressure” of always
having to hurry up. If you’ve had a
great session, even if you have more time… stop early! If you present something and your horse makes
a really big improvement, leave him alone… that is the best reward you can give
him! The irony is the more you initially
“leave them” when they get it right, the more they want to be with you and the
more they offer you because they realize you recognize their efforts and don’t
just try to take advantage of them.
I haven’t worn a watch for almost fifteen years, and it isn’t
an accident. But then again, I live in a
lifestyle where I go to town once, maybe twice a week, and in my world, it
doesn’t even really matter what day it is… Perhaps I’m living on a horse time?
Sam
The value of a voiceless day...
If you’ve ever read any of my past blogs you can probably imagine
that in person I talk a lot. It is
always a challenge as an instructor to convey to the student exactly ALL of the
information I want to offer in a single session. Amazingly my voice holds up over my 3-5 day long
clinics (thanks to the best-investment-ever PA system I have)… But usually once
a year I’ll lose my voice for 2-3 days.
Although it can be annoying, I find it can be a great reminder forcing us to raise our
awareness in how to best communicate with other people when we can’t talk, so
too could we use that same awareness in how we interact with our horses.
It is also the time of year in which I invariably get a few
calls about young horses that are progressing in their education and have “suddenly”
started acting dangerously; bucking, kicking, bolting in response to something
their rider has asked of them… I find
(and perhaps this comes from WAY too many hours spent pondering as I mow the
property on the tractor and the riding mower) that there is a relationship in the
various ways people “react” to my having no voice and how they attempt to interact
with me, to being similar in how people approuch working with their horses in using “body language”
when we communicate. I know
the comparison may seem a little odd, but bear with me.
The times I have lost my voice and have been around young
children, when they realize my voice is gone and I can only barely whisper, I’ve
noticed an entire change in the child’s mannerisms. Behaviors such as responding to me in a
whisper because I’m whispering, or literally changing their posture into a more
“submissive” manner with their shoulders rolled forward and head slightly
hunkered down as if they were telling me a secret when we were “talking.” There also seems to be a slow tentativeness in
their behavior such as when passing me an item or taking something from
me.
I find the same goes with young horses. Horses are born with a curiosity that all too
often humans diminish rather than support.
But initially that young colt or filly is curious about everything. You go out to fix the fence, pull weeds, etc.
and if you do it long enough, eventually that youngster will come over and
inspect your activities. If you’re “hunkered
down” fixing fence, they will actually lower their posture as they inspect what
you are doing. Now they may bolt off and
then come back again, but there will be gentleness to their curiosity.
Back to the days of no voice, when interacting with
teenagers, at first there is a shock that I have no voice, and then you can
almost see the impulsive, mischievous thought, “So if she can’t talk, then
maybe I could __________.” They may not
actually act on that thought, but any initial intentions tend to be focused on restraining
themselves from acting on those thoughts that might get them in trouble. Then as they continue to interact, they will
often come up with a sudden bunch of answers for you every time they ask you a
question. But none of their answers will really be
appropriate and most will just be a result of them brainlessly talking.
All too often from a horse’s two to four year old age, which
is usually the most common time people really start to handle, saddle and start
young horses, the horses wind up getting anticipative while they get more “creative”
in how they are reacting to the human. The
horse doesn’t really mentally slow down, so they wind up with a lot of
excessive movement and chaotic thoughts, which eventually leads to them scaring
themselves and not feeling too good around the human. Because of the anticipation, they get
defensive, usually by starting to offer dangerous behavior as a preventative
measure to stop the human from asking more of the horse.
When voiceless and dealing with humans who are in their
20s-30s, often when they realize I can’t speak out loud, they tend to
immediately “shut down” and end any form of communication, as if to say, “Since
you can’t ‘talk’ there is no point in interacting.”
Often with horses from 5-10 years old they will have enough
confidence and exposure to “get by” in how they interact with humans, but they
have started to become accustomed to patternized behavior in how people
interact with them and what performance is expected of them. These patternized horses that often are calm
and “quiet,” can suddenly turn into a fire breathing dragon when something is presented in a way they are unaccustmed to. People don’t
realize how their complacency in working "routines" with their horse can actually teach their horse’s
brain to “shut down” towards anything new.
When dealing with people in their 40s and 50s when I have no
voice, they tend to become the “let me do it for you” sorts… Meaning, that if I
have no voice, in their good efforts and intentions, they will take over “all
decision making” as if my ability to do that was directly related to whether or
not I had a voice. If you show signs
that you do not want them to takeover, they tend to blow you off and continue.
Take a horse in their early to mid-teens and often their
rider is someone re-entering the horse world after years of “having a life with
school, work, and family” and now finally have to time to get back in the
saddle. All too often this group of
riders has fantasized so long about “how it used to be” that they often lack
the ability to really “see” what their horse is communicating to them. They tend to assume they always understand
and “know what is best” for the horse.
This can often lead to another version of “mentally shut down horses”
that are old and mature enough to have the patience to put up with their riders
ignoring them. But they also are the
group of horses that many times wind up having harsher bits, spurs, crops, etc.
in order to get a response from them because they are “dull” or “stubborn”.
When dealing with older folks while I don’t have a voice, at
first they think it is them that is having the problem in hearing me. Then they realize it is me that can’t
speak. Then their eyes light up, as if
they have nothing else to think about, and all the time in the world to “play”
guess-what-I’m-trying-to-communicate.
They have the time and enthusiasm and can usually decipher what I’m
conveying pretty quickly.
The older folks who interact with horses of all ages often
have quality relationships because they aren’t in a “rush” to hurry up and
accomplish anything. That doesn’t mean
that they don’t have goals, but often they enjoy the process of getting to the
end goal, rather than just value in the sole accomplishment of the goal. They also tend to notice a lot more of what
is “going on” with their horse, even if they aren’t sure what to do about it. If things don’t go “as planned” they don’t get
stressed out. Their horses also tend to
respond a lot more positively to change and trying new stuff.
So my point is, we
affect and have the ability to influence every moment of how we interact with
our horse. The slower and more open
minded we are, the greater the opportunity to take the time to really “see”
what is going on. Somehow I think being
able to communicate vocally in the rest of our life, allows us to rush in our intentions,
energy and movement when we work with our horses. If for one day we had to rely more on our
senses and pay attention to what we were actually doing, we might re-sensitize
OURSELVES and be in awe of the mirror affect it would have on our horses.
Doctoring the Defensive Horse
So
this latest blog came to my mind as one of the young horses I have in training
put a nice little puncture in his front leg half way between his knee and the
point of his shoulder. It seems to be a “rite
of passage” as I can’t remember how many four year old geldings I’ve seen that seem
to have the “need” to put a hole in their leg…
Anyhow,
this particular horse came to me pretty defensive about most things in life and
certainly when it came to anything around his legs. His nature in general would appear to most
horse folks “relaxed” or “quiet.” What I
was “translating” was that he was mentally shut down, or unavailable, and his
resistance made him appear, slow and quiet, whereas I saw a horse constantly
looking for “a way out” from anything associated with humans.
I’ve
mentioned in past blogs about Not Embracing the Brace, Filling the Holes in
your Horsemanship, and so on… this horse is the absolute epitome of why I at
times might seem a bit “over the top” in really laying down the basics and
creating clear communication. Any time
something concerned, bothered, or worried him, he’d mentally check out and
physically “lock up” or “blast” his body in any direction possible, including
considering running over the top of me.
In scenarios away from the other horses he’d seem like he was “in your
pocket,” but in reality it was the lessor of two evils- him being alone, or him
being “with” a human.
With
the distraction of other horses, if he was loose, I witnessed him actually
consider climbing my four foot metal gate to put himself back into the pasture to
be with the other horses. Even in the
herd, he had a hard time respecting the “leader” and had quite a few marks from
his “delayed response” after being warned by the herd leader.
The
first time I was working him in the round pen (he happened to be trotting) and
the horses on the outside of the pen moseyed off; he literally turned and ran
straight into one of the pen panels.
When
his brain “checks out” his eyes literally glaze over and he looks “empty.” Then when he checks back in, it is as if a
lightning bolt cracked him on the backside and his body will spring into
multiple directions at once. Watching
him loose trying to make up his mind just as to which direction in the pen or
how fast he wants to move would be stress inducing for the folks who’d want to “do
it for him.”
I
honestly believe he never was asked to think before he got here. This is not at all to nay say his owners who
specifically took their time to go slow and not rush him. The problem is their lack of experience and ability
to recognize and translate his behaviors has now led to a horse whose level of
anticipation about “anything” about to happen is pretty extreme.
But
horses are amazing… In just a few weeks he learned he could use his brain to
make decisions in a reasonable manner, participate but be respectful while
being groomed, tacked up… He learned about yielding to and following
pressure. He learned that he could move
backwards when asked. He learned how to
move one foot individually without a chaos.
He learned how to “wait.” That he
didn’t have to “flee” anytime anything more than a walk was asked of him. To literally look and think to his right and
left before he moved. To increase and
decrease his energy, to line up to the mounting block (loose), to be able to be
“sent” through obstacles on his own without mentally checking out, to push his
way through hanging tarps, to work at liberty in a 100x200 grass arena… To jump
over cavalleties, etc… And to bring himself “in” to his night pasture when his
name was literally called from the opposite end of the property.
But there
was still a very long “list” that I wanted him to learn to be reasonable
about. On that list included movement
near his legs… He’d tolerate (which did not mean I believed he was “okay” with
it) ropes swing on top of his neck, back and rump, but as they slid down to any
of his legs he’d either try to flee or slightly kick out at the rope. I’d been working his front legs in being able
to just dangle a rope to rub all over them, and then with each end of the rope
held in either hand to gently apply pressure against his leg, releasing as soon
as he “followed” the pressure I was applying.
I didn’t want to just see him physically yield his leg, but rather to
feel better about the moving, touching, etc. of his legs and feet.
And
then I walked out one morning and there was the swollen knee and upper
leg. It wasn’t extreme, but I realized
the smooth scratch about the width of my pinky I’d seen the day before, really
had a hole under it. I’ve dealt with
many wounds that turn most people’s stomachs… and this one was a pretty petite one.
So I had
an already defensive and anticipative horse, who now was 100 times more on edge
with the pain of the wound. Which meant
that even when I just stood on the side of the wound and patted his neck, he’d
try to turn his head to block me from getting anywhere near his injured leg.
This
is where revisiting the pre-established basics comes into play. Although he was pretty much dead set that
there was no way I was getting near the wound (which he communicated to me with
offerings to strike out, run backwards/sideways/forwards and considered running
me over, locking up his body so that any moment of touching he would go
straight up in the air, bracing his neck in his “got to bail” position over his
right shoulder with his left shoulder trying to “push” on my personal space to
keep me at bay, etc.
Now my
“scale” of extreme behavior is pretty crazy compared to what the average horse
person has seen, and by no means was this horse particularly “creative” in his
resistance. What really intrigued me was
the way he “held” on to his anticipation causing him to emotionally come
completely unglued mentally.
Lips
curled up and pursed, chest muscles twitching, tail wringing, neck so rigid you
could bounce a coin off of it, the whites of his eyes showing… He just knew I
was going to saw his leg off, except because of his insecurity, as his defense he
tried everything he could to avoid looking at me, thinking about where I was
asking him to stand, or staying mentally “tuned in” as I touched him (not on
the leg.)
So
each time he presented a way to “avoid” mentally addressing me, I had to get
him to “let go” of what he was trying.
It was a bit like an emotional roller coaster for him which was mirrored
with dramatic movement; he’d initially lock up, then try and have excessive
movement, then lock up, then tune in to what I was offering, and then start to take
baby mental and physical steps/movement, then would take a huge sigh or blow
his nose, and instantly all of the signs of stress and anticipation would
dissolve from his body language. Then I’d
go back to whatever I’d originally been asking, whether it was where I was
touching him, or with how much “energy”, etc.
Keep in mind my standard for him standing quietly was that I could “work
on him” with him standing ground tied (the lead rope loose on the ground.)
Although
my “goal” may have appeared to doctor his leg, it really was to help this poor
horse feel better about life. He had no
trust that I was going to help him relax.
He had no belief that I’d really “follow through” until he made a
change, which is why I believe he hung on to his extreme mental resistance for
so long. But as soon as he “let go” of
his anticipation it was like he turned to putty in my hands- literally.
Eventually
on day one I got a hose (by the way I don’t think he’d ever been hosed/bathed)
on him for twenty minutes while he stood with his head low and relaxed and with
a hind foot cocked. That afternoon I put
a sweat on his leg which involved applying ointment with a Popsicle stick (he
would have sworn it was going to be a knife), seran wrap, cotton and then vet
wrap. The irony was that he didn’t care at
all about the crinkly packaging of the vet wrap and cotton rolls or the actual
touching of his leg as I applied the bandaged.
The
next day I applied a new bandage after he’d gone through the night without one,
and the swelling was definitely going down.
I don’t work by the clock, and although initially met with the similar “the
world is going to end” resistance as the previous day’s initial session, in
less than a quarter of the time he completely relaxed and let me doctor him.
That
evening after he came in from grazing I asked him to stand (totally loose) and
I was able to approach, although for one moment he thought about fleeing the opposite
way from me, and then he took a deep sigh and stood relaxed as I undid his
bandage and inspected the wound.
On day
three of doctoring he just about put his leg in my lap to inspect; all signs of
swelling were gone as was the heat and he was totally sound.
The
next day when I actually went to “work him” his entire attitude and body language
from the start was much softer and more participative without me having to “do”
so much to get his brain with me. We
still have quite a ways to go, but it was like he realized I was there to
support him through worrisome scenarios, rather than scare him through them.
So as
much as it was on my list to gently and slowly address working around/with his
legs and desensitizing him to movement, pressure, etc., by having him get hurt,
it fast forwarded his “learning” how to be reasonable in a situation he clearly
thought was going to kill him.
Every
single one of the “tools” I used in how I communicated with his brain and then
body was through the over simplified points of yielding to pressure, directing
his brain, influencing his energy and a clarity of when something he offered
was “correct” or not the desired response.
I
could imagine many other folks attempting to “take on” a horse like him, who to
a certain extent you could probably “bully” into tolerating a scenario, but I’d
hate to imagine where that sort of interaction might lead in the long run. I’ve already witnessed a few of his “light
switch” dramatic moments, and in my mind, “challenging” a horse like this to “get
it right” is like lighting a fuse on the end of a stick of dynamite.
Over
the years I have heard quite a few stories of the “wild and crazy horse” that
of course gets hurt, and in the human’s commitment to “doctor” that horse,
where under other circumstances the human would never had spent so much time
with the horse, that the horse and human actually built a very trusting
relationship and “fixed” a lot of the horse’s initial “problems” without
realizing or trying to do so.
But all
too often people wind up being distracted and aren’t really “committed” themselves
to mentally focusing on their horse until the moment of an emergency. So instead of “waiting” for a scenario like
that, for those who don’t have an injured horse, maybe experiment with interacting
with your equine partner as if it were as important as attending to a
wound. You might be surprised by just
having the thoughts in your head how the difference in your energy and
intention will be perceived by your horse perhaps causing a change for the
better in him.
Here’s
to “TLC”,
Sam
Filling in the "holes"
I’ve had a new horse come in for training and in between
this crazy ongoing rain I head outside to work with him. He is a four-year old that has had a lot of
handling, though his owner’s experience is limited, she has gone “slow” with
him…
TEC re-opened for 2012
I arrived safe and sound to the gorgeous northwest and have spent the week re-opening the Sandpoint, ID facility. Starting Monday May 21 I'll be starting lessons, training and more! Reminder there will only be one Full Immersion Camp this year held June 8-10. Please visit www.learnhorses.com for details!
Expanding your Experience- Breaking the boundaries of invisible barriers
As I’m winding down in my last week of teaching here in the
quickly warming Arizona desert and prepare for my trek to the north where
cooler temperatures and greener pastures await (think rain and wet), I have had
several conversations with students whose initial reaction to my leaving is a
state of semi panic. But as I try to
continually remind people my goal is to empower them with the awareness, ability
to assess and interpret their horse’s behavior, and then offer them tools to
effectively communicate with their horse in order to achieve the desired mental
and physical changes.
With the ending of each lesson we always review a few of the
key points we addressed in that session, so that the student is able to literally
think through and then communicate verbally what, why and how they did what
they did, so that when they are on their own, they are able to address
behaviors, issues, etc. without having to rely on me “watching” them.
Several new students this winter have started to really “take
the ball and roll with it.” What I mean
by this is that at the beginning of each lesson we discuss the rides that occurred
between lessons; as the students are able to vocalize observations (of themselves
and their horse), report on experimenting with various “tools” to achieve
desired results, and have a more “tuned-in” perspective in how they approach
working with their horses, their confidence increases tremendously, which of
course is a rewarding and encouraging feeling to both the rider and horse. This is the “path” that allows the rider to
not feel “needy” towards the riding instructor and still allows a forward
progression with a clear direction.
Most of all my clients find me through word of mouth
recommendation and over the last few days, without my initiating, several have
mentioned that what they are learning, how I approach teaching them, and the “issues”
I help them address, were not “at all” similar to what our mutual acquaintance
had mentioned in suggesting they work with me.
I find humor in this because it is completely true.
I believe the challenge in being a quality instructor is
assessing what either the human student or horse need me to address and we go
from there. Even if I have two students
with similar “problems”, I may have to approach teaching them in completely
different ways.
So when a current student is asked about how or what I teach,
their answer may be appropriate for them, but their friend might not have the
same experience with me. And yet, they
all can arrive at the same end goals.
The downside to this, is that I often find what I do to be very “clear
and simple”, and yet to even the most supportive students, when asked to “summarize”
riding with me, they can’t. For the
student’s self-growth, their horse’s contentment and their goal achievement, I
believe retaining flexibility in our “curriculum” helps both the rider and
horse maintain a positive mental and emotional experience in their journey. The downside is that this approach often can
be a bit difficult for them to summarize to someone who hasn’t experienced a “Sam
lesson.”
Business wise the “vagueness” of my services not being “easily
defined” often frustrates people when they attempt to “pinpoint” my style. But blending the boundaries of “what I offer”
allows no restrictions, no reservations and no judgments… I often find riders
don’t experiment enough with their horses because none of their riding peers
are “doing it.” From things as simple as
the “type of clothes” one wears (usually defining what discipline they ride) to
the type of horse ridden, to the equipment used. Take a ranch horse and jump that log? Take a Thoroughbred and herd cows? Take a Dressage mount and ride it in a
western saddle through an obstacle course?
Why not? Who created the “boundaries”
and why are people so concerned with what others think? (Obviously prioritizing the safety factor in
any scenario.)
So my point is wherever you are at in your riding situation
and experience, you just may not know what you’re missing out on by not keeping
an open mind. Not to sign up for a lesson ever week and have to be committed for
the rest of your riding days, but rather for some insights and new directions
for you to work on…
Sadly the thought of working with someone new, especially
when “nothing is wrong” can be scary as many horse folks have had a less than
positive experience with perhaps a new instructor or clinician. So before you commit to something “new” go
and audit a lesson to find out “what you’re getting” as far as the horse
professional’s teaching style, ability to communicate, etc. Notice if the instructor seems to have a
predetermined focus for the lesson or do they assess the student and horse’s
current “needs.” Look for communication
between instructor and student, often people teach, and theories can be clear
in their head, but that does not always mean the student on the receiving end
is as clear in what is being taught.
Look for the mental availability and physical participation of the
horse; as the lesson progresses does the horse seem “happier” or does it get
stressed the more “stuff” is being worked on?
Go “break the boundaries” and watch what wonders in can do
for your relationship with your horse!
Sam
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