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Friday 07 March 2025 17:35:35 GMT
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āœØ Body language, energy, and the power of choice. āœØ Working with my horses isnā€™t about demanding obedienceā€”itā€™s about guiding them, showing them possibilities, and letting them make their own decisions. In this session, I set up a Cavaletti off the rail, creating three options: 1ļøāƒ£ Stay on the rail and go around it. 2ļøāƒ£ Come closer to me and pass in front of it. 3ļøāƒ£ Line up perfectly and go over it. Instead of forcing an outcome, I used my body languageā€”my hips, knees, shoulders, and the movement of my handsā€”to shape her path. As she approached the corner, I asked her to come slightly off the rail, placing her perfectly in line with the Cavaletti. And she chose to take the jump. šŸ‘ But hereā€™s the thingā€”I never expected her to. I wasnā€™t attached to the outcome. Some moments, she skipped it. Other moments, she soared. And either way? She got rewarded (rewarded for other movements, effort, behaviors). Because for me, training isnā€™t about compliance. Itā€™s about engagement. About communication. Itā€™s about creating a space where my horse feels like she has a say say in her own experience. Horses, like us, crave that dopamine hitā€”the rush of feeling good, of understanding, of achieving. And I want to make sure that comes not from pressure or fear, but from curiosity, problem-solving, and the joy of movement. So whether she followed my suggestion or chose another option, I found something to reward. Because every moment of engagement, every thoughtful decision, is a step toward a willing, confident, and connected horse. How often do we allow our horsesā€”or ourselvesā€”the space to explore different choices without fear of ā€œgetting it wrongā€? šŸ¤”
āœØ Body language, energy, and the power of choice. āœØ Working with my horses isnā€™t about demanding obedienceā€”itā€™s about guiding them, showing them possibilities, and letting them make their own decisions. In this session, I set up a Cavaletti off the rail, creating three options: 1ļøāƒ£ Stay on the rail and go around it. 2ļøāƒ£ Come closer to me and pass in front of it. 3ļøāƒ£ Line up perfectly and go over it. Instead of forcing an outcome, I used my body languageā€”my hips, knees, shoulders, and the movement of my handsā€”to shape her path. As she approached the corner, I asked her to come slightly off the rail, placing her perfectly in line with the Cavaletti. And she chose to take the jump. šŸ‘ But hereā€™s the thingā€”I never expected her to. I wasnā€™t attached to the outcome. Some moments, she skipped it. Other moments, she soared. And either way? She got rewarded (rewarded for other movements, effort, behaviors). Because for me, training isnā€™t about compliance. Itā€™s about engagement. About communication. Itā€™s about creating a space where my horse feels like she has a say say in her own experience. Horses, like us, crave that dopamine hitā€”the rush of feeling good, of understanding, of achieving. And I want to make sure that comes not from pressure or fear, but from curiosity, problem-solving, and the joy of movement. So whether she followed my suggestion or chose another option, I found something to reward. Because every moment of engagement, every thoughtful decision, is a step toward a willing, confident, and connected horse. How often do we allow our horsesā€”or ourselvesā€”the space to explore different choices without fear of ā€œgetting it wrongā€? šŸ¤”

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