
Become a hero to your horse by showing him a place where he can relax and find peace. To get to this place, John focuses on positive tools he wants Preacher and Charlie to learn.
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Many people talk about forming a partnership with their horse,
but very few folks stop to think about what the horse needs to get out of this
relationship.
We ask a lot of our horses. We expect them to overcome their
most basic survival instincts just because we say they should. The amazing thing
is that for thousands of years, horses have essentially acquiesced and done
this. They let us climb on top of them, walk underneath them, pick up their
feet, and stick fingers in their mouths. Because we have asked, they’ve pulled
heavy, noisy things behind them and faced bullets and cannons as men rode them
into battle.
Today, we ride them places they probably would not choose to go
by themselves. We teach them to do odd things that stretch the limits of their
actual physical capabilities.
And they do it for us.
Sure, we feed, water, and groom our horses. We try to keep them
healthy with shots and deworming. We pay for medical attention when they need
it. We provide shelter from the elements.
We may dress up their manes and tails in fancy ways and drape
them in expensive tack that we think looks cool, but that’s mostly for our own
benefit.
Lucky horses get pasture, buddy horses, pats, soft words, and
solid training that they can understand. Even luckier horses get peace.
Horses want peace for the same reasons we do. Knowing this
gives us a hugely powerful tool as we work toward building a lifelong friendship
with our horses while also gaining great and safe performance.
We want to live in peace with our families, our co-workers, our
friends, and our neighbors. So do our horses.
We don’t want to sit by uncomfortably and nervously twiddle our
thumbs in rhythm with the butterflies in our stomach while our boss rants about
our not doing something right—something that we haven’t been taught how to do.
Our horses don’t want to be worried and unsure about what’s expected either.
They don’t want to worry that they may be punished for something they don’t
understand.
We want freedom from worry. So do our horses.
Recognizing the emotions going on inside our horses is as
important as seeing what’s happening on the outside. Fear, worry, frustration,
anger, and uncertainty are all unpleasant feelings, both for us and for our
horses. Knowing that these emotions are the same in both people and horses gives
us insight when our horses toss their heads, jig, wring their tails, or paw the
ground nervously. When our horses are doing or feeling these things, they’re
miserable.
Well, guess what? You and your horse want exactly the same
thing! He doesn’t want to kick and you don’t want him to kick. He doesn’t want
to be nervous and you don’t want him to be nervous. He doesn’t want to throw his
head and you don’t want him to do that either. And it’s really important to know
that you don’t have to make him stop or make his life worse by punishing him
when he’s doing these things.
Knowing that your horse isn’t happy when he’s upset, unsure,
worried, producing negative behavior, or giving you more energy than you’re
asking for gives you a huge advantage when you begin to teach him what you want
him to do. You don’t have to react or try to show him that he’s wrong. You can
relax. You can smile. You can focus on showing him that everything is okay
because you just want him to be easy on himself and move a specific body part in
a specific way.
If you focus on something—anything—positive that you want your
horse to do, you become your horse’s hero by showing him there’s a place where
he can relax and find the peace he wants. This becomes a huge factor in
everything you do with your horse.
It keeps you focused on what you want, not on what your horse
happens to be doing at the time. You never have to correct or scold your horse
because you’re only working on what you want, not what you don’t want. The
training goes much faster because you don’t get sidetracked by "fixing"
behavior. You never need to work on any behavior you don’t want your horse to
do. It’s unnecessary, reactive, and negative. Instead, work only on the behavior
you do want.
When you understand that you’re showing and not fixing, nothing
you do with your hands will scare, hurt, or irritate your horse. Your job
becomes easier because your hands are always showing the horse the direction you
want his head or body part to go or how he is to move. Your hands are softer,
more forgiving, more consistent, more sure of what they’re asking, and less
reactive to what your horse is doing. Your hands are never focused on punishing
him for what he’s doing wrong, so he relaxes and accepts your cues because he
knows your hands have a reassuring way of telling him what he is to do that will
make both of you happy.
This sounds simple, and it is once you get the hang of it, but
like any change, it takes practice. If you stay focused and relaxed, if you keep
an even keel with your own emotions, you will accomplish the same behavior in
your horse.
Don’t change your actions because your horse’s behavior
changes. You become the constant, reliable, and safe leader that the horse
needs. Keep practicing your exercise or your lesson. Keep smiling, knowing that
you and your horse want the same thing. You both want to relax and know
everything is going to be okay. You’re not going to get hurt; your horse isn’t
going to get hurt. No one is going to get mad at either of you and you’re going
to have fun together.
Don’t correct. Guide. Don’t punish. Offer direction. Don’t make
his life worse. Show him how nice his life can be. To offer your horse a place
where he can have peace, you must always keep this concept clear in your own
head when you’re working with him on any exercise.
Treat your horse as if he’s a person you just met at a dance
who’s not sure of you or what you want. Hold the reins as if you’re holding onto
that shy person’s hand. Show him or her that you’re trustworthy—you just want to
dance. If they’re scared or nervous, they’ll be tense and the dance won’t look
good or feel good for either of you. Your goal is to get your partner to relax
so you can guide him or her around the dance floor as if you’re both floating on
air.
Honest. In every situation, you and your horse want the same things. He’s
willing to do anything for you. He’ll change his whole life just to find peace
for a day, an hour, a minute, or a moment. You become his hero by giving him
that wonderful, necessary peace. In the process, you both have a lot of fun and
you both get what you want.