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Self
Control Precedes Horse Control
by Ron Meredith
Merely
causing a horse to do something does not mean that you are
in control of the horse. Think about the times you have
seen someone put a chain lead shank under a horse's chin
or over its nose. They may have been successful in leading
that horse from Point A to Point B but the use of that shank
is a dead giveaway that they were not really in control.
If they were, coercive equipment would not be necessary.
Trailer
loading is another activity where you see a lot of out of
control horses. You may use a longe line or a buggy whip
or some form of bribery to get your horse into that trailer.
Most horses eventually give in to the pressure if you nag
them long enough or coerce them hard enough and they go
on that trailer. But that is not training. Even though you
succeeded in causing the horse to do what you wanted him
to do, you were not really in control.
At Meredith
Manor, the beginning step for students learning how to control
and teach horses is ground work we call "heeding." We call
it that because, to an observer, it looks like a combination
of leading a horse and getting a dog to heel. The trainer
first uses body language to establish himself or herself
as the lead mare in a little herd of two. Once the horse
tunes in to the trainer's body language and acknowledges
the trainer is leading the dance, the trainer then uses
body language to create shapes that the horse can successfully
mirror.
The
trainer starts by mirroring the horse's natural shapes (such
as the animal's normal walking stride) until the horse learns
that matching shapes is the name of the game. Then the trainer
can gradually take greater control by asking the horse to
mirror new shapes introduced by the trainer.
This
is a greatly oversimplified description of basic heeding.
But it is enough to help you understand that as both horse
and trainer progress in this relationship, "advanced heeding"
gives the trainer control to lead that horse wherever the
trainer wants it to go, to get the horse to stand quietly
for a farrier or vet, to march on that trailer without blinking
an eye, to stand to be caught in the pasture, and to respond
to cues under saddle. The trainer is in control. Not guessing,
not hoping, not praying, but actually in control without
coercion, without nagging, and without any special gadgets,
gimmicks or drugs.
There's
a catch, though (isn't there always a catch?). To succeed
at teaching a horse to heed or anything else for that matter,
students must first be in control of themselves. That's
the catch. If you want to be successful at teaching things
to your horse, you must first be in control of yourself
mentally, physically, and emotionally. You must be calm,
mentally focused, and self disciplined before you can to
control any horse.
Being
in control mentally means that your entire attention is
focused on your horse at all times. Every moment, every
stride, even when you are just leading your horse. Your
attention to your horse must be the greatest when something
startles it or when something goes wrong such as another
horse kicking out as you trot past. When you take your attention
off your horse, even for a second, you have just told your
horse that you won't always be there when something goes
wrong.
Your
ability to concentrate on what you're doing, to be mentally
with your horse at all times, has to be unquestionable.
The horse should be so used to you always being there that
it never surprises him when you are. A lot of people ride
along like they're in the back seat of a taxi cab and all
at once they want to lean forward and beat on the glass
and yell at the driver about where he should have turned.
Working with horses shouldn't be like that.
Being
in control physically means that you are always aware that
you are always creating physical shapes that your horse
will mirror. Every stride. On the ground, your horse will
walk the way you walk, in the direction you walk, and at
the speed that you walk. That's how you just walk him onto
that trailer. Under saddle, your horse will mirror your
breathing patterns and the shapes you make with your own
body. That's how you get him to speed up, slow down, collect,
extend, turn, and stop.
Being
in control physically does not mean physically dominating
the horse. When you look at pictograms of how to apply the
aids, you might get the impression that you are supposed
to put one leg back, the other on the girth and squeeze
so hard that you push the horse's hindquarters over. Give
me a break. Arnold Schwarzenegger is not strong enough to
push a horse over. Nothing about horse training or riding
is about physical force.
Finally,
to train horses well, you must be in control emotionally.
A real chess master makes his moves calmly without showing
any emotion that might reveal his real motives to his opponent.
Good riding, good training, calls for the same kind of emotional
control.
There's
a paradox here for riders and amateur trainers. A totally
effective rider or trainer must be so emotionally committed
to getting the job done correctly that they will do almost
anything, including waiting a year or more, to get the job
done exactly right. But someone with that sort of emotional
personality, that intensity of commitment, usually hates
waiting. So there is a conflict.
To succeed
as a trainer, you have to develop the discipline to control
your emotions and your ego. You cannot get greedy or impatient
and force your horse faster than it is physically and mentally
able to master something. You have to stay calm, stay in
control, and not let anyone influence you to alter a sound
training plan.
It does
not require strength to train horses to the highest levels.
Horse training is a mental game played in a physical medium.
As your ability to manipulate and control the horse increases,
your judgment about what to do and when to do it has to
increase along with that ability. Otherwise, you may cause
the horse to hurt itself and you don't want to do that.
© 2002
Meredith Manor International Equestrian Centre. All rights
reserved.
Instructor and trainer
Ron Meredith has refined his "horse logical" methods
for communicating with equines for over 30 years as president
of Meredith Manor
International Equestrian Centre, an ACCET accredited
equestrian educational institution.
Rt.
1 Box 66
Waverly, WV 26184
001 (800)679-2603
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