Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Wounded Leader?
I have a friend who came up with a theory about why last Friday's ride with Harley might have been so off kilter. While it doesn't matter too terribly much why, I do like to analyze and try to learn from the possibilities.
As I shared previously in the blog, I came to my horse time on Friday deeply wounded by someone I had thought of as a friend. While I wasn't wearing it outward physically, emotionally, I was definitely "licking those wounds," being rather self absorbed and putting on a pretense. Harley sensed my woundedness.
Maybe horses don't discriminate between physical wounding and emotional wounding in people since their world isn't about that. So to him, I might have just been a mess...even a liability!
I can't imagine a herd of horses continuing to follow a lead mare if she had been gouged by a lion, was nursing her wounds, limping along pretending all was well...
Like the theoretical lead mare, I wasn't myself. Harley knew it. But I insisted on leading our partnership that day.
So, is it possible that it literally frightened Harley to have a "wounded leader" call the shots from his back?
Hmmm....thoughts?
Saturday, January 10, 2009
What Will I Believe?
Have you ever believed lies so completely that they actually began to define a new truth?
On Friday, I was mulling over something someone had said about my horsemanship intentionally to wound me...it was a lie...but by rehearsing what she said over and over again in my head I began to believe the lie! For 48 hours I became what she ridiculed me as being...something that I had NOT been! During that 48 hours, my believing and owning the lies she said to me wreaked HAVOC with my horsemanship.
Waking up now, I have decided to reject the lies and to refocus my mind on truth.
I learned something very powerfully through this!
It was a continuation of what I experienced with Harley a week and a half ago. If I go to him with an agenda, with a lack of confidence, or a pretense, then he will see through it in nothing flat. On Friday, I even walked him to the trailer explaining, "Harley, you know that lady you really like? Well, she said some things to me that really have made me feel like garbage...and that is what she wanted! So today I need you to give me the benefit of the doubt and fill in for me." (Obviously, how much of this Harley actually understood is up for some debate. ;-) But giving my feelings a voice was cathartic for me certainly.)
What transpired was the single most challenging ride I have *ever* had with him--even going back 4 years ago! We started out nice and ended nice but everything in between was crazy...popping up, hippity skippity, crow hops, bucking, stomping of back feet...and my last maneuver looked a bit like a trick rider (well, not so graceful)...clinging for all I was worth with my right hand to his mane, my left hand to the rein on his sidepull on the left. My right leg was trying to hang over the saddle, left foot still in the stirrup...he was bucking as we cantered up a hill and I had to decide to plant my feet on the ground since it was clear I couldn't haul my sorry bum back up into the saddle. I was so angry, I was determined not to come off. As it became clear that my feet were going to be landing on the ground ahead of another part of my anatomy, I was concerned that I would be dragged...as I was NOT going to let go! Besides, if I let go, I would have the potential of falling in the way of Harley's back feet and being pummelled. NOT a good thing.
Miraculously, as I allowed my feet to touch the ground on his left side (I was facing his tail, if you can picture it), he came to a dead STOP. Thankfully.
Having gotten the brace out of his system, I praised him for not freaking out more for having me cling to his left side so desperately. I then took some deep breaths and remounted. We rode the rest of the way back to the trailer at a nice calm walk.
All of this came out ok, but I cried the entire way home. I was positive that the nasty person whose lies I had believed would be laughing with glee if she could see me.
After thinking and praying through this a bit, I realized that by believing those lies I had effectively changed. After 6 rides the previous week, four of which were on the trail--and all on the trail were AWESOME--I knew that the negotiable thing...the variable had been me...what I believed about me and my horsemanship. It was that simple. And all because of a ridiculous thing that someone said to wound me! Go figure!
So after Harley and I took Saturday off, this morning, we got up bright and early and hubby and I headed out for a one hour ride. Same place. I talked with hubby about what I was bringing to this ride that was going to be different from Friday's ride. I wanted to focus on the positive. But more than that...I don't buy thinking "positive" unless it is TRUTH. So I brought that to the ride, too. What was truth was great enough that I didn't need to drum up something fake.
Since May of 2007 when Harley came back from Melissa's (my trainer) Harley and I have ridden the trail at least 140 times. In all that time, there has been some excitement, sure, but never has there been a ride like the one we had on Friday. I have been in process the entire time. Surely I lacked confidence more earlier on in our journey together...but Friday I was trying to fake it. He is used to me being there for him--to whatever capacity I can be. He knows if I am not *able* to be there and am doing my best. But Friday, I wasn't bringing what he knew I could bring. I wasn't reliable. I wasn't predictable. I wasn't as confident as I typically am. I couldn't be. I was too busy being caught up in my own drama. Believing the lie that I am a rotten horse-mom and lousier horsewoman.
This morning, I returned to what was true. I refocused, recentered, and rehearsed the truth in my head over and over again to the point of believing it again, so all was right in our world together. We had the quietest ride we have ever had, in fact. It was peaceful as the sun came up.
What did I take from this?
What do I believe about myself? About my horsemanship? About how my horses respond to it all? How shakable are these beliefs? Can one difficult experience, one rude comment topple all of it down? I need to be more tenacious than that!
Or if I have a ride that challenges me, or if, when I am handling one of my other horses--Doc--I feel like he is taller than a 3 story building and has no idea I am on this planet...will that now define my horsemanship? My skill? All the things I have learned? Does that one experience somehow minimize or negate all the incredible learning moments that have preceded it?
No. I have learned through this experience to guard my heart, my mind, my horsemanship...to decide what I will believe. I guess in a strange way I am glad that the person said to me what she did. I learned an incredibly valuable lesson through this. One that I will not soon forget. My horses and I will be better for my having learned it.
Saturday, January 03, 2009
Example of Matter of Fact-ness
Wow. WOW! Today was something. Another significant day in the life...
The first thing that was obvious to me was that this was going to be a definite lesson before my very eyes in what Tom Moates refers to as "matter of factness." Given my own recent struggle with this, I was all eyes and ears to see where this would go.
To P., all was going to be ok. She was so "matter of fact" about all of this. She was just ponying another in a long line of horses (she used to be a trainer) and Doc would be just fine. That was in her head--I have NO doubt of it. She announced that they were heading off to go meet a group of bicyclists and laughing and hollering kids...Doc in tow. "Matter of factness" again.
The crossing in this photograph is one of our formerly troubled spots. P. walked him in there...and he drank some water, then pawed at the water and acted like he wanted to play. "Matter of factness" again...
As we continued on, we heard a helicopter circling... pretty low, too. It was clear that it was trying to land probably in the staging area or close by. As we got back to the parking lot, it was taking off. P. calmly stopped and Doc and P's horse (and Breezy too) did great for it, even though the helicopter was pretty low and veered off just slightly away from us. It was almost over the top of us.
Matter of factness...again.
Friday, January 02, 2009
Whee...sort of!
We chose an unfamiliar trail with lots of ups and downs heading to the river. We cantered and trotted some of it in little bits. Harley seemed to love the combination...and that I was asking *him* for the pace he loves...instead of him asking me (repeatedly) and me saying (repeatedly), “Not now, Harley.”
After meandering along the river, coming back up, I let Harley go...for the first time ever really...my idea to go as fast as he wanted (safely). Off we went.
As we blitzed along out on the trail, I exulted...”This is what I dreamed of...this is what I have dreamed of...WHEEE!!!!!” (Never mind how immature this is...just being honest! LOL!)
I have worked with Harley a lot this week. Monday was another nice ride at Kronan...different trail for much of the way than today. Then Tues. and Weds. I worked with him at the arena trying to get some things accomplished. Those sessions were discouraging to me...and I doubted that yesterday at Kronan would be positive because of that, but chose to do it anyhow. One year ago, I was too intimidated by Harley to ride him out there, so had borrowed a friend’s horse to ride with hubby on January 1st. Yesterday was definitely an earmark day for me. It may be winter. Harley may be fat and sassy, but we DID it! Warts and all! Uglies and all! I loved it!
I am celebrating how far we have come. I am thrilled. In fact, my first ride on Harley (after all our accidents two years prior) in May 2007 is at this link. Yesterday was much different than that ride where I was scared to let go of the fence railing...I have Melissa to thank for much of it! Here is a link to part 3 of an ugly video taken in August, but it does, at least show that I wasn’t holding fence rail...I was trying to convince Harley I was trying to let go of the reins and he could have his face freely...I wanted him to go. It was our first time cantering at the arena ever (for some reason, that intimidated me even when the trail didn’t....)
Yesterday, out on the trail, I literally gave him his head...several times...and loved it.
For those moments, I guess I chose to set aside my doubts that this is best...he seems so much happier and calmer when I invite him up into the pace that he enjoys...I have often wondered WHY he enjoys being so “forward.” But with all the breathing and willingness to offer me his thought, to soften at my rein request, I don’t think he was “upset” wanting to move his feet because of angst. I have seen what that looks and feels like. Yet I know that people I respect, admire and friends I ride with who also respect the same trainers/clinicians would not encourage what I did today. Yet...I had a blast and I think Harley did, too...or some equine version of it.
Still the doubt is there...
Often at clinics I have audited/participated in, I see at least one participant spend a good chunk of time talking to the clinician about an internal struggle like this...almost like a therapy session. The theme of these talking sessions often seems to be this very thing...the question of how what seems to work best, feel best, in many ways...can it possibly BE best? The question often seems to be, “Is there a way in which I am doing something (negative) TO the horse by the very things/approach that I think he enjoys/responds to best?”
There are things I war with inside of me like these clinic participants...For instance, in my case, do “calm” and “soft” have to consistently happen at the walk and trot before we can ever canter out on the trail? If I can’t get his thought back mid-stride, is that cause to go back to the drawing board? What if his thought seems more prone to leave when I haven’t yet allowed him to move forward...but if I give him that at the beginning of a ride, he is much more dialed in to my page after that? He seems to be a totally different horse when I have let him move forward more, able to go at the walk. Able to give up a thought and change to a thought I am asking him to consider...If I keep him in “the box,” trying for all I am worth to find “softness” yet his thought is “out there out there” simply because he wants to move out...and if once I let him do that, he can give me the rest...is it so wrong to go that route? I can’t figure this out.
If I simplified it all down, what I really *want* to be able to do is go any pace at any time and feel him happy and content with me happy and content. ...and safe. What I have been trying repeatedly for most of the 19 months we have been doing this, for whatever reason, hasn’t worked. We have progressed in what we do together, but I don't feel like much of it feels good to him. When I go out to the pasture to catch him, he is a bit reluctant. Sometimes more willing than others, but typically somewhat reluctant.
As we cantered along yesterday, he stretched out, breathed, blew out... and...well...it all seemed nice...and it seemed like what I have been dreaming of...
Yet something in me is feeling like I may be blowing it if I allow this to go on.
I just want to let it all go and holler WHEE!!!!!


