Category Archives: horses, dogs & more

horsemanship/humanship

While at Equine Affaire, I had the opportunity to hear Mark Rashid, the brilliant horseman, author and Aikido master talk about the “alpha” myth.

Here is a point that he made that I think is worth repeating (probably many times).  He said that many people think that when their horse does something that they don’t want them to do, something that we would consider disrespectful, in fact the horse is demonstrating respect.

Here is why.  The horse learns things through both intentional and inadvertant teaching.  Those “bad” behaviors are often the result of inadvertant teaching – the horse learning something that we are unconscious of, but inadvertantly reinforcing!  So when the horse does those “bad” things, they are in fact showing respect- they are doing what they have been taught!.

For me, still working to get softer, clearer and more successful with my complicated horse Amadeo, this felt like a big new window.  I am pretty sure that I have done more inadvertant teaching than intentional, or inadvertant masquerading as intentional.  And that what feels like intentional probably has a lot of unintentional lessons laced through it.

That got me to thinking about what I am inadvertantly teaching others – kids, students, even myself.  When I am not taking time to eat consciously, to do my yoga practice, or breathe, I am inadvertantly teaching myself that those things are not really important, as well as making those habits of oversight and carelessness stronger.  I am reinforcing my own “bad” – unconscious – behaviors.

How do you see it?

 

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dancing with Pony

Me holding forth about horse dancing after the performance.

Sarah Hollis, owner of Tintatgel Enterprises, with her Pony.

DeAnna Pellecchia and Pony.

Ingrid Schatz with Pony.

Pony makes us all look good.  Photographer Jeffrey Anderson makes us look even better.  Pony and
Sarah have been dancing with us for nearly seven years, and Jeff has been shooting us for that many years as well.  It is the first time that we have all made an appearance at Equine Affaire in West Springfield, MA.  We were not in the extravaganza called the Phantasia (!) but doing small, informal demonstrations near Tintagel’s gorgeous set up in C Barn.  We will all be back next year, so mark your calendars!

Equine Affaire: tomorrow!

I will be joining Sarah Hollis of Tintagel Andalusians and her beautiful horses at Equine Affaire in West Springfield, MA all day tomorrow.  Sarah and her horse, Escorial, will be doing informal demonstrations of our dancing with horses work with dancers DeAnna Pellecchia and Ingrid Schatz throughout the day.

I will be available to talk about Embodied Horsemanship and you can schedule a private 15-minute session with me for either Tellington TTouch or Riding Wide Awake (on a physio ball).

We will be in C Barn all day, so please stop by!

movement tells

As a movement analyst, it has been interesting to observe Willard Mitt Romney.  There is a clear contradiction in his movement behavior – a kind of subservient aggression – a simultaneous retreat and advance in his body that is a give away to the contradiction in his wildly wavering positions.  As I watched him advance on Candy Crowley during the last debate, I was surprised by the postural retreat in his body at the same time that he was propelling himself forward with self-righteous aggression.  Romney appears posturally brittle and lacking in flow.  By contrast, the president expresses a more free flowing, connected and articulate core.

The other day I wrote about the diagnosis a horse would make of the two candidates.  Because horses are so attuned to our movement, and to the coherence or lack of in our emotional-physical expression, they can immediately sort out the truth-tellers from the liars.  They also sense danger from predators, particularly when there is a clear discordance between inner and outer.