
Work with the horse you have today
When you first start riding, the goal is survival.
You aren't worried about the outline or the engagement. You are just trying to stay on board.
Can I stay on at the walk?
Can I stay on at the trot?
Can I survive the canter?
Then, you survive enough falls to decide you want to do this properly. You invest. You buy the horse. You decide to "teach" him.
But here is the truth that took me years to understand:
We don’t need to teach them how to be horses.
They already know how to run.
They know how to balance.
They know how to herd, play, and anticipate the movement of a predator.
They are masters of motion.
We are the ones playing catch-up.
The Communication Gap
As humans, we rely on what makes sense to us: Voice and Hands.But horses rely on what makes sense to the herd: Motion, Location, Shoulder Position, and Eye Contact.
When we use our hands to say "slow down" but our body energy is screaming "speed up," we are sending conflicting cues.We are speaking two different languages at the same time.
In my experience reviewing videos of accidents or "unexplained" explosions, this is almost always the cause. It wasn't "out of nowhere." It was a buildup of confusion caused by a rider shouting in English to a listener who speaks Energy.
The F1 Standard
At the highest levels—whether Dressage, Showjumping, or Racing—the margin for error is razor-thin. Like an F1 car, the difference between winning and losing is technical perfection.
But unlike a car, our engine has a heartbeat.
The real challenge isn't the mechanics. It is Disciplined Communication.It is building a system of signals so refined, so telepathic, that the horse can make a decision in a millisecond based on a shift in your focus.
We see this with Para-riders competing at the Olympic level with no arms, riding with reins in their mouths. No hands. No voice. Just pure connection.
Why do they let us?
I have pondered this question my whole life.
They are bigger.
They are stronger. In a battle of physics, they win every time.
And yet, they are so forgiving.
I believe they chose this. I believe they sacrifice their freedom to make us better human beings.
To teach us patience.
To remind us that love conquers force.
To strip away our ego and force us to handle failure.
The Daily Lesson
The horse reminds me every single day of the most important rule of love:
Work with the horse you have today.
Not the horse you had yesterday. Not the horse you want him to be in six months. The horse standing in front of you right now.
And that lesson bleeds out of the stable.
It reminds us to work with the partner, the child, the body, and the mind we have today.
Let go of the expectation. Clear the signa and enjoy the ride.
Nika
