
Don't Hold Your Breath
by Ron Meredith
Take a quick poll anywhere you find a bunch of horse people, and
you’ll find that the two things riders fear most are coming off their
horses and getting run away with. There’s a common solution to both of
those problems--don’t hold your breath.
When horses or people are startled or nervous or concerned in some
way, they hold their breath. When they do that, any rhythm or relaxation
they had go right out the window. Rhythm and relaxation are the first
rungs in our training tree because they’re so important to anything
else that you do with your horse. Rhythm is the one way you can control
a horse. So that’s where everything starts.
When you practice your heeding groundwork with your horse in an arena
or a round pen or even when you first go to get him out of his stall and
groom him, you need to breathe in a steady, relaxed rhythm. Your posture
follows your breathing and, as you do your groundwork, your horse is
following your posture. So if your horse gets nervous and holds his
breath, you have to make sure to watch your own breathing. Don’t hold
your own breath. You just keep breathing in rhythm and relaxation. If
the horse breaks his rhythm, you don’t interrupt your own rhythm by
holding your breath or doing anything startling.
So in your groundwork, you want to make sure your breathing is always
rhythmic and relaxed so your posture says rhythmic and relaxed. Then you
keep showing this rhythm to the horse until he develops the habit of
following it. You make your rhythm a safe place he can always go back to
if he gets nervous or startled.
You’re also developing the habit of staying rhythmic and relaxed
yourself no matter what the horse does. That’s important because
people come off horses when they hold their breath. When you hold your
breath, you tighten your stomach, brace your back, and clamp your legs.
That tension in your body intensifies the horse’s motion and bingo.
You’re bounced off on the ground.
The hard part about preventing this from happening is training
yourself to breathe when things are falling apart. So as you’re
heeding your horse from the ground, you start building the automatic
responses to the horse’s nervous reflexes that are going to help you
when he startles while you’re on his back. You’re just going to
breathe right through it and not “notice” it with any change in your
own rhythm.
Whether you’re working your horse from the ground or the saddle,
you can also use a little mantra like “Breath-Ride-Every Stride” to
help yourself develop the habit of rhythmic breathing in the cadence you
want. You can’t hold your breath while you’re talking or singing. So
a little mantra like this or a little refrain you can sing is a place
you can go back to in a crisis to help yourself recreate and stay with
the rhythm you want.
In our riding classes, we sometimes play music or use a drumbeat to
help everyone keep the rhythm as they ride down the sides of the arena
and turn through the corners. If a student gets in trouble, the
instructors may repeat a phrase like “sit up and ride” over and over
in the correct cadence to help the student regain the rhythm she needs
to take back control of her horse. Figure out what works for you and
develop it as a habit to help you focus on your rhythm.
A lot of people don’t understand that you have to ride a runaway
horse before you can stop him. They grab hold of the reins and start
pulling. This doesn’t work because pulling just traps the head of an
already frightened horse and scares him even more. It also gives him
something to pull against, just like a racehorse. When you pull against
a runaway horse, you make it possible for him to run as long as he wants
to. See-sawing the reins doesn’t do much better because it’s not
something the horse understands. The pressure doesn’t create a feeling
in him of any shape he recognizes.
To stop a runaway, you have to go where the horse is and match his
rhythm. Then you start riding him forward rhythmically to let him know
you’re still leading the dance. Then you use your breathing and your
aids to slow the rhythm and bring him back to where you want him. You
have to breathe so you can keep your body relaxed enough to stay in the
saddle. You have to breathe so you can control the horse through rhythm.
Now I realize this isn’t as easy to do on a horse as it sounds on
paper. To make it as easy as possible, you have to set things up in
stages well in advance of any crisis so the sequence you need to regain
control is perfectly horse logical to your horse. So first you use your
heeding groundwork to teach the horse to follow the rhythm of your
breathing and your posture. When you get on his back, you teach him to
follow the rhythm of your seat, which is set by the rhythm of your
breathing. You want to be able to use that rhythm to speed him up or
slow him down at any gait. You want to develop the habit of the horse
feeling and following that rhythm. And you develop that little mantra or
song or whistle as a habit you can use to help you keep breathing
rhythmically when things hit the fan.
If you want a performance horse that can go to the top of his game,
you don’t want to inhibit his athletic potential in any way. If
you’re training a grand prix jumper or an advanced event horse, his
unspent energy drive after a stretch without exercise can set things up
for some bucking or a runaway. You don’t want to do anything that
makes him feel like he should put a damper on his drive and enthusiasm.
That means you’ve got to be able to rhythmically ride whatever he
offers in order to control it and shape it into what you want.
The same principle of achieving control through rhythm applies even
if you’re just riding for pleasure. If you’re out on a trail taking
in the scenery or talking with your buddy, you’re going to be in
trouble if your horse startles at something. You’ll probably be
startled by the horse’s startle, hold your breath, tense your body,
and get dumped. If the horse takes off and you manage to stay with him,
you’ve got to get your own rhythm back before you can get with the
horse’s rhythm and reshape it so the horse is going the speed you
want.
Either way the results would have been a lot less dramatic if you
hadn’t taken your attention off your horse and the rhythm you wanted
in the first place. If you develop the habit in yourself of giving the
horse a rhythmic reference point stride by stride and if the horse
develops the habit of following that rhythm, that rhythm is going to be
the safe, familiar place he looks for when something startling comes
along.
Just remember to “Breath-Ride-Every Stride” until it’s
automatic and things will go better the next time.
© 1997-2002 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
(800)679-2603
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