Monthly Archives: May 2013

The way it used to be wasn’t actually all that great

My first horse time in two weeks of travel and workalanche, and even though I could tell at the time what I was doing, I couldn’t stop doing it.

Photo May 02, 4 33 21 PM

I failed in the First Responsibility for the Human, which is Act like a partner, not like a predator. Our evening went something like this.

  1. Rocky met me at the gate, whuffling and sniffing me.
  2. I parked Rocky at the hay net in the barn while I groomed and saddled him. I forgot to clean his feet.
  3. I walked with Rocky around the ranch as a warm up, but didn’t do anything to connect him to me emotionally or mentally. No games, no appetizers on the lawn, no challenges. Directly opposite of what I learned in recent lessons with Erin about purposeful warm ups, or what Linda writes about in her article Achieving The Right Frame of Mind (Savvy Times, May 2012).

    Your warm up is everything. Success is all about preparation. ~ Linda Parelli

  4. I walked and trotted Rocky around the arena on-line a few times, gently tightening the cinch every lap or so.
  5. I pushed and pulled Rocky to line him up at the mounting block. It probably didn’t look like much pushing and pulling, and Rocky probably didn’t look all that uncooperative, to non-Parelli eyes. But Rocky is sensitive, and I was pretty much barking at him if not outright shouting.
  6. I climbed aboard and tried to keep us on the patterns I made last time I rode. We argued at some spilled hay, at corners, at gates. My cues were neither light nor consistent. Rocky turned more or less when I wanted him to and went more or less where I wanted him to, and stopped fairly close to where I wanted…but willing, enthusiastic partnership it was not. I noticed that when I think my shoulders are turned in the direction I want to go, they really aren’t; my upper body gets rigid and my arms have the reins way up and out.
  7. I finally began to listen to my inner voice, which had been screaming hey! slow down! listen to him! buy him dinner and a drink first!, and to get myself lighter, smoother, kinder. Rocky offered to tune in, at this point, and we both felt the connection. But in my weird churned-up state I couldn’t keep it. I kept tensing my calves and not relaxing into my heels. Rocky went back to acting gormless.
  8. We went out the gate to ride around the ranch, which he loves to do. He helped me open the gate. He saw something around the edge of the barn and his head came up and his adrenaline too, and I could feel him deciding whether to turn it into a “let’s pretend I’m terrified and see what Gina does” game. I sat deep and exerted leadership and we walked down the drive like it was nuthin’. I decided that I shouldn’t ride without my glasses, anymore because it keeps me looking at short distances instead of a point ahead where I want to go. That’s the Fourth Responsibility for the Human: Engage the natural power of focus.
  9. I rode back into the arena, dismounted, unsaddled, and sent him at liberty over to the spilled hay.
  10. I got my book and spent an hour reading in the arena. He divided his time between eating the hay and coming over to be scratched and rubbed. He gave me space and affection and I mellowed and tuned in to him. We had connection, and walked back to his pen in harmony.

In my last post, I wrote about how I needed to focus more on the connection. Tonight’s session showed what happens when you don’t prioritize the connection, when you don’t put the relationship first “just this once” or “just to get this one thing done.”

I had my pony ride and my muscles got time in the saddle, but our turns were sloppy and we made not a single straight line the whole time, on the ground or in the saddle. Not one. It felt very much like a normal practice ride, from 20 years ago. Long before I had heard about Parelli, but not long before I gave up on horses for 10 years.

I imagine how things could have gone, had I started out with the undemanding time I finished with, and asked myself in each moment “what can I do to nurture the connection?” And allowed the straight lines and turns and patterns to come from a place of I’m willing to try that! instead of let’s just get this over with.

Hm, how interesting!

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If I’m his personal trainer, why isn’t he working up a sweat?

I’ve been pretty good about taking Rocky out for his workouts at least 3 and more often 5 days a week — until I have a work trip and then it’s two weeks off, we both lose all our fitness, and we have to start over.

rocky_nap

But.

Recently I realized just how much I’m still holding him back.

I took him to the front arena intending to warm up and then trot over poles, with some canter circles mixed in for interest. I’m choosing the front arena because it’s a better gauge of our relationship. He’s a lot more UP!, out there, and it’s much harder to keep him connected. Hm, how interesting, and yay, what an opportunity.

We played on the 22-foot line and I tried for flows of circles, arcs, sideways, transitions up and down the gaits, and resting just before the threshold between up and ACK!. This threshold used to be about 12 feet from the gate and now it’s about 45 feet.

Successes

  • I concentrated on keeping my focus on Rocky. If I’m asking him to keep focused on me, I need to do the same, and not be distracted by the horses across the street or motorcycles roaring by or a giant truck with flapping tarps. Or incoming texts.
  • I assessed the situation and didn’t leave the arena until we were connected and calm.
  • I had the idea to have our resting spot be further from the gate instead of going to the gate to rest. In the past, I did this to show him that he could always retreat to a more comfortable place. But I realized that I can start expanding that comfort zone, and that all those times I didn’t think to do so have solidified the barrier between comfort and fear instead of blurred it.

Improvements for Next Time

  • Focus more on the relationship connection (“what does Rocky need in this moment? and this one? and this one?”) and less on the physical activities (“we’ve done 4 circles let’s do a sideways and now an arc, okay, how about over that pole and then stand on the tarp”).
  • Trust that he can handle a lot more exercise. We played for more than an hour, mostly at trot with some canter and some galloping squirts, and he didn’t break a sweat — on a warm summer evening, too. Part of my job is to help him get and stay fit and conditioned not just for riding but for his own general soundness and joint-pain management.
  • Cut my physical body movements by 50 percent. I’m waving and wiggling and clucking, but the language is getting lost in the noise.
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