Kerry Equine Therapies & Counselling

Kerry Equine Therapies & Counselling Equine Assisted Learning/ Therapy:
a) Equine Assisted Learning- Children/ Adult/ School Groups. b) Equine Assisted Counselling/ Psychotherapy sessions.

c) Team building through Horses

2026 the year of the horse🐴🥳Lets hope is a nice old Connemara type or Irish Cob😉🐴❣️🥳🥳
31/12/2025

2026 the year of the horse🐴🥳

Lets hope is a nice old Connemara type or Irish Cob😉🐴❣️🥳🥳

🐴🎄As 2025 ends & We see in 2026🐴🎄We would like to say a big heart felt thank you to all the people; children & adults, t...
31/12/2025

🐴🎄As 2025 ends & We see in 2026🐴🎄
We would like to say a big heart felt thank you to all the people; children & adults, that joined us at Kerry Equine Therapies & Counselling during 2025 ... All supporting a small business & keeping dreams alive!

A special thank you to the fabulous women group that join us every month, some for nearly two years now, & some wonderful new people from 2025 too, looking forward to more groups, chats & laughs, & connections in 2026. There is something truly special about the feminine power combined with the power of these horses🦸‍♀️💪❣️🐴

A massive massive thank you & beyond, to the amazing four leggeds that support us to do this work ... to help us to be seen & feel seen... the four leggeds that support us to heal our souls🐴🙏❣️

Heres hoping 2026, the year of the horse, is a nice old Connemara type or Irish Cob type😉

Happy New Year Everyone🥳🥳🥳🥳🥳

30/12/2025

Why Horses Don’t Follow Mixed Signals

Most of us were taught to manage our emotions.
To stay calm.
To push through.
To keep going even when something inside us says no.

Horses don’t respond to that.

They respond to congruence.

If your body is tense but your voice is calm,
the horse notices the tension.

If your smile says “I’m fine”
but your nervous system is braced,
the horse meets the brace.

This isn’t disobedience.
It isn’t rejection.
It’s information.

Horses are wired to track safety through the body —
through breath, muscle tone, micro-movements, and rhythm.

When those signals line up,
connection happens naturally.

When they don’t,
the horse pauses.

This is why working with horses can feel so revealing —
and so regulating.

They’re not asking us to be perfect.
They’re inviting us to be honest.

That’s The Way of the Horse.

28/12/2025

Here’s a little horse science to kick off your Boxing Day, folks 🧠🐴

I know a lot of people spend what feels like a million bucks on gadgets, gear, and the next best thing, but none of that really matters if you don’t understand that your horse is engaging with you through the emotional and survival part of the brain.

It’s not about equipment, training, or techniques. It’s about understanding that your horse is meeting you through the limbic system, the part of the brain that governs connection, emotion, and safety.

This is called Limbic Resonance.

Limbic resonance is the deep, non verbal emotional and physiological syncing that happens between individuals through the brain’s limbic system. In humans, this is how empathy, bonding, and emotional understanding develop. It’s that feeling of being on the same wavelength, where one person’s inner state naturally influences another’s.

We see this everywhere. A calm person can settle someone who feels anxious. A baby relaxes in the arms of someone who feels safe. Dogs will often choose to sit near certain people or lean into them, while reacting nervously around others. None of this relies on words or deliberate behaviour. It’s about how that person feels on the inside.

This is limbic resonance at work.

So what does limbic resonance actually look like in the body?

Inside the brain is a group of structures called the limbic system. This system is responsible for emotions, memory, bonding, and survival responses. It is constantly scanning the environment for information about safety, danger, and connection.

The limbic system does not work on its own. It is directly linked to the central nervous system, which carries electrical impulses throughout the body. These impulses influence breathing, heart rate, muscle tone, posture, facial expression, and subtle movement. Together, they create your internal state.

And that internal state is not private.

We are constantly broadcasting it outward in several ways at once. Through our body signals like posture, tension, breath, and rhythm. Through chemical signals such as scent and pheromones. And through electrical impulses moving through the nervous system. Other mammals pick this up automatically, without thinking about it.

This is limbic resonance in action. It is nervous system to nervous system communication. No words needed.

Horses excel at this.

As prey animals that have survived for over 55 million years, horses have developed this system to an extraordinary level. Their survival has always depended on being able to sense and respond to subtle changes in others. They are masters of limbic resonance.

Within a herd, horses are constantly reading each other’s emotional and physical states. This silent communication keeps them safe. It is their primary language.

When we spend time with horses, we step into that system.

Horses do not tune into our words first. They sense how we feel, how present we are, and what we are carrying inside. Long before we act or speak, they already know whether we feel calm, unsure, confident, or unsettled.

Your internal dialogue plays a big role here.

And to be fair, it is completely understandable that you might feel uneasy when you see something worrying ahead, especially when you are out riding. A flapping tarp, a banging gate, or something unfamiliar in the distance can easily trigger a moment of tension. That does not make you a bad rider or handler. It makes you human.

If you are standing there thinking, oh no, he’s going to freak out, your nervous system is already broadcasting tension. Your horse feels that immediately, often before anything actually happens, and that is very often the moment that actually sets him off and makes him freak out.

If instead you can gently train yourself to pause, breathe, and think, it’s fine, nothing to worry about, I’ve got this and I’ve got you, that provides him with a sense of reassurance and safety that often keeps him calm.

You do not need to say it out loud. When your thoughts, breathing, and body line up, your horse can feel that steadiness and borrow it. If you see something as just a thing, your horse is far more likely to see it the same way.

This is why breathing matters so much.

Slow, steady breathing slows the heart rate and settles the nervous system. When your nervous system settles, you are not pretending to be calm, you actually are calm. That genuine calmness then flows naturally through your body, your chemistry, and your nervous system.

Horses pick this up instantly.

When a horse feels that real steadiness, they feel safer. And when a horse feels safe, they are more likely to want to be near you, connect with you, and stay relaxed. Not because you asked them to, but because your presence feels good to be around.

And no, you do not need to be a Tibetan monk sitting on a mountain to do this.

Simply slowing your breathing, softening your body, and being present is enough. Even a few conscious breaths can change what you are broadcasting.

Horses do not need perfection. They just need you to be real.

In humans, limbic resonance builds connection and understanding. In horses, it is about safety and survival.

When you understand this, working with horses becomes less about trying harder and more about slowing down, breathing, and being present.

And honestly, that probably is the most valuable Boxing Day gift you can give your horse.

04/12/2025

Sometimes the greatest magic is the silence shared between two hearts.
A child and a horse… two worlds meeting in a single breath of trust.

In moments like this, no words are needed.
Just the warmth of a hand, a gentle tilt of a head — and suddenly the world feels calmer.
Animals sense what we often try to hide —
our sadness, our exhaustion, our joy, our hope.

And they give us what humans so often struggle to offer:
pure presence. sincerity. unconditional love.

This photo reminds us that
sometimes, to feel strong again, all you need is to touch someone who understands you without a single word. 🐴✨

02/12/2025

Every experience leaves a trace in how we show up physically. Horses pick up on these cues because, as prey animals, it's part of how they navigate their world.

When guided by trained professionals, this awareness becomes a powerful tool for reflection and growth. Horses For Mental Health highlights this work so more people can find care that feels grounded and real.

Learn more at horsesformentalhealth.org 🐴

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