28/10/2025
"The horse is always responding - not to our commands, but to our coherence. When we’re braced, they brace. When we soften, they breathe. When we find safety inside ourselves, they finally can too.
This is why true horsemanship begins with self-awareness.
It’s not about perfect technique. It’s about emotional maturity. It’s about having the humility to look at yourself before blaming the horse. It’s about knowing that every reaction - yours or theirs - is a conversation about safety"
There’s a quiet crisis in the horse world - and it isn’t just ignorance. It’s disconnection. It’s how many people are handling, training, and even loving horses without ever learning how a horse’s nervous system truly works - or how deeply it reflects their own.
So much of what we call “training” is really human pain in disguise. People projecting their frustration, fear, and unmet emotions onto an animal that can’t fight back. People punishing what they don’t understand, controlling what they can’t connect with. And what makes it so tragic is that most don’t even realise they’re doing it or some do and don't care to change anything because THEY can't change or heal themselves.
We’ve been taught to manage behaviour, not to recognise dysregulation. We call stillness “good” when it’s shutdown.
We call obedience “respect” when it’s actually resignation.
We call force “discipline” when it’s our own unhealed anger trying to find power somewhere.
Sadly, cruelty doesn’t always look like violence. It can look like indifference. It can sound like impatience. It can hide behind “standards” and “corrections.” It’s in the handler who ignores the small signs - the brace in the neck, the flicker of fear in the eye -because they’ve learned to ignore those same signals in themselves.
When a person is disconnected from their own body, they can’t feel the horse’s. When they’ve spent their life surviving their own pain, they don’t notice when the horse goes into survival too. Their nervous system is locked in fight, flight, or freeze - and the horse, being the mirror that it is, simply joins them there.
Horses end up carrying the weight of our unprocessed emotions. They absorb our tension, our grief, our impatience. They learn to tiptoe around our storms. And because they are so forgiving, so loyal, they often keep trying to please us even as they break down quietly under the burden of our unconsciousness.
It’s easy to point fingers at “abusers,” but the truth is more complex. Yes, there are people who use dominance, pain, and fear to control horses - and it’s wrong. But many of them aren’t monsters. They’re unhealed humans. They were taught that control equals safety, that force equals respect, that emotion equals weakness. They don’t realise they’re replaying the same fear-based systems they grew up in. They’re training from trauma - theirs, not the horse’s.
That doesn’t excuse it. But it explains it.
And understanding it is how we begin to change it.
Because a horse can only find as much safety as the human beside them can hold. You cannot create calm in another being if your own nervous system is broadcasting chaos. You cannot offer softness when your heart is clenched around unhealed anger. You cannot teach trust through fear.
The horse is always responding - not to our commands, but to our coherence. When we’re braced, they brace. When we soften, they breathe. When we find safety inside ourselves, they finally can too.
This is why true horsemanship begins with self-awareness.
It’s not about perfect technique. It’s about emotional maturity. It’s about having the humility to look at yourself before blaming the horse. It’s about knowing that every reaction - yours or theirs - is a conversation about safety.
If we want better horses, we need better humans. Humans who regulate before they correct. Humans who pause before they punish. Humans who can feel themselves enough to feel another being. Because every time we reach for force instead of understanding, we teach fear. And every time we choose patience, breath, and presence, we teach safety.
This isn’t about being “soft.” It’s about being sovereign.
It’s about recognising that leadership is not domination, it’s responsibility - the responsibility to create the kind of environment where another nervous system can thrive.
Horses aren’t here to absorb our pain or to make us feel powerful. They’re here to show us the truth of who we are. If you can’t meet a horse without your ego, they’ll show it to you. If you can’t stand still without tension, they’ll mirror it back. If you can’t handle vulnerability, they’ll stay guarded too.
That’s not defiance. That’s feedback.
This is the real awakening in horsemanship - to see that every “problem” horse is a reflection of human dysregulation. Every explosion, every brace, every act of so-called resistance is the horse saying, “I can’t feel safe with you like this.” That truth might hurt. And maybe it should. Because it’s the kind of hurt that wakes us up - the kind that cracks the shell of our unconsciousness and asks us to become someone a horse can finally exhale beside.
The future of horsemanship isn’t in better tools or new methods. It’s in better nervous systems. Humans who can regulate. Humans who can feel. Humans who can hold presence so steady that the horse doesn’t have to protect itself anymore.
Because the horse was never the one who needed fixing.
It’s us. And once we heal - once we stop projecting, stop forcing, stop fleeing from our own discomfort - the horse will meet us there. Soft, open, curious, ready.
Because that’s who they’ve been all along.