Friday, August 26, 2011

TO HAVE A HORSE IN YOUR LIFE

Our barn owner emailed me this and I liked it so much I thought I would repost it here:

TO HAVE A HORSE IN YOUR LIFE

To have a horse in your life is a gift. In the matter of a few short
years, a horse can teach a young girl courage, if she chooses to grab
mane and hang on for dear life. Even the smallest of ponies is mightier
than the tallest of girls. To conquer the fear of falling off, having
one's toes crushed, or being publicly humiliated at a horse show is an
admirable feat for any child. For that, we can be grateful.

Horses teach us responsibility. Unlike a bicycle or a computer, a horse
needs regular care and most of it requires that you get dirty and
smelly and up off the couch. Choosing to leave your cozy kitchen to
break the crust of ice off the water buckets is to choose responsibility. When our horses dip their noses and drink heartily; we know we've made the right choice.

Learning to care for a horse is both an art and a science. Some are
easy keepers, requiring little more than regular turnout, a flake of
hay, and a trough of clean water. Others will test you, you'll
struggle to keep them from being too fat or too thin. You'll have their
feet shod regularly only to find shoes gone missing. Some are so
accident prone you'll swear they're intentionally finding new ways to
injure themselves.

If you weren't raised with horses, you can't know that they have unique
personalities. You'd expect this from dogs, but horses? Indeed, there
are clever horses, grumpy horses, and even horses with a sense of
humor. Those prone to humor will test you by finding new ways to escape from the barn when you least expect it.

Horses can be timid or brave, lazy or athletic, obstinate or willing.
You will hit it off with some horses and others will elude you
altogether. There are as many "types" of horses as there are people-
which makes the whole partnership thing all the more interesting.

If you've never ridden a horse, you probably assume it's a simple thing
you can learn in a weekend. You can, in fact, learn the basics on a
Sunday, but to truly ride well, takes a lifetime. Working with a living
being is far more complex than turning a key in the ignition and
putting the car or tractor in "drive."

In addition to listening to your instructor, your horse will have a few
things to say to you as well. On a good day, he'll be happy to go along
with the program and tolerate your mistakes; on a bad day, you'll swear
he's trying to kill you. Perhaps he's naughty or perhaps he's fed up
with how slowly you're learning his language. Regardless, the horse
will have an opinion. He may choose to challenge you (which can
ultimately make you a better rider) or he may carefully carry you over
fences - if it suits him. It all depends on the partnership - and
partnership is what it's all about.

If you face your fears, swallow your pride, and are willing to work at
it, you'll learn lessons in courage, commitment, and compassion in
addition to basic survival skills. You'll discover just how hard you're
willing to work toward a goal, how little you know, and how much you
have to learn.

And, while some people think the horse "does all the work", you'll be
challenged physically as well as mentally. Your horse may humble you
completely. Or, you may find that sitting on his back is the closest
you'll get to heaven.

You can choose to intimidate your horse, but do you really want to? The
results may come more quickly, but will your work ever be as graceful
as that gained through trust? The best partners choose to listen, as
well as to tell. When it works, we experience a sweet sense of
accomplishment brought about by smarts, hard work, and mutual
understanding between horse and rider. These are the days when you know with absolute certainty that your horse is enjoying his work.

If we make it to adulthood with horses still in our lives, most of us
have to squeeze riding into our over saturated schedules; balancing our
need for things equine with those of our households and employers.
There is never enough time to ride, or to ride as well as we'd like.
Hours in the barn are stolen pleasures.

If it is in your blood to love horses, you share your life with them.
Our horses know our secrets; we braid our tears into their manes and
whisper our hopes into their ears. A barn is a sanctuary in an
unsettled world, a sheltered place where life's true priorities are
clear: a warm place to sleep, someone who loves us, and the luxury of
regular meals. Some of us need these reminders.

When you step back, it's not just about horses, it's about love, life,
and learning. On any given day, a friend is celebrating the birth of a
foal, a blue ribbon, or recovery from an illness. That same day, there
is also loss: a broken limb, a case of colic, a decision to sustain a
life or end it gently. As horse people, we share the accelerated life
cycle of horses: the hurried rush of life, love, loss and death that
caring for these animals brings us. When our partners pass, it is more
than a moment of sorrow.

We mark our loss with words of gratitude for the ways our lives have
been blessed. Our memories are of joy, awe and wonder. Absolute union. We honor our horses for their brave hearts, courage, and willingness to give.

To those outside our circle, it must seem strange. To see us in our
muddy boots, who would guess such poetry lives in our hearts? We
celebrate our companions with praise worthy of heroes. Indeed, horses
have the hearts of warriors and often carry us into and out of fields
of battle.

Listen to stories of that once-in-a-lifetime horse; of journeys made
and challenges met. The best of horses rise to the challenges we set
before them, asking little in return.

Those who know them understand how fully a horse can hold a human
heart. Together, we share the pain of sudden loss and the lingering
taste of long-term illness. We shoulder the burden of deciding when or
whether to end the life of a true companion.

In the end, we're not certain if God entrusts us to our horses or our
horses to us. Does it matter? We're grateful God loaned us the horse in
the first place.

Author Unknown

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Fiona and The Four Agreements

Quick update: Fiona's doing great! We are back to riding more often. Her trust in me has grown by leaps and bounds. We even rode across the property the other day. It was unbelievable! The tractor and the feed cart went by and she never waivered. I love that little horse. She's really turning out OK. We are in the process of getting a new saddle. She outgrew the old one and it started to pinch her. I think it was even starting to make her buck a bit into the trot and canter. oh yes, we canter now! ..well, we are just getting started...but it HAS happened! I am still trying to get some video done. I am holding out for a cantering video though, so it might still be a bit. On to the subject at hand.....

There's a book called The Four Agreements by Don Miguel Ruiz. If you haven't read it, I HIGHLY recommend it! In short, the book describes four rules to live your life by which will help you grow spiritually and move in the world more easily. Well, at least that's what these rules have done for me.

Here are the "agreements" or rules:
1) Be impeccable with your word

2) Don't take anything personally

3) Don't make assumptions

4) Always do your best

I read this book a long time ago, but I read something on a horse trainer's website that triggered one of the rules to pop into my head. "Be impeccable with your word". The exact words I read are not important, but the underlying message was "The horse needs work."

The most important thing I have learned in the last few months is, the horse is just fine, the owner needs work. Horse owners HATE to hear this. I HATE to hear this. It makes me feel like I am broken or not good enough. This thought leads RIGHT into the next agreement. "Don't take things personally".

One of the great things about working with horses is you are NEVER done. There's always more my horse can teach me and there's an endless number of "sports" I can teach my horse to participate in. There's dressage, endurance, barrels, poles, trail riding, the list goes on and on. So the statement "the owner needs work" really means the journey hasn't ended, not that I am broken or inadequate. It means I am still alive! This is what living is about...moving forward, learning, working, playing.

I don't have a clean segway into the next rule, but it definitely applies to horsemanship. "Don't make assumptions" Don't assume that the horse is the problem. The horse is never the problem. The saddle can be the problem (which I had happen recently). The owner can definitely be the problem. Lack of knowledge can be the problem. It's our job as good horse owners to discover our the truth about our horses, based on the facts. So don't just guess or assume that you know the root cause of an issue. Do your own investigation. If your horse bucks you off, change things and see what makes it better..or God forbid, worse.

The last rule applies so much to horsemanship, I can't even fit it all into one blog post. "Always do your best". Now I think most people interpret or apply this rule when they want to bail out early and quit what they are trying to do before they are done. I don't often have that issue, unless I am afraid and even when I am afraid of something with my horse, I come back and keep trying. I have to apply this rule when I don't get to my goal in the timeframe I want to and then I tend to beat myself up for it. You don't hit a grand slam every day. As a co-dependent Capricorn, that is very hard for me to accept. I have a goal every day, week, month and year. If I miss one, it's a disappointment. Yes, my standards are WAY too high. Sometimes your best isn't your all-time, record setting best, and that's OK. :)

Hopefully this helps some people in their work and play with horses.