04/04/2026
You can’t make a horse choose you.
But you can become someone they feel safe with.
Most people are taught to do more.
More cues.
More pressure.
More control.
But connection doesn’t live there.
It lives in the quiet moments…
where nothing is rushed,
nothing is forced,
and everything is felt.
That’s where being chosen begins.
And once you feel it…
you don’t go back.
✨
21/10/2025
Collecting entries for ‘Rules That Shouldn’t Have To Exist – Horse Edition.’ What’s yours?
09/10/2025
Behaviour is Communication ✨
Your horse is never “just acting out.” Every flick of an ear, swish of a tail, or step away is part of a conversation.
🔬 Science tells us that horses, like humans, communicate through subtle signals long before they escalate. Their nervous system responds to stress by moving through thresholds: calm → alert → survival mode (fight, flight, or freeze). Once they’re over threshold, learning shuts down — because the brain is focused on safety, not partnership.
When we notice the whispers (tiny shifts in posture, breathing, or expression), we give our horses the chance to regulate before they have to shout. This doesn’t just build trust — it keeps both horse and human safe.
💡 Psychology research shows that being heard regulates the nervous system. For horses, just like for us, being allowed to express discomfort without punishment creates emotional safety. Over time, that safety builds connection, confidence, and willingness.
👉 Change your POV - don’t see behaviour as “good” or “bad” — see it as communication. Read those signals, respond with empathy, and create a horse who chooses to connect with you.
⸻
25/09/2025
Ever wondered why skilled riders look like they’re “doing nothing” but their horse responds with ease? It’s biomechanics in action.
Your big muscles (core, glutes, thighs, back) provide the stability that keeps you centred, balanced, and steady in the saddle. Your small muscles provide the communication that your horse feels instantly. The obliques provide crucial stability by keeping the rider’s torso evenly stacked, preventing collapse to one side, while the Quadratus Lumborum and other core muscles work with the hip and back muscles to maintain posture and absorb the horse’s movements. The psoas muscle also connects the spine and hips, enabling the rider to move with the horse by allowing the spine and hips to flex and absorb shock. Horses are so sensitive they can detect the pressure of a single hair being moved—so subtlety matters.
Here’s the science:
🧠 Proprioception (your body’s awareness of its position in space) is key to balance and coordination. Yoga enhances proprioception, making you more aware of your alignment and corrections.
💪 Neuromuscular pathways built through mindful practice help refine subtle cues, so your body responds automatically rather than with force.
🐴 Horses mirror your balance and tension—poor biomechanics can cause behavioural issues, discomfort, or even lameness.
That’s why yoga and riding go hand-in-hand. Yoga strengthens postural muscles, reduces tension, and deepens the mind-body connection. When you ride with awareness, your horse can move more freely, trust your signals, and perform without resistance.
✨ Biomechanics = moving like you’re doing nothing, but saying everything. ✨
24/09/2025
The arena isn’t just dirt and rails—it’s sacred ground. Every time you step in, you bring your energy, your breath, your intention. And your horse feels it all.
💡 Science shows that horses can detect our heart rate and breathing rhythms from a distance. Even the smallest shift in posture or tension sends them signals. Calm, steady energy becomes an anchor for them to relax and learn.
🌿 When we treat the arena as more than a training space—as a place of connection, respect, and presence—our horses mirror that peace back to us.
💫 The arena becomes more than practice. It becomes ritual.
Connection > Control. Always.
👉 What’s one way you bring intention into your rides?
20/08/2025
Start with breathwork—your calm is their trust. 🌿🐴
Horses have hearts 8–10x larger than ours and slower resting breaths (8–16 per minute). They notice tiny changes in your rhythm, tension, and energy, and can detect your heartbeat and breathing from up to 4 feet away.
Science shows that slow, deep human breathing lowers cortisol and activates the parasympathetic nervous system—physiological calm that horses mirror almost instantly.
The breath is the flow of life energy. Ground yourself before every session, and your calm naturally extends to your horse, creating connection, trust, and harmony.
23/12/2024
Dear Bestie, your subscription has been renewed for another year. You’re welcome 🤩
06/12/2024
Horses have a great sense of humour 🤩
17/11/2024
Honour both partners in the relationship