little_critter
Well-Known Member
I think of it like yoga.Your posts are always so interesting.
I think we can get trapped (particularly in dressage) in the logical fallacy that the horse isn't strong enough (yet) so we should hold it together to produce the shape. And of course, the more we hold the horse, the more the horse leans, and the horse might get stronger but it doesn't get lighter.
I just looked back at one of the notes I took after a master class with Gareth Hughes:
Gareth talks about the difference between ‘guiding’ and ‘holding’. Guiding a horse is where we want to be. We want to use technique over strength to ride. The difficulty with horses who have been trained by being held is that the more they develop, the stronger they become and therefore the more strength you need to hold them. That is going in the opposite direction of what we are trying to achieve in dressage. When we guide the horse rather than hold the horse, this is what develops self-carriage in the horse. It is that self-carriage without relying on the human to balance the horse that gives you the ability to do things like “give and retake”.
I think a lot of people look at the symptoms rather than train to improve the root cause. I probably fall into the trap too - getting too concerned with things like inconsistency in contact or falling behind the vertical and looking to improve that so that things optically look better but are probably just resulting in a better horse from the pole forward rather than from the core and thoracic sling. Not to say that I don't try to do a lot of work to strengthen the horse properly, but I probably want to quieten the things that make the picture less harmonious more quickly than if they were the last thing to come through from truly strengthening the horse and having the horse find its own balance and self carriage. Thought provoking.
The exercise you are doing needs to be of benefit to the horse.
The horse gets the benefit from carrying themselves / putting themselves in the positions you request.
If you went to a yoga class and your instructor put you in the yoga poses and held you there, you wouldn’t get the benefit of challenging your body to do it for itself.