HufflyPuffly
Well-Known Member
How do you fight the fear of ruining a horse?
I never thought I'd be so anxious about messing up a horse, with the other two I was super happy to crack on and not give the bad parts too much thought. But with Skylla I am 'so' aware that everything she does is a product of my training! I specifically went out and bought a youngster as I wanted to have a blank slate to work with, rather than working around other peoples mistakes (and I do love it), so it makes no rational sense that I'm now fearing every wrong step as the one that ruins her.
She is a bit quirky, is that because of me? Or just she's a fairly independent, sassy little horse...
This waffling comes to you from the consciously incompetent person, because she refused a fence yesterday xc schooling
(it was a decent palisade, with a hedge on the top and a small ditch in front, you know perfectly simple and easy, not
). I know that if I am logical about it, all horses will have a stop at some point (or will they, do professionals do it so well the horse never loses a good experience out of the jar?) and the fact we broke it down, worked out the question and then she did jump it a couple of times means it's fine and overall she was a complete superstar, means I should be happy with the day right? Not stressing about my ability to reasonably assess what the training steps up should be.
I know you have to push the boundaries of the comfort zone to continue to improve, but gah I am being such a bloody nervous nelly about it and it's annoying me! We have regular lessons which I love, but I need to also be able to train independently with confidence, as I can't really have my hand held every time I ride (as appealing as that sounds
).
Any advice, tips, words of wisdom... that-I-can-print-out-attach-to-my-hat-and-read-whilst-riding-so-I'm-never-having-to-do-it-all-on-my-own...
I never thought I'd be so anxious about messing up a horse, with the other two I was super happy to crack on and not give the bad parts too much thought. But with Skylla I am 'so' aware that everything she does is a product of my training! I specifically went out and bought a youngster as I wanted to have a blank slate to work with, rather than working around other peoples mistakes (and I do love it), so it makes no rational sense that I'm now fearing every wrong step as the one that ruins her.
She is a bit quirky, is that because of me? Or just she's a fairly independent, sassy little horse...
This waffling comes to you from the consciously incompetent person, because she refused a fence yesterday xc schooling
I know you have to push the boundaries of the comfort zone to continue to improve, but gah I am being such a bloody nervous nelly about it and it's annoying me! We have regular lessons which I love, but I need to also be able to train independently with confidence, as I can't really have my hand held every time I ride (as appealing as that sounds
Any advice, tips, words of wisdom... that-I-can-print-out-attach-to-my-hat-and-read-whilst-riding-so-I'm-never-having-to-do-it-all-on-my-own...