Horses Don’t Get Divorced Today’s Troubled Teens & Youth at Risk

Horses Don’t Get Divorced. Photo Tim Hayes Collection

Horses Don’t Get Divorced. Photo Tim Hayes Collection

After nine years of marriage, when Kyle was seven, his parents John and Sandy divorced. As divorces go, it was relatively amicable, and after about two years both parents were in new committed relationships.

Kyle made the painful adjustment to joint custody, commuting weekly between the two homes where his parents lived with their new partners. As time went on Kyle seemed to be increasingly withdrawn in class according to his teachers. Many of the kids at Kyle’s school also had divorced parents and were often in trouble at school or at home. As he got older, Kyle found himself hanging out with some of them.

The first time Kyle smoked marijuana he was twelve. One day he came home with bruises all over his face. He told his father he had been in a fight. His mom had him see a therapist once a week, but Kyle said he hated going, and after three months he stopped. This happened multiple times with different therapists.

By the time Kyle started high school, he was smoking marijuana weekly, regularly getting into fights, and picking on his younger brother, sometimes physically. One night his father got a call from the police. Kyle had been arrested for trying to steal money from one of his classmates.

His father and mother went to the village police station and picked him up; no charges were pressed, but they were stunned. After two months of agonizing soul-searching and exploring therapeutic options, they brought Kyle to In Balance Ranch Academy, a therapeutic boarding school outside of Tucson, Arizona, to begin a one-year marijuana-addiction rehabilitation program.

Dr. William Parker the therapist who would be in charge of Kyle’s recovery program asked Kyle to tell him about his previous therapy. Kyle said, “I told my mom I don’t mind therapy. I’ve been to six of them, but I don’t like it. I don’t think it’s helpful or does anything. I talk because I have to be there. It’s kind of a waste.”

Dr. Parker felt that the divorce of Kyle’s parents had contributed a great deal to his emotional difficulties and the struggles he was having in relating to his family and other people. Because his interpersonal guardedness had repeatedly made it difficult for him to establish a genuine relationship with a therapist, Dr. Parker decided to begin Kyle’s recovery with equine therapy.

Kyle was assigned to work with an equine therapist named Chris. In their first session, Chris asked Kyle to take a soft rope and step through a gate, into a small corral that held six horses. Next he asked him to walk toward the horses, choose one, gently put the rope around its neck, and lead it back to the gate. Kyle walked toward a small black horse named Cassidy. He got to within about three feet from it when the horse suddenly walked away and across the corral.

Kyle followed the horse to the other side or the ring, and the same thing happened. He turned around and looked at the other five horses and began walking toward a large draft horse named Billy. The same thing happened. For the next ten minutes, Kyle tried to catch a horse, any horse. He tried all six. They all left him.

What Kyle didn’t know was that these horses, like all horses, always respond to another being, whether human or horse, by communicating in body language. If they feel comfortable with the body language of another, they will remain where they are. If not, they will walk away. Something about Kyle—his attitude, his intentions, something that made the horses uncomfortable—was showing up in his body language, and the horses were letting him know. Kyle was angry, and the horses could sense it.

Kyle came out of the corral and sat down on the ground next to Chris. Chris asked him what had happened. Kyle said, “I never liked horses. They’re stupid.” Chris asked Kyle what it felt like when every horse kept walking away from him. Kyle thought for a moment then said, “It’s like gym at school. Nobody wants me on their team.” Chris asked Kyle how he was feeling. Without thinking Kyle said, “I think this is freakin’ stupid.”

“Are you angry?”

“Yeah, I’m angry.”

“Are you angry at the horses?”

“Yeah.”

“Who else?”

Kyle stared at the ground for about ten seconds and then said,

“My father.”

Chris said, “Does he know you’re angry at him?”

“I don’t know.”

“Have you told him you’re angry with him?”

“No.”

“Do you want to tell him?”

“I don’t know.”

“Do you want to tell the horses you’re angry at them?”

Kyle looked up from the ground and out toward the horses standing quietly in the corral. He slowly moved his eyes from one horse to another, looking hard at each one. When he got to the last one, his tight lips curved slightly up into a faint smile. As he continued to stare at the last of the six horses, he said, “I’m not angry at the horses . . . I’m angry at my father.”

Chris said, “Why don’t we go get out of the sun, sit under that tree, and talk about it.”

Kyle and Chris got up off the ground and started to head over to a wooden picnic table under a large desert ironwood. As they walked next to the fence, one of the horses ambled over and stuck his head over the railing. Kyle stopped, slowly lifted his hand, and gently stroked the horse’s face. The horse dropped his head and began to gently nuzzle Kyle on his head. Kyle quietly began to cry.

Kyle felt angry with his parents, but for any number of reasons he had not been able to express that or tell them. Instead he had been acting out his anger by fighting and getting into trouble at school. He had also been acting in his anger at himself, which produced feelings of depression and low self-esteem. He endured but self-medicated his feelings by smoking marijuana.

Expressing anger in an appropriate or healthy way can be difficult for many people. Kyle’s inability to acknowledge or express his feelings to his parents or a therapist made it impossible for him to begin the process of healing his emotional pain. But the feelings and the negative behavior it was causing were immediately seen in Kyle’s body language and were reacted to when he attempted to interact with a horse.

Not just one but all six horses could see that Kyle was angry, and therefore they wanted nothing to do with him. When his therapist Chris pointed this out, Kyle could finally perceive his unexpressed anger. The horses also helped him see the negative effects it was having on himself and others in his life.

Unlike a parent, a teacher, or even a therapist, the horses didn’t judge, criticize, or tell Kyle that he was right or wrong, good or bad. They simply mirrored Kyle’s anger back to him by walking away, letting him know that it made them uncomfortable to stay with him. Anger is predatory behavior that makes horses feel threatened and, thus, causes them to leave where they are.

Horses don’t get divorced. Their need for self-preservation creates socially harmonious herds. Equine herd dynamics utilize, demonstrate, and model the same human qualities found in functional families and necessary in forming all healthy relationships.

Horses don’t care who you are, what you’ve done, or what you believe. They care only about how you behave with them. This enables them to give unconditional acceptance to a troubled teen who is revealing his or her true self. This acceptance creates a feeling of self-worth, which can often be hard to obtain with the typical rehabilitation methods of traditional psychotherapy and/or prescription drugs.

Horses don’t see us as right or wrong, good or bad, sick or well. If a horse feels safe, it will accept us unconditionally. It is our actions they deem to be acceptable or unacceptable—friendly or unfriendly.

For many people, having a positive relationship with a horse can be the first time they have ever experienced a small yet genuine sense of unconditional acceptance or love. It is a brief yet remarkable moment between two species.

A year after Kyle return home his father said, “Before Kyle went to In Balance we couldn’t talk to him. He was failing academically, using drugs, dealing drugs, and had been expelled from school for violent behavior. Today he’s doing really well in school. He is a gifted athlete playing three school sports, and he’s also started to love the outdoors. One of his favorite activities is to leave his cell phone and iPad at home and go on walks or hikes in the woods with his friends. He also recently started a personalized-baseball- cap business, and he sells them on weekends at local street fairs.”

Equine therapy has become one of the most beneficial and cost- effective programs for today’s Youth at Risk. To think that millions of emotionally wounded teenagers can get a second chance at a healthy and meaningful life is heartwarming. The idea that this can be achieved from a breakthrough in self-awareness that occurred from simply interacting with a horse is extraordinary.

© Tim Hayes 2015

This story is from my new book RIDING HOME – The Power of Horses to Heal and appears in Chapter 4 ~”Horses Don’t Get Divorced…Today’s Youth at Risk”. It is this amazing power of horses to heal and teach us about ourselves that is accessible to everyone and found in the pages this book.

To purchase or learn more about the book please visit: www.ridinghome.com. Every book ordered will benefit veterans with PTSD, children with autism and children of families in need.

In Balance Ranch Academy is a member of the National Association of Therapeutic Schools and Programs (NATSAP), which has over 150 member organizations with centers in more than thirty states. For more information about NATSAP or In Balance Ranch Academy, see the book Appendix or go to Resources at: www.ridinghome.com

Natural Horsemanship articles by Tim Hayes are at: www.hayesisforhorses.com

For clinics, classes or private sessions, contact Tim at: tim@hayesisforhorses.com or 917-816-4662

Horses and Autism

“The Power of Horses to Heal” ~ Photo courtesy of Orah Moore

“The Power of Horses to Heal” ~ Photo courtesy of Orah Moore

When Rachel was seven, her mom, Lynn, took her to three different child therapists for what she called “traditional talk therapy.” Rachel hated it and, after a while, refused to go. Most of the time Rachel, was simply unable to sit still. Although there are no drugs that can cure autism, Rachel was periodically put on medications—including haloperidol, thioridazine and fluphenazine (all antipsychotics) and carbamazepine (an anticonvulsant and mood stabilizer)—in the hope that one of them might improve some of her everyday functions. Lynn said, “It was like there was something inside her that kept making her move, which she couldn’t turn off.”

The first time Rachel arrived at the horse farm, her equine counselor Sherri led Rachel over to a large gray horse named Alfie. Rachel stopped about two feet in front of Alfie and looked up at his soft, dark eyes gazing down at her. After about a minute, Rachel lifted her hand toward Alfie’s nose. Alfie dropped his head and sniffed Rachel’s fingers. Rachel quickly pulled her hand away, turned, and walked toward the gate. Alfie followed her.

When she got to the gate, she turned back and was amazed to see Alfie standing right behind her. Sherri walked over, looked at Rachel, and said, “Alfie likes you.” Rachel’s mouth opened in an overwhelming smile. As Lynn told me this, she became emotional and said, “I had never seen Rachel smile like that before in her whole life.” She could tell that Alfie was interested in her and that it didn’t matter to him that she was autistic.

Horses are naturally curious. Their curiosity is often motivated by the possibility of finding something that might feel good, taste good, or be fun to play with. Once they know they are safe from predators or anything that exhibits predatory behavior, their apprehension or fear of any person, place, or object turns into curiosity. Rachel was nonthreatening and had offered her hand to Alfie; he had investigated and smelled it, and then she had simply walked away. Alfie had become curious and followed Rachel.

Horses reveal their thoughts and feelings with their body language and behavior. They do not ask, demand, or expect anything from us. They want to feel safe, comfortable, and get along. When Rachel experienced this with Alfie, it was unlike any interaction with another person she had known. Lynn said that Alfie showed Rachel that she could trust him, and if she could trust him, one day she might learn to trust people. As Rachel continued at Good Hope Farms, she started interacting with other girls and their horses.

Horses don’t see a child with autism. They see a child. Autistic children know this, and it feels good to them. In order for anyone, autistic or otherwise, to grow, heal, and have positive relationships with others, they must first have a positive relationship with themselves. Horses have the ability to make humans feel good about themselves. As with so many other men, women, and children, horses have enabled some of those with autism to become more confident, more trusting, and to feel, even if only for a moment, love for themselves and others.

Autism is now considered the fastest-growing developmental disability in the United States. Some of the most enlightening discoveries about the healing effects horses can have on people with autism are revealed in a book entitled Animals in Translation, by Dr. Temple Grandin, a professor in the Department of Animal Sciences at Colorado State University.

Dr. Grandin’s findings in the field of animal-human relationships are not only remarkable they’re transformative. Some of her most compelling research is found in the similarities between horses and people with autism. It is based on Dr. Grandin’s first- hand knowledge, as she herself is autistic.

In Animals in Translation, Dr. Grandin reports that there is often a special connection or identification that occurs when an autistic person begins to interact with a horse. She points to a possible basis for this, stating that both horses and autistic people think in pictures, not words or verbal language.

In the brains of both humans and horses, the right side deals with pictures and nonverbal communication. I believe it is the brain’s nonverbal right side that creates an emotional identification between horses and autistic humans and that this connection is unintentionally expressed yet mutually recognized in their respective body languages. Whether it’s a horse or a human, we are both powerfully attracted to that which is most familiar. When an autistic child feels the unconditional acceptance from a horse, I believe a small part of their soul is healed.

© Tim Hayes 2015

This story is from my new book RIDING HOME – The Power of Horses to Heal and appears in Chapter 8 –“I Wish People Had Ears Like Horses”. It is this amazing power of horses to heal and teach us about ourselves that is accessible to everyone and found in the pages this book.

To purchase or learn more about the book please visit: www.ridinghome.com. Every book ordered will benefit children with autism, veterans with PTSD and children of families in need.

Natural Horsemanship articles by Tim Hayes are at: www.hayesisforhorses.com

For clinics, classes or private sessions, contact Tim at: tim@hayesisforhorses.com or 917-816-4662

Riding Home: The Power of Horses to Heal

Riding Home: The Power of Horses to Heal

Riding Home: The Power of Horses to Heal

Ten years ago I began writing articles and about Natural Horsemanship. A method of training horses using equine psychology, communication and compassion as opposed to force, intimidation and pain. A way of looking at our human interaction with horses from the horse’s point of view.

At the same time I also began to write a book about horse/human relationships. I remember thinking: “I hope I will be able to write all these articles and have enough time to also work on my book.” As it has turned out I have been able to successfully write both. In fact writing monthly articles, or blogs, has not only been extremely rewarding, it has helped me become a better book writer.

In March of 2015 St. Martin’s Press will publish my book Riding Home – The Power of Horses To Heal with a Foreword by Robert Redford (www.ridinghome.com).

After years of teaching the principals of Natural Horsemanship and helping humans create better relationships with their horses I became fascinated with the ability of horses to not only cause humans to become better riders as well as better people, better partners, better friends and better parents, but to actually facilitate in the healing of a wide variety of human emotional wounds that include Veterans with PTSD, Children with Autism and Youth at Risk.

From years of study, research and experience I discovered there were two natural hard-wired characteristics in horses that enabled them to remarkably initiate the emotional healing of a wide range of wounded men, women and children. The first is Hypervigilance; the second is Equine Herd Dynamics that utilize textbook perfect social skills.

As a prey species horses are hypervigilant, which means they remain on continuous alert for their survival. Humans with PTSD and autism are also hypervigilant. When either one of these hypervigilant humans interacts on the ground with a horse there is an immediate non-verbal identification with what seems familiar in the other. This immediately reduces mutual stress, feels safe and comfortable and most importantly produces a level of emotional healing that is created by the extraordinary inter-species compassion that occurs as a result of their relationship.

Equine herd dynamics, which imbue horses with the unending ability to get along with each other, also evolved as a way to ensure survival by enabling them to stay together and travel in the safety of large herds. The herd leader or alpha horse as well as every other member of the herd establishes their place in the pecking order with the use of physical dominance, which can include biting and kicking. Having to participate in these physically aggressive interactions and to then be able to live in harmony and get along with each other is only possible by the entire herds ability to practice the flawless social skills of acceptance, tolerance, kindness, honesty, patience, understanding, forgiveness and compassion.

Horses do not judge other horses or humans. Horses only judge their behavior. When a person’s behavior is kind, accepting, tolerant, understanding and compassionate, so is their horse. When a horse feels safe with a human who is not exhibiting predatory behavior he will usually begin to approach and interact with them. He accepts the human as he or she is. The horse does not see a war veteran who may have seen and done horrific things, he sees another being. The horse does not see a child with autism, he sees a child.

For a man or women who suffers excruciating emotional pain from the horrors of war, or an autistic child who has endured his or her entire life as someone whose parents, teachers and friends all thought that to get better meant the child needed to change or be different, establishing a relationship with a horse can often be the first time any of these men, women or children feel love and acceptance for their true selves.

For many people who read my articles the power of this interspecies relationship is unquestionable. It is now my hope that the information in my book will help those who know nothing about horses as well as someone who needs help: a husband, a wife, a partner, a child, a friend, a troubled teenager, a war veteran with PTSD, someone with autism, an addiction, basically anyone in emotional pain or who has lost their way. It is this amazing power of horses to heal and teach us about ourselves that is accessible to everyone and found in the pages of RIDING HOME – The Power of Horses to Heal. © Tim Hayes 2015

To purchase or learn more about the book please visit: www.ridinghome.com. Any book ordered before February 28th will be discounted and will help to benefit veterans with PTSD and children of families in need.

Natural Horsemanship articles by Tim Hayes are at: www.hayesisforhorses.com

For clinics, classes or private sessions, contact Tim at: tim@hayesisforhorses.com or 917-816-4662

The Four Stages of Competence, What Stage Are You?

Tim Chasing Strays – From Tim Hayes Collection

Tim Chasing Strays – From Tim Hayes Collection

According to the dictionary, synonyms for competence would be: “ability, skill, fitness and aptitude – The ability to do something well or to a required standard.” Incompetence would be the opposite. One way to look at ones progress in the art of riding and horsemanship are with four simple stages I like to call: 1. Unconscious Incompetence. 2. Conscious Incompetence. 3. Conscious Competence. 4. Unconscious Competence.

Discovering what stage we are at with our horse can be quite revealing. It is also a good way to learn what we need to work on to improve and move ahead to the next level.

Unconscious Incompetence: Unless you were born on a horse this is the stage at which most people start. It’s a stage that is usually a prerequisite to learning anything new for the first time. It’s much more than just a lack of knowledge. It’s: “you don’t know what you don’t know”. Believe it or not some people can get stuck in this stage for a very long time. The problem with being stuck at this stage with horses is not only does it limit their ability to get better and improve; it can put them unwittingly in a dangerous situation with the potential for severe injury.

To this day I have worked with both beginners and people who have been riding for years who don’t know that there is a right and wrong way to saddle a horse. What makes it wrong has nothing to do with “Proper Horse Etiquette” it has to do with preventing your horse from potentially killing himself. In order to make it safe for you and your horse, securing your horse with the girth/cinch must always be the first thing you do when you put on the saddle and the last thing you do when you take it off.

Unconscious Incompetence would be securing the breast collar before the girth/cinch. If for any reason the saddle slips off your horses’ back it will stay hung around his neck and underneath his belly. The instant a horse feels something underneath its belly he will move to get away from it. When he realizes it’s staying with him (It’s attached to him with the breast collar) he panics, take off and continues to run until it leaves him. Since it usually does not come off he may run until he injures himself; sometime fatally.

Conscious Incompetence: This is an extremely popular stage which can last on and off for a very long time. One of the prime causes for staying in this stage is simply laziness.

Conscious Incompetence is allowing your horse to change gaits without correcting him back to the original gait. You start walking your horse; he slips into a trot; you allow him to continue trotting and think: “Oh just let it be. I was eventually going to trot anyway.” The big problem with this is you are actually teaching your horse he is allowed to make decisions for both of you. You don’t realize it but your telling him he is in fact the leader (this is more unconscious incompetence). When your horse thinks he’s the leader he will continually challenge you by resisting your requests.

Conscious Competence: This is good horsemanship. There is mutual trust and respect. You and your horse are in a willing partnership with you as the accepted leader for all decisions. If your horse gets lazy (disrespectful) and starts to walk while you’re mounting, you step down, back him up twice the distance he moved and remount. You do this as many times as it takes until he stands rock solid for you. You never get on a horse that’s moving. Old timers like to say “Never let your horse leave without you.”

There are many examples of Conscious Competence. It’s knowing when you’re in the correct lead or diagonal. It’s knowing that a bit is for sophisticated communication and not for stopping your horse. It’s knowing you’ve made mistakes, learned from them, practiced and improved. It’s knowing you and your horse are in constant communication and you both ride in the moment with positive awareness.

Unconscious Competence: The gold standard. What most riders strive for and wish to achieve. Years ago I was working on Chris Black’s cattle ranch in Bruneau Idaho. I had cowboyed for a few years, ridden hundreds of miles on many different horses and now wanted to learn how to become a horseman. One day while working some cows I just sat and watch Chris ride. It was like watching an Eagle floating on a breeze. It wasn’t a man and a horse. It was one being gracefully moving across the plains.

I thought: “I want to learn how to ride like that.” On the way back to camp I rode up next to Chris and said: “Chris, I need some help with my riding. What are you doing when you ride?”

Chris thought hard for a moment then looked at me: “Well Tim, I don’t really know. Never thought about it. I just ride.” I thought for a moment and realized what Chris was saying was…when he rides, he isn’t thinking about riding.

In all my years of riding horses the times I remember riding with true Unconscious Competence have all been working cattle. It’s a feeling like no other. You and your horse both know you are doing a specific job. It’s also a job that’s fun. Your horse likes it as much as you do. When you do it right you both feel good about yourselves. The reason this has always made me ride my best was because I wasn’t thinking about my riding when I was riding. To do the job and stay one move ahead of the cow I had to focus 100% on the cow. To take all my attention off my horse and put it on the cow I had to totally trust that my horse knew what we were doing and that I didn’t have to micromanage him. I had to truly, “Let Go.”

Chris Black Chasing Strays – From Tim Hayes Collection

Chris Black Chasing Strays – From Tim Hayes Collection

One of the great advantages of Natural Horsemanship is the knowledge that comes from learning how to communicate with horses emotionally and mentally as well as physically. When I know my horse and I are in harmony emotionally and mentally I am truly confident. When I am confident I am in a place of total trust. Then I can let go. I can ride with my heart and not my head. I can ride like the wind with true unity…Unconscious Competence. ©Tim Hayes 2015

Tim Hayes is an internationally recognized Natural Horsemanship Clinician and the author of Riding Home – The Power of Horses to Heal.

To learn more about Tim Hayes, Horses & Healing visit: www.ridinghome.com and www.hayesisforhorses.com

For clinics, classes or private sessions, contact Tim at: tim@hayesisforhorses.com or 917-816-4662

The Secret to Great Riding is Always Found in the Relationship You Have with Your Horse

Great Relationships with one’s horse always begin on the ground – Stephanie Lockhart – St. Gallen Switzerland. Photo – Tim Hayes collection 2014

Great Relationships with one’s horse always begin on the ground – Stephanie Lockhart – St. Gallen Switzerland. Photo – Tim Hayes collection 2014

Most problems people have in horseback riding, whether English or Western, are not with their riding; they’re with the quality of the relationship they have with their horse. In order for any relationship to work – horse or human – there must always be mutual love, trust and respect.

One way to improve your equine relationship is with the methods of Natural Horsemanship. Natural Horsemanship begins by teaching us horse psychology. This gives us the knowledge of how and why the horse thinks and feels about everything in his world. This provides us with the understanding and the explanations as to why our horse sometimes resists our requests. Without this knowledge we don’t know if our horse is resisting because of fear, disrespect, misunderstanding or pain. How can we help our horse if we don’t know what he’s trying to tell us?

How a horse thinks and feels is always expressed physically in his body language e.g. ear pining, kicking, biting, licking & chewing, bucking etc. Body language is how horses communicate with other horses and if we are going to truly communicate with horses, we must learn and use their language.

Learning his language we immediately know what our horse is saying to us with his physical behavior. Then we can appropriately respond whether we’re on the ground or on his back. When we respond appropriately our horse realizes we understand what he’s trying to tell us. Then he begins to trust us, respect us and eventually look to us as his leader.

Without this knowledge of what and why our horse thinks and feels, the only way we can interpret our horses’ behavior is by guessing, assuming, or asking our friends. Often this can be frustrating, providing many different answers that are very often confusing or wrong. Without offering the right response, we are unable to effectively communicate, correct and thus eliminate the undesirable behavior of our horse.

The goal of all equine relationships is a positive willing partnership with the horse happily accepting his human as his leader. Traditional horsemanship usually focuses on riding with physical communication between human and horse. Naturalhorsemanship teaches how to communicate with the horse mentally, emotionally as well as physically, first on the ground (which is more natural and understandable to the horse) and then on his back. If my horse isn’t responding to me with willingness and respect on the ground then I need to ask myself is he truly responding to me when we ride or is he deciding to accommodate me just to get it over with?

Have you ever ridden very well in a show and then, as you led your horse back to the barn, been pulled around as he keeps diving for grass? Have you ridden your horse on a trail or in a ring when he suddenly spooks or becomes anxious and nothing you do seems to calm him down to his or your satisfaction? Knowing that you and your horse love each other, have you ever wondered why he/she can be so difficult at times? The vast majority of the men and women I work with come to my clinics and classes with these and many other similar questions.

There are thousands of excellent professionals who teach horseback riding in every possible discipline: Jumping, Dressage, Trail Riding, Polo, Barrel Racing and Reining. However what is so often missing is the necessary mental and emotional understanding necessary for a quality relationship, which is always achieved most effectively when begun on the ground. Create a relationship of mutual love, trust, respect and understanding before you sit on his back. When you get your relationship right with your horse, he’ll always give you his best performance because he’s already given you his heart.

Sometimes instead of asking, “how is my riding?” a better question to ask is “how is my relationship?” When it comes to horses these are my priorities: Do I feel safe, am I having fun, does my horse respond to me as his leader and then, am I achieving my goals? If not, I asked myself what do I need to do to have me and my horse become safer, calmer, more confident, more respectful and more fun to ride. The answer to this question I believe is not about working on my riding; it’s about working on the quality of my relationship with my horse.

© Tim Hayes 2016

My clinics, classes and private sessions cover the following topics of Natural Horsemanship and finish with a program for the future.  
                                       
Principles of Natural Horsemanship:
How to communicate in their language ~ Transferring natural communication from the ground to riding~ building confidence and problem solving on the ground ~ Gentleness vs. Firmness- which one, how much and when? How humans read horses, how horses read humans ~ Domination vs. Intimidation ~ Force, the horses enemy ~ Tools and Phases ~The round pen
 
Safety:
The only technique that needs to be perfect 100% of the time ~Horseplay and groundwork that establishes love, trust and respect ~ Getting hurt from gentle horses ~ Loving humans and loving horses-the right and wrong way for both

Natural Riding Skills:
Focus, Feel, Timing and Balance - Natural saddling skills ~ How to execute an emergency stop ~ The natural principals and methods of Go/Whoa/Turn/Back ~ A program for the future

Herd Dynamics:
Pecking Order- Leadership ~Horse time vs. human time ~
Horse fear vs. human fear ~ Desensitization – Advance and retreat

Attitude Awareness:
Anger, Assertiveness, Frustration, Patience, Acceptance, Dominance ~
Five super human senses of horses ~ Petting places ~ Vulnerable places ~ Blind spots ~ The four reasons a horse says NO ~ The two mental lists horses make and never forget ~ Right brain vs. Left brain ~ Adrenaline vs. Endorphins


 Natural Horsemanship articles by Tim Hayes are at: www.hayesisforhorses.com

For clinics, classes or private sessions:
Contact Tim at:
tim@hayesisforhorses.com or 917-816-4662