Wednesday, October 21, 2015

Relearn what you know

I used to be a good jump rider. Trusting, motivating, giving, strong yet soft, ect. ect.  Then I rode nothing but green babies and problem horses.  I made a name locally for myself.  I could get on just about anything and get it to chill out and eventually be a brave jumper, at which point the horse would be sold or the owner would take over riding again.
My first go at Training
While I gained many skills and techniques I also lost some.  In general my riding has improved every year, I would love to take what I know now and ride the horses of my past.  There is a big but though.  While many of my skills have been honed, the ability to trust a horse down to a jump jumped ship somewhere along the way.
Riding is certainly a journey
I hadn't realized it per se, but I had noticed that jumping didn't quite have the joy I knew it should.  Yes, there were always great jumps sessions sprinkled around, but it just generally was more difficult than I remembered it should be.  I could get any horse doing any shenanigan down to and over a jump, but the idea of just coming in at a good clip and jumping out of stride was eluding me.  My hands are always wanting to check and steer, my legs to push and kick, my seat to be defensive, heck even my voice wanted some action.  By golly we are going to get over that jump come hell or high water.
Brick walls of terror
It has been like I had no ability to jump easily.  I've felt like I'm under water in a pool and keep slipping on the bottom, if good jumps are my oxygen I've been suffocating.  Prisoner and I had a seriously rough summer, yes we made progress, but it was mixed in with lots of what felt like failure.  Turns out it wasn't failure so much and just relearning what I used to know.
These are from a lesson back in August
Poor Prisoner has had to help me wade through the muck and mire I collected getting terrible horses turned into solid citizens.  Many tears have been cried because I've felt like such a failure.  Here I have been blessed with this wildly talented horse and we spent half the summer running sideways, running towards jumps, and rearing.  I've always taken the adage to heart that if something goes wrong with a horse it is first the rider's fault.  While mostly true you can't let it turn into an unhealthy mantra playing over in your head.
Flying airline ottb
I could beat myself up even more playing chicken vs. egg about why he started misbehaving.  What it boils down to is just a big conglomeration of shit stuff called life.  Finding a single culprit to blame would be like finding where the first drop in a rain storm fell, it doesn't matter.  Instead I am looking to move forward.  Relearn the simple art of letting a horse get to a fence without my getting in the way.  He is athletic and smart, he will figure it out without 'help' from me.  I have to relearn to trust my own skills as well as my horse.  When a green horse doesn't understand the concept I can't immediately heap coals upon my head about my own inadequacy and failure, I must instead explain it to them in another way.  All of these are things I knew, I just have to change that back into things I know.
Finding my smile again

8 comments:

  1. Holy shitballs that horse can jump! I honestly think cantering down to a fence, sitting quietly and just letting it happen is by far the hardest thing in jumping!

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  2. ^ Agree, sitting quiet and Relaxed is so hard to a jump. Power to ya for keeping at it but acknowledging where you are both at.

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  3. THIS. Thank you for writing this, your timing is perfect!

    I'm having the same struggles with Roger right now; I'm NOT the kind of rider that can get on anything and take it over a jump like you can, but I can absolutely relate to the feeling of 'failure' you mentioned. Like Prisoner, Roger is wildly talented and sometimes I don't feel worthy of riding him. Roger and I have only been partners for 6 months and we're still getting to know each other, but I needed to read this post to remind me that riding is a learning process: if it were easy, everyone would do it. Riding talented horses like Prisoner and Roger can be intimidating at times because they are so athletic, and can make us doubt our own skills. Like you mentioned, green horses will figure it out on their own without 'help' from us, and I have to learn to trust my skills and remember that I do know how to ride...sometimes, that's tough to do!

    I will say, though, that you and Prisoner are SUCH a great team and you've come incredibly far in the short time you've been partners. Your riding style fits Prisoner's personality so well and you have wonderful communication. I love watching you ride, and can only imagine where you guys will be a year or two from now :)

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  4. Don't be so hard on yourself. It is completely different to train a client horse and to train your own. You don't have that distance to fairly evaluate. It really is not the same thing fixing your own problems and fixing others'. It is easier to see what needs to be done from outside, get on them and do it, and get out again. When it's your own pony, you have all the knowledge, hang ups, baggage etc. Even as a pro.

    But you guys will be fine. You know all that and have a ground person to help you occasionally. You got this girl!

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  5. Don't be so hard on yourself. It is completely different to train a client horse and to train your own. You don't have that distance to fairly evaluate. It really is not the same thing fixing your own problems and fixing others'. It is easier to see what needs to be done from outside, get on them and do it, and get out again. When it's your own pony, you have all the knowledge, hang ups, baggage etc. Even as a pro.

    But you guys will be fine. You know all that and have a ground person to help you occasionally. You got this girl!

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  6. i so relate to this post. learning to be trusting again with jumping horses has been a constant struggle - my mare is a complete saint and yet i'm ridiculously defensive all the time. you're so right tho - there's no point in beating ourselves up or wasting time trying to figure out they whys and hows of it. just gotta keep trying to get better! and for what it's worth - seems like you and Prisoner are well on your way!

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  7. I think we all go through these feelings at some point! I feel like I am constantly re-learning how to trust my pony to get us to the other side in one piece, to be quiet, to be supportive, and stay out of the way. One of the hardest things in riding, and in life, is to just BE and let things happen without constantly messing with them. Despite what you think about yourself, I really look up to you as a rider and have been really blessed by you sharing your journey with Prisoner!

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  8. Riding is such a process. :-) Glad you have an awesome horse to do it on.

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