Students and Horses Excel - Horses Helping Families

Students and Horses Excel - Horses Helping Families Non-profit charitable organization (SHE, Inc.) Sometimes a person needs a new start. Horses have healing hearts and allow this magic to take place.

that helps families and individuals with wellness through horseback riding activities and therapies using Working Equitation education and principals. A family is well when all the individuals are well.

01/19/2025

Happy New Year! It's that time of the year we get new inquires about our services, new volunteers and new students. Today was a great first day with a new volunteer that helped groom 6 horses in cold weather b4 our toes froze. New riders are coming in the middle of the week too. 2025 is gonna be a great year to spread the joy of horse therapy.

12/05/2024

Great article here. Slow is the speed for learning to build confidence. Our program promotes a slow momentum in developing harmony with self confidence. Never do we push beyond tbe comfort zone. Everything must be in agreement with the student and horse in order to Excel.

Enjoy the article and drop a comment if you like.

***

Horses and humans are both mammals. Our brains may not be the same size, but they are almost identical in their structure and function.

Why can our brains look so similar but our behaviours and sensitivity to the world look so different?

The area in the picture highlighted is the prefrontal cortex or the (PFC). Its job in humans, horses, dogs, dolphins, elephants, cats, mice, rats, all mammals, and even birds is to carry out "higher executive functions" such as:

🧠 problem solving
🧠 decision making
🧠 reasoning
🧠 risk assessment
🧠 forward planning
🧠 impulse control
🧠 intention

Obviously, these executive functions are more advanced in humans than in other species of mammals, but this part of the brain plays a pivotal role in higher levels of learning beyond primal behaviours and learning survival skills.

So why aren't we seeing these higher executive functioning skills and behaviours in horses as much as what we see them in dogs, dolphins, elephants and even birds?

Ultimately it comes down to safety!

The latest neuroscience research suggests that when the brain feels unsafe it causes the body to produce stress response hormones and these stress response hormones cause the PFC to go "offline".
This means that subcortical regions of the brain (deeper parts of the brain) such as the primal brain (AKA limbic system, survival brain, flight/fight brain) completely take over to increase the chances of survival.

Feeling unsafe causes the feeling of fear and it is fear that gets this party started.

So behaviours come from two areas:

1. The PFC, carrying out problem solving skills, reasoning, impulse control, forward planning etc. that may be interpreted as "obedience" and "partnership".

2. The primal brain, carrying out reactive survival behaviours. This brain does NOT carry out impulse control, forward planning, problem solving, etc. It just reacts to the world. This brain heavily relies on patterns and consistency. This brain will cause freeze/flight/fight behaviours such as shutting down, bolting, biting, rearing, bucking, kicking, barging, etc.

Which brain is the domesticated horse spending most of it's time in?
It's primal brain!

This is why we don't get to see their full intellectual and cognitive potential because most of the time, domesticated horses are perceiving their world in a fearful way to some degree.

We can help our horses with this!

Feeling fearful is the OPPOSITE to feeling calm.
If we want to help our horses access their PFC then we MUST do whatever it takes to help them feel calm.

☝️ ONLY when a brain feels calm can it slow down enough to develop TRUE confidence. Only when the brain feels confident will it access TRUE cognition (PFC).

☝️ We first need to understand that when we get "bad behaviour" from our horses, it's not intentional or naughty or rude. What you are seeing is either a horse that is just reacting to the fear they feel or they are carrying out their "coping mechanism" in response to their anticipation of feeling fear.

☝️ Try to remove expectations that your horse should "know better".
"Knowing better" implies that all behaviours are coming from the PFC and there should be some impulse control and reasoning. Unless your horse feels calm, they can't access the PFC to "know better".

THIS STARTS WITH YOU!!!

You need to be consciously aware if YOU feel calm first. If you feel calm, your horse will have a better chance at feeling calm. Expecting them to feel calm when you don't is unfair.

The best way to create calmness is to intentionally be SLOW!!!
SLOW EVERYTHING you do down.
SLOW your movement down.
SLOW your talking down.
SLOW your walking down.
SLOW your breathing down.
SLOW your horse down.
If you feel too slow, then you're going slow enough.

Calmness is slow, not fast.

This will help you and your horse to connect and feel safe together.
When the brain feels stressed, the stress response hormones cause the body to speed up.

Stress = speed

We can reverse engineer this process and create a calm mind through slow intentional movement and a relaxed posture.

The by-product of a calm brain is confidence and cognition (PFC access).

Happy brain training 🧠
Charlotte 😊

Photo: Credit: Adult horse (equine) brain, sagittal section. Michael Frank, Royal Veterinary College. Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)

Students and Horses Excel is home to a CHA Instructor for Riders with Disabilities. Message us to set up an intake date/...
07/21/2024

Students and Horses Excel is home to a CHA Instructor for Riders with Disabilities.

Message us to set up an intake date/time to get started with Equine Assisted Activities and Therapies, where horses open up a world of magic in self realization.




River Ranch

Did you know CHA has a job board?
Whether you're hunting for the right riding instructor position or looking to hire a Summer camp counselor, the CHA Job Board is the place to go!

www.CHA.horse/job-board

12/24/2023

Welcome 3 of our therapy horses for 2024.

Pella is the newest addition. She has the best black knees and moves out so nicely. And she likes Poncho.

Poncho has been with us for a while and everyone agrees he's like a fuzzy rocking horse. Poncho likes Pella. Both are Norwegian Fjords.

Jr. is a Haflinger, and much smaller. He'll fit in just fine as a therapy horse. He galloped around the open field today when all three were turned out together for the first time.

Feel free to contact us if you'd like to volunteer with grooming care. They love it.

All 3 have driving experience. Now we need a 2-wheel cart donated to get them tuned up.

Address

8894 W Martha Avenue
Mountain Home, ID
83647

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