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Our challenge as equestrians begins with the fact that horses were not designed to carry weight on their backs. They are a grazing species with bodies adapted for long hours wandering and chomping grass and the occasional sprint away from potential threats.
When we ask the horse to carry our weight there is a particular way they need to organize their body in order to do so effectively without pain and undue stress on joints and soft tissue structures. This is called a weight bearing posture. |
At 27 years old, Wendy had a serious riding accident, the horse she was riding reared and fell, rolling over her and pushing her femur through her hip socket. Weeks later Wendy left the hospital in a wheelchair with no opportunities for physical therapy. But her commitment to understanding the body and the connection between body and mind had begun.
Now, with over 30 years of experience as a professional riding instructor and Feldenkrais practitioner, Wendy has combined her formal education in anatomy and physiology with her time working alongside great veterinarians such as Dr Hilary Clayton and Dr Joyce Harman as well as her intensive Feldenkrais training using movement as a mode of body work. Wendy has also spent countless hours in arenas around the world working with horses and riders to help them discover where they are stuck and how to change old habits and patterns to find new possibilities for movement, balance and ease. |
Thank you Wendy. This was so helpful. I am very visual and your visuals really helped me understand the concepts more, and help them have a volume of sorts. I hear these words in my lessons too and I think I grouped many of the words together to mean collection, but now I understand the pieces of the puzzle and how they interact. Also, I appreciated the on the aids, meaning as I have always wondered if the 'bit' or the ability to manipulate the bit adequately, would result in 'on the bit', even though I sensed it was more about the energy and the feeling energized and with strength and enthusiasm. On the aids, seems so much more humane, and I have seen my horse collected chasing my pony around, with no rider or aids but intention, enthusiasm and focus! |
Thank you - all these modules are very helpful in understanding the big picture and understanding what I can do specifically to help the horse keep his back up and underneath himself. FINALLY I understand "in front of the leg" and all that it entails. Thank you! Wow. Using Joker makes it so clear how we influence our horse's movement so much for better or worse! Excellent information and well presented. |