When is an offer not an offer anymore?

Okay, so I know that I owe everyone a Level 3 blog and it's coming!  These Levels blogs are harder than I thought, so I want it to be perfect for you.  I also want to say thank you for all of your warm emails and comments in response to my Levels journey.  It is my privilege to inspire and help you any way I can in your journey.

This blog is about knowing the difference between when your horse is offering you something and when he's taking over, either as an assumption or to dominate the situation.

First we need to know, what is an offer?  To me, an offer is when my horse is asking me questions and offering to try something for me.  She's connected to my thoughts and trying to satisfy my request.  She's looking for a release through communication.

Remember that communication is two or more individuals sharing and understanding an idea - so this is a mutual experience. We're sharing ideas, I'm making suggestions, and she's offering up possible answers and checking in.

When a horse is taking over it can happen in a few ways, by making an assumption or trying to dominate you.  What does that look like?  For me, it's different in my two horses, both extroverts, but one is Left Brain and the other is Right Brain.

My Left Brain Extrovert mare may or may not try what I'm asking.  Sometimes she just checks out and does her own thing.  She ignores me, stays out of reach, gets big, gets fast - whatever it takes so I can't control her feet.  Most frequently she doesn't wait for me to finish my request (extrovert!) and then does her own thing.

For example, say we're at Liberty and I want to send her on a circle, I'll back her out and before I can send she'll just pick a direction and blast off.  Now she's on a circle, which is what I wanted, but not through communication.  She didn't wait to see if I was going to ask her to come back in, like a Yo-Yo, or which direction to go if I were to send on a circle, she just made an assumption and went.

This is her taking over the game and dominating me by not fulfilling my request.  Now she's going around, ignoring what speed or direction I want her to go.  Then she will look at me with two ears and run in.  To someone else this might seem like exuberance and a great draw, but what's really happening is, on solely her terms, she decided the game was over and came in.  In her mind she feels smart and playful and like she is dominant over me.  She kind of did what I wanted but on her own agenda, thereby controlling the situation.

Blasting off, having fun, and ignoring me.

Decided the game was over and ran in and tried mugging me for treats.

The Left Brain horses are usually looking for fun, freedom, and dominance so they're going to try and outsmart and outmaneuver you by making assumptions.

When my Right Brain Extrovert mare takes over she's usually looking for comfort by doing something she knows.  I've taught her the Spanish Walk, and it's become one of her go-to things to try when she's confused or looking for a release.  If she's not sure what I want she'll try Spanish Walk, if she wants a treat she'll Spanish Walk.  This is how specialty movements (like the Spanish Walk or rear for example) turn into tricks instead of mutual conversation.  The horse knows that when she learned Spanish Walk she got lots of love and rest and treats.  It made her feel good, smart, and secure.  So naturally, if she's feeling unconfident she's going to try something she feels really good about doing - she is thinking by doing this it will make me happy and I will take the pressure off.

When I was first teaching her to pick up her feet with me in preparation for the Spanish Walk.  She's connected and thinking about my request, this was an offer.

The Right Brain horse is looking for reassurance and validation by doing something they understand and know very well.  She's taking over our session by doing this but her intention is a little different than my Left Brain horses.

An offer is something your horse is trying to do in an honest effort to have a conversation with you and satisfy what you're asking.  

A takeover is when your horse is making an assumption about what you want and/or doing something entirely different from what you're asking in order to control the situation.  


You've likely heard the saying, "Expect a lot, accept a little, reward the slightest try."  For me, I sometimes equate offer with effort.   Is she trying and honestly looking for an answer?  Is she thinking through the process and hunting for that "open door", the release?  If so, that's an offer.

I want for her to be checking in, listening to my body language, following my ideas, and stay connected.

When I'm playing with her and she starts trying things I'm not asking for, before I correct her and squelch her play and confidence I ask myself a couple things:  Is she offering something and checking back in or is she just doing things and checking out?  Can I control that behavior or is it out of my control?

3-Star Parelli Pro Lillan Roquet recently said that "a horse will always do what the understand first, the last thing they do is what they learn."  I feel like this is so important when determining if your horse is making offers or assumptions.

You have to be a strong enough leader with a ton of focus and willpower and crystal clear body language so your horse can find the answer.  If you're muddy in your request the horse won't know what to do and is going to try something they already know.  So I need to be sure I am being exact in my communication with my horse.

I know she's going to do a lot of things before she gets to the right answer when she's learning and that's okay.

When she knows what we're doing, it's something we've done 100 times, and she's doing something else despite my clear request - then I know it's a take over.


A quick story-

When I first got Aspen and was beginning to play with jumps I would always be really sure to play it just like Pat does in Level 1 and 2, as a Squeeze Game.  Jump, turn, face, wait.  Pretty soon Aspen would drag me to a jump, jump it, then turn-face-wait, usually coming in after a few seconds for a cookie.

I thought this was so cool!  She really got it!  She was hunting the jump, she was turning and facing, and then checking in with me.

What was really happening was she'd see the jump, know the pattern and just take over because she knew how to get herself some comfort.  If I wanted to change course or ask her to keep going after the jump that just wasn't an option.  She was doing it that same way, every time, no matter what.  That was her making assumptions, looking for reassurance and confidence.

Here we were circling and she detoured for the jump, did it, and came right back to me.  When what she should have been doing was staying on the circle while I stayed in neutral... Maintain gait/maintain direction!

Not long into that habit I created in her, it switched from reassurance and confidence as her motivation to her just doing it, very left brain, because she wanted her damn cookie.  If I asked her to keep going after the jump or stop before it, or anything besides jump-turn-face-wait she'd throw a tantrum.  This was the switch from RB to LB and her motivation in taking over.  This was not an offer.

I created this situation through my lack of progression and my lack of being particular without being critical.  I didn't understand how to keep the conversation interesting and engaging in which we were sharing ideas and advancing our skills.  I also didn't know how to up the ante, even just a little and say, "hey you can jump AND keep going on this circle for 3 laps."  Because I didn't do that I just keep reinforcing her behavior until she went on autopilot.

The first time I got really clear that she needed to keep going after the jump and not just run in for a treat it blew her mind.  At first she had a small fit, then lost some confidence, then realized I was just being firm but fair, and our connection and draw skyrocketed.

We were back to having a two way conversation, not just me saying, "How about you..." and her cutting me off going, "Yeah, yeah I got it!..  Oh heck no, I don't do anything after a jump besides turn-face-wait!!! Now, where's my cookie?!!"

This was a defining moment for me in my horsemanship.  It's something I still am learning about and feeling from my horses.

Do you have horses that offer or take assumptions?  Tell me in the comments!




Dynamite Horse Supplements

Dynamite is the ONLY chemical free mill in the United States! 

Don't risk the safety and well being of your horse. Check out the Dynamite difference and put your horse's health first!


Do YOU know what the Dynamite difference is?  

Find out here

_________


"Dynamite's Shared Vision is to improve the lives of all creatures by empowering people with the truth and knowledge about health. Learn about Dynamite's unique philosophy of holistic nutritional science that drives our business and what inspires us every day to carry on this vision."



"about us

Dynamite's vision is to improve the lives of all creatures by empowering people with the truth and knowledge about health. Backed by over 80 years of experience in holistic nutritional science, we formulate, manufacture and market nutraceuticals for all species. We have a completely different approach to health that, if applied, will improve the lives of you and your animals.

a company like none other

In 1982 our founder, Jim Zamzow, a lifelong student of nutrition, soil science, microbiology, mycology, and herbal medicine, recognized and decided to fill a need in the animal supplement industry. His vision, that still holds today, is to improve the lives of all living creatures. The scope of Jim's vision has grown from horses and dogs to the full spectrum of "creatures" on this planet--from your beloved household pet and your competition animals, to animals in the wild and microbes that live in our soil. Of course, and maybe most importantly, our vision includes the lives of people, caretakers of the earth, upon whom all these creatures are dependent. Dynamite cares about yourhealth, the health of your animals, and the health of your planet. 
Today the traditions, values, and standards that this company was originally built on are faithfully being upheld by a team of people who understand our vision, fully embrace it, and are inspired by it. Our products are unparalleled in the industry. Our focus is on an uncompromised quality in all aspects of formulation, packaging, and manufacturing. We have developed a unique line of products using a deeply ingrained philosophy of innovation guided by nature and backed by science.
Dynamite partners with word-of-mouth, independent distributors that are charged with empowering people with the truth and knowledge about health. This team of knowledgeable consultants are able to communicate our unique approach to health thereby improving lives one-by-one across the country. 
Dynamite is a family-owned business built on a dedication to hard work, quality products, and unsurpassed customer service. This attitude is carried forward by every person on the Dynamite team."

Dynamite Videos:

The history of Dyna-Pro (in my opinion a miracle product for colic!)




Equine Wormers & Vaccines