
Learning to Communicate Through Energy
How do we truly communicate with our horses? This article challenges the idea that it's all about physical aids like push and pull. It explores the concept of energetic communication—a language that horses understand fluently but that we have forgotten. Discover why what your horse 'hears' is your energy and intention, not just your words or actions, and why learning to quiet your own 'noise' is the first step to being heard.
Article Summary
This article delves into the subtle and powerful world of energetic communication with horses. It moves beyond the idea of body language to explore how horses read our intentions, our hearts, and our energy, and why our own internal 'noise' can be overwhelming for them. Discover the concept that you may be 'shouting' at your horse energetically without even realizing it.
Learn why the first step to true communication isn't fixing the horse, but working on yourself—clearing your energy and learning to control its intensity. The full text offers insights into how to stop shouting, start whispering, and build a connection so clear that your horse can finally hear you.
Read More From the Article...
The horse doesn’t understand language. Doesn’t understand the word box vs boy, dog vs dot.
But science is slowly catching up to the fact of how intelligent these creatures are.
The mirror test alone shows how advanced they are, which so many truly don’t yet understand.
Bred to work side by side with us for 6000 years, perhaps it shouldn’t surprise us. But it still seems to.
When it comes to communication, if language isn’t the right answer, what is? To the horses understanding us?
Some people say they understand our body language. And they do respond to what direction our body directs them in. Funny how many don’t realize how we can slow down and drive just with a simple change in the angle of our hips and shoulders.
But if that was the limit of their understanding of us, think how sad that would be, for a creature as intelligent as this.
But I think our impression of them is based on the simplicity of our own ability to communicate and that greatly influences our understanding of how smart they are.
We hit with a whip to make them go.
We pull on the reins to make them stop or turn.
This is how simple we make it.
Push, pull, hit, chase seems to define the extent of our communication as if there was no other way to communicate with them. And for many, this is the extent of their communication.
But that has nothing to do with the horses and everything to do with us.
Time to Assess Our Ability to Communicate
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