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Horses Build Confidence
Horses are large and intimidating, so naturally it takes
a lot of confidence to be able to control one. Letting a child handle a
gentle horse will do wonders for their confidence. By handling a gentle
horse children/teens will overcome their fear and learn that they can
safely handle and control the same animal that they were once afraid of.
The better your child learns how to handle the horse, the
more confident he/she will become. When children do well with the horses
that they handle their confidence goes up and their self esteem
improves. They know that they have accomplished something worth while.
Horses Teach Responsibility
Horses will teach children responsibility very quickly.
Make sure that your child does all the work involved in caring for the
horse. Everything from grooming, cleaning hooves, feeding, mucking
stalls, saddling up and riding. Children will want to ride but they may
not always be eager to do the work. However children almost always fall
in love with the horses that they handle and they will want to take as
good care of them as possible. Once they know that the horses depend on
them and that in order to ride they have to take good care of the
horses, they will learn to be responsible.
Horses Teach Patience
Horses are like small children, and training a horse is
much like teaching a child. When your child has become a confident
rider, letting them help train a horse will be an excellent experience
for them. Horses require a lot of patience because training a young
horse involves a lot of repetition and time.
The rider must consistently give the horse the proper
command until the horse responds correctly. For most horses this takes a
lot of time so the rider must be patient and reward the horse for its
efforts. Training a horse to do something, even if it is something small
will boost your child/teens confidence.
Horses Teach Sensitivity
Horses are very sensitive creatures. They can tell if
someone is afraid, angry, happy, etc. They communicate with body
language and are very sensitive to their handler’s body position.
Because horses are so sensitive, the handler must be also. The handler
must be able to tell how the horse is feeling and why it is behaving the
way it is. The handler must learn to interpret the horse’s body language
and to communicate effectively with the horse using its own language.
When a horse misbehaves, the handler must decide whether or not the
horse is doing so out of fear, stubbornness, anger, pain etc. and must
respond appropriately.
Horses Teach Trust
Horses must be able to trust their handlers. One of the
first things that your child or teen will learn about handling and
riding horses is to be trustworthy and dependable, because if the horse
doesn’t trust its handler it will not obey him/her.
Horses Teach Respect
Children will learn to respect their horses and
themselves. Horses are large, dangerous creatures and they demand
respect, yet in order to be handled safely they must also respect their
handlers. By learning how to handle a horse, children will become more
respectful and more respectable. By being trustworthy, confident and
responsible your child will earn the respect of his/her horse.
Horses Teach Us to be Open Minded
Every horse is different and will have to be handled
differently. A good horseman never stops learning; even so called
experts will admit that they learn something new everyday from their
horses. Horses will make your child realize that learning is an on going
process that never ends.
Horses Teach Us to Learn From Our Mistakes
When children first start learning to ride and handle
horses they will make a lot of mistakes and will quickly learn not to
make the same mistake twice. That is what riding is all about. When a
rider makes a mistake he/she cannot deny it. He/she must acknowledge the
mistake and correct it. Mistakes can‘t be dwelled on either. They rider
must move on after correcting the mistake. Handling and riding horses
will teach your child to use their past mistakes to improve their future
horsemanship skills.
Horses Teach Self Discipline
Horses take a lot of time and work, so your child will
have to be dedicated to learning how to ride and handle horses
effectively. I have found that dedication is rarely something that
children lack when it comes to horses. People, especially young people,
have a natural attraction to horses and enjoy spending time with them.
However, because horses are a lot of working your child will soon learn
self discipline. For example, instead of sleeping in in the morning,
they will be out feeding. Horses must be fed twice daily and have access
to fresh water at all times. Their and their stalls/pens must be cleaned
regularly and they must receive regular exercise. This will take a lot
of time, but most people find that it is worth it for the time they get
to spend riding, or just being with horses.
The time that children spend with horses makes a
tremendous difference in their lives and the skills that they learn from
handling horses will apply to all other areas of their lives (school,
work, ect.) making them happier and more successful individuals. |