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The Resistant Horse.
Last month my article was focused on the confused horse. As a
horse’s training progresses the confusion they feel should decrease. There
are some horses though that develop resistance because confusion was not
effectively dealt with. There are different forms of resistance; it can be
physical or mental. Physical and mental resistance can develop individually
or together. Resistance can show itself in many different situations; some
of them are instinctively reactive while other times it will be a deliberate
response. How do we tell the difference? Understanding which form and when
it appears will help us learn to deal with it. The more effective we are at
dealing with it in a positive way the easier it is to eliminate.
Physical resistance on its own is generally more instinctive and reactive.
When a horse gets stressed to the point they feel that they can not cope
they can become physically resistant. The degree of physical resistance
depends on how stressed or threatened the horse feels. The more stress the
more resistant the reaction will be. Resistance can also lead to defensive
aggression and an array of evasion tactics from leaning or pulling to
bucking or rearing or any other way that a horse feels might be effective in
removing themselves from the source of the stress.
Mental resistance is often more deliberate. This is when a horse gets fed up
with what we are doing and they decide to say no. Or the horse is so
confused and bothered that nothing is going his way that he does not know
what else to do to find a release from what we are asking. Mental resistance
on its own can be exhibited by refusal, anticipation or they can appear to
be stuck and they will not alter their response to aids, even aids they
understand.
It is common for resistance that was initially a scared reaction to become a
deliberate response when horses learn how to bully us into giving them what
they want. This is where mental and physical resistance is combined. It can
be very intimidating when horses behave badly on purpose because they have
learned to become resistant.
When we are faced with resistance we are at fault not our horse. It is his
way of telling us that he is not feeling good about what we are doing. Once
we have become aware of the resistance we can start to find the source of
our horses stress. To eliminate the problem we need to back track to the
point that things stopped going well. This may be easier said than done if
it is a resistant horse that has been acquired after the problem was already
established. If you can find a trigger point you can established that the
horse associates resistant behavior with whatever you just did. If you then
break whatever you were asking for down to its most basic form you will
probably find the horse is not resistant. Somewhere in between is where the
problem lies.
Resistance of one form or another will develop in every horse at one time or
another. See it as an opportunity rather than a outcome.

Will Clinging 2006 (c)
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