Monday, May 09, 2005

Why hope makes you a horse training guru

How Hope Makes You
A Horse Training Guru


Hope is a good thing.

It's a proven remedy for depression al-
though not always a cure.

Hope even helps us with our horses
for the times we feel like a failure because
our horse doesn't do what we want.

We'll seek out solutions to our horse
training challenges "hoping" we find the cure.

And if we just keep at it, we "will"
find that cure because hope kept us looking.

Yes, hope is good. Hope is found in
an amazing array of things.

Take lotteries for instance. Hope
is what fuels them. The hope of winning
keeps people spending money for them.

Lotteries have a long history. They
aren't just a fad that recently started. In
fact, they date back to the 1700's.

The original 13 colonies were financed
by lottery money - and the US government used
them to help pay for wars.

Lotteries are how Harvard, Yale, and
Princeton got started. (Betcha didn't know that)

The hope of winning...the hope of being
rewarded...that's how many humble beginnings became
great things.

And if your experience with horses is
humble, you can turn it into great things too.

There is hope.

Maybe you've had a horse behaviorial
problem and you "hoped" you or a trainer could
fix it.

I encourage you to look to yourself
for that hope rather than sending a horse off to
a trainer.

Sure there times a trainer is necessary
because you could get hurt or some other compelling
reason.

Rather than hoping a trainer fixes a problem,
I hope you look to yourself because you "can" do
amazing things.

Let me prove it.

Maybe you know the answer to this question
but I'll ask anyway.

When you approach a horse, do you know
how to correctly approach him so he won't feel
the need to run from you?

The answer is to "not" approach him
from behind.

One obvious reason is you may get kicked.

But horses are a prey animal. Prey animals
get pursued from behind. So if you going towards
them from behind they get the feeling of being pur-
sued.

Feeling pursued, you want to escape because
you feel threatened.

So the answer is to approach towards their
shoulder. They can see you just fine. You're not
sneakin' up behind 'em. You don't come across as
threatening, and so on.

Now if you already knew this, there's "proof"
you can do this horse thing. After all, you knew it.


And if you didn't know it,...YOU DO NOW!

Again, proof you "CAN" do this horse thing.

Sure, there's more to know than that...but all
great things have humble beginnings.

I don't know where you're at with your horses.
Whether your doing great with 'em or having troubles.

Even if all is okay with your horse, you're
bound to experience some problems - that's just part
of owning a horse.

It will ruffle your feathers but you can
find the solution. You can solve it.

You don't necessarily need a trainer to
fix it for you.

Just keep learning and you'll surprise
yourself at just how advanced you are.

There is hope!



Sincerely,

Andy Curry
www.horsetrainingandtips.com


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How To Train Horses For Killer Results - Everytime!

Click here to find out how:
http://www.horsetrainingandtips.com/horse_owners_manual.htm

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