Last week, we looked at how easily our sense of urgency can spill over onto our horses. We explored ways to manage our fears and the urge to intervene when all our horses need is the time and space to heal.

Today, I take that a step further by explaining how healing is a steady, repetitive, and imperfect process that requires our trust and patience.

Imperfect Progress

Horses require consistency, observation, and time for their nervous systems to process changes. Owners often act out of fear or urgency, switching practitioners, modalities, or approaches mid-process. But when we simplify our approach, tension is released, and both horse and human can move at a natural pace. Even though visible results may take weeks, progress is happening beneath the surface.

Self-Awareness

If you are anxious, impatient, or reactive, your horse will feel it and reflect it back. Healing your horse begins with you regulating your own nervous system and showing up with presence, patience, and clarity, rather than trying to control the outcome.

Integration and Patience

Healing unfolds in stages. Setbacks, plateaus, and integration periods are normal. Your horse’s body needs time to adjust to new movement patterns, nutrition, and modalities. Owners need to embrace this pace, trusting that chemical and neurological changes are happening even when the results are not immediately visible.

Small, Consistent Steps

Choose one approach at a time for your horse and commit to it for at least three to four weeks before evaluating progress. For yourself, establish one daily practice that supports your nervous system- a short walk, breathwork, or grounding ritual. Consistency beats intensity.

Observation Without Judgment

Notice any changes in your horse’s movement, energy, behavior, or body without labeling them as either good or bad, and observe your own emotions without self-judgment. Journaling helps you track patterns, separate emotions from reality, and build confidence in your decision-making.

Integration Practices

Support your horse with rest, social time, and basic care. Let them lie down, play with friends, or simply relax without interference. Similarly, honor your own needs. Regulated owners make better decisions and create an environment that fosters true recovery.

Reflection

Track progress with photos, videos, and regular check-ins with trusted practitioners. And for yourself, spend 15 minutes weekly reflecting on what shifted, what was hard, and make the required adjustments.

Managing Urgency and Fear

Recognize when the urge to act comes from fear, not clarity. Ask yourself: “Will this action move my horse toward healing in the next 28 days?” and “What small step respects my horse’s and my own capacity today?” Small, deliberate actions will keep healing on track.

Two-Track Approach

Take immediate, low-risk actions while planning high-leverage actions for the future. That honors urgency without hijacking the process, allowing progress to continue steadily while you maintain clarity and focus.

Links and resources:

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