Rhythmic Riding Immersion Training - March 3-6, 2022 - Lampasas, TX
Learn how to integrate rhythm and movement into your work to build a trusting relationship with your horse from the ground to your horse’s back.
Four days of movement, rhythmic connection, and FUN -
AND the ultimate brain integration activity
Have you ever danced with a horse?
During this four-day Rhythmic Riding™ Immersion, you will experience the powerful mounted component of Natural Lifemanship, and complete your training by participating in the ultimate brain integration activity––Riding to the rhythm of music, with a horse, to the song of your choosing.
One of the greatest challenges of doing or facilitating mounted work is that people tend to lose a focus on connection, and instead (inadvertently) resort to power, domination and control while on the horse's back.
Although you may work hard at building a connected relationship on the ground, you may feel a natural need to control your horse once you are on his or her back. Reasons for this include vulnerability, muscle memory, or simply habit. It takes practice to stay in connection as intimacy grows.
When you attend this training, you will learn to integrate rhythm and movement into your work to build a trusting relationship with your horse that transfers from the ground to your horse’s back.
You will work with the same horse throughout to measure relationship progress.
“At each step along the way we had to be willing to risk the relationships we had developed to see if we could take them one step further. This is the work that our clients must be willing to do in order to heal and regain their life and relationships.”
- Cindy Skelton-Hodge
What: Rhythmic Riding Immersion
When: The music starts March 3rd
Where: Tyson’s Corners in Lampasas, Texas
Why: This is the ultimate experience in connection and will transform the way you interact with your clients and equine partners.
Cost: $1,799
Prerequisites: The Fundamentals of NL and the NL Intensive
Therapeutic drumming to get you in touch with your internal rhythm
How to use "found sounds." So many things in the environment and the barn can become an instrument.
How to use body percussion to create music (clapping, snapping, stomping, etc)
How to use rhythm and movement in trauma informed work through individual and group activities
On the final day of this unique training, you’ll take rhythmic riding to a whole new level.
After days of practicing slow and intentional Rhythmic Riding™ in a contained space bareback or with a bareback pad, you’ll enter the large arena (usually with an actual saddle) while you and your relationship partner ride to the rhythm of music. There, you will share a dance with your horse as a true testament to the relationship built through connection, respect and trust.
This activity is the ultimate brain integration activity where every single area of the brain is engaged––neurons are firing, connections are being made, and secure attachments are being formed!
How to tell when areas of the brain are regulated or dysregulated
How to promote bottom-up regulation with various kinds of sensory input
How to teach top-down regulation capitalizing on the eustress provided while mounted
How to introduce mounted work in a way that promotes bottom-up and/or top-down regulation while deepening the client's sense of connection with self and with their horse
When it is appropriate to dismount and practice regulation skills outside the round pen
How the equine professional may discern when to maintain the connection with the horse on a lead rope or release that connection to the client who is mounted
The difference between making a request by connecting with the horse versus by controlling her
Properly facilitated by the therapy team, mounted work provides a powerful opportunity for the client to deepen their sense of connection with themselves and with their horse while experiencing somatosensory input of a quality that reorganizes the brain.
Bottom-up regulation is promoted by engaging the brainstem with rhythmic, patterned, repetitive, bilateral movement that the client does not have to produce for themselves. With the lower regions regulated and organized, the client is better able to access the midbrain regions responsible for connection and emotions.
You will do lots of self-regulation, co-regulation and building rhythm in the relationship with your horse partner before you move to mounted work, if and when the relationship is ready.
This is a small training limited to 12 people with no more than 4 participants per trainer.
This training provides the foundation for trauma processing and EC-EMDR.
The Fundamentals of NL and the NL Intensive are prerequisites.
Earn 18.75 CE credits (NBCC).
This training counts towards Advanced Natural Lifemanship Certification.
Check out these powerful blogs from our past participants!
“The Ride of Your Life, How Does One Get That?” by Cindy Skelton-Hodge
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