We always hear about riders who were on a horse before they could walk. But many people don’t learn to ride until adulthood ‒ and then there are those who had a negative experience as a child which instilled a lifelong fear of horses.

Graeme Bull of Maple Ridge, BC, was in this latter category until he made the decision to overcome his anxiety of horses. He’d had a traumatic experience as a child: when on a trail ride the horse he was riding, which was too big for him and the stirrups were too long, rode him under an old pine tree, where Bull remained for at least half an hour before being rescued. While working as a computer programmer for 20 years, Bull signed up for riding lessons.

Graeme Bull: “I hope to be able to move the needle a bit in the horse world away from overbearing tactics and fear-based methods.”

“This long-standing memory was something I wanted to rid my brain of and empower myself to get past what was a literal childhood fear based on a lack of education and preparation,” Bull says. “I was determined to change that, and I did.

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