Change is hard. As riders, and as humans, we find it emotionally challenging to let go of our dreams and make adjustments to our plans. Many of us will have to make the decision to retire, re-home or re-purpose (find a
new job for) our horses at some point. This is an emotionally painful situation to be in. However,
we tend to make it harder on ourselves by trying to control outcomes or resist changes that are occurring.

Nothing in life ever stays the same; everything changes and eventually ends. Yet, we spend a lot of our life resisting this and trying to direct it to go our way. No amount of worrying will change this fact of life; it will only make you miserable along the way.

When your horse can no longer do the job you want him to do, you need to accept that life is changing and allow yourself to grieve. Grief is an emotion and process humans are hardwired for, and it helps us move through pain and come out the other side. It’s an adaptive function of the brain. If you don’t allow yourself to grieve the loss of your partnership with your horse, you will remain stuck trying to control things – your emotions, for example.

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