Healing Touch for Gedy:
A registered
Arabian gelding, owned by Terry Boaz of Loma Rica,
California.
Article written by Terry
Boaz
Gedy had suffered some bad
handling when he was "broke" to saddle. The woman who trained him
was very heavy handed and used the old fashioned "beat them into
submission" methods. Gedy was sold to a family that treated him with
kindness, but what he had experienced during early training stayed
with him. When this family moved, they placed him with us knowing he
would have a good home for the rest of his life. Gedy is now 24
years old.
As we began riding Gedy more, we
found that if he thought you were going to discipline him in any
way, he became very excitable. We worked with him using all the
usual training methods to help quiet excitable horses, even though
Gedy did calm down a lot, he was still a very excitable and hyper
horse. I was told this was just the nature of an Arabian horse, so
we accepted the behavior and went on with life. Gedy would prance,
dance, step sideways, rear and crow-hop if he was put into a
situation that reminded him of the methods used to break him to
saddle. On the ground Gedy was very calm, easy to handle and a big
love, but in the saddle he was a different horse. Gedy also had the
habit of running if he knew you had a halter in your hand. If you
walked up to him and placed your arms around his neck, you could
lead him anywhere. If he saw the halter, he would lead you on a
merry chase!
When Kathy Edstrom came for a
visit to California and told me about using Healing Touch, like most
people, I was a bit skeptical thinking, “How can something like this
really work?” At the time Kathy came, Gedy had just suffered a new
transition in his life. A few months before we had to sell his
stable mate due to unfortunate circumstances. This was a horse that
he had been with for three years. Gedy is very possessive of his
buddies, because he has had two older companion horses die while
pastured with him. He has a strong separation anxiety because of
this. We could never ride him off by himself, because he became so
excitable and difficult to handle. When his pasture mate left to go
to his new home, Gedy sulked for weeks. He would turn his head away from me,
refusing to be consoled. Gedy and I always had a good relationship,
but he did not want any part of my efforts to make him feel
better.
After a few months, we found a
nice Appaloosa gelding to become Gedy's new friend. We gradually
introduced them to each other, but when we turned them lose, Gedy
would not let me near the other horse! So, we had to separate them.
When Kathy came, Gedy was in one pasture and the new "buddy" in
another. I told Kathy the problems with Gedy when riding him and in
the pasture. Also, I told her about the gate where we took them out
of the pasture to ride off the property. Gedy for some reason wanted
out of the gate and would become frantic to get to it. He would
dance sideways, crow hop, rear, toss his head, and fight for the
bit. I was becoming frustrated because everything I tried to do to
discourage this behavior, failed. I finally resorted to riding in a different
area and not going near the gate for any reason. This wasn't a cure,
but it avoided the behavior.
Upon Kathy's arrival, we went out
to meet the horses. Kathy, over the few days she spent here, went
out to see Gedy and Bandit on a regular basis. She began explaining
Healing Touch to me and asked if she could try it. I told her to go
ahead, but I was skeptical about it actually working. She worked
with him using Healing Touch and then we went riding. I could not
believe I was on the same horse! Gedy went calmly, no prancing, no
dancing, no crow hopping, or fighting to get out the gate! We rode
past the gate and all over with a WALKING and very calmly collected
Arabian horse! Since that session, Gedy has not offered to run, nor
has he offered to keep me from catching the other
horse.
While Kathy
was here we turned him out with Bandit and the two are buddies,
happy and enjoying each other’s company. Kathy taught me how to use
one of the Healing Touch techniques called the Bridging Technique,
with Gedy, which I now often do before riding. He has even let
others ride him with the same calm demeanor. He does not become
excitable as he once did, but calmly walks along enjoying a quiet
ride! We are able to ride him out with friends and their
horses. Where Gedy used to walk out in the lead, he will now ride
behind, in between or in the lead of other horses. Before he always
had to be in the lead. It is unbelievable at what we can do with him
now that we couldn't do before Kathy's visit. We can even walk in
and out the "problem" gate calmly and go away from it without
incident! Gedy is a different horse and all our friends keep asking,
"What did you do to Gedy? He's so calm! He acts like a Quarter Horse
instead of a hyper Arabian!"
Since Kathy taught me the
Bridging Technique, we have also used it on a friend's mustang that
had a bucking problem. The mustang is relaxed and now accepting the
saddle without bucking and no longer pulling free from his handlers
in an attempt to buck the saddle off. He is becoming as relaxed and
calm as Gedy has been and continues to be! I hope anyone who has a
horse that suffers from a bad experience will be open-minded and try
Healing Touch. My horse is certainly proof that it does work! Thank
you, Kathy! Gedy sends his love!
Published August
2004 |