Listening to Everyone but the Horse
Why Horses Escalate
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Paulette Clark
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Most people believe they are good listeners.
They notice what’s happening.
They respond.
They try to do the right thing.
And yet, something still keeps going wrong.
This book looks at a pattern that shows up in horse–human relationships, but doesn’t begin there. It begins much earlier — in how many of us learned to listen in the first place.
Listening, for most people, isn’t about being changed by what the other is experiencing. It’s about working out what to do next. How to keep things moving. How to stay on track. How to hold things together.
That way of listening feels normal. Responsible. Even caring.
Imagine trying to explain that something feels wrong, and being met immediately with direction.
Imagine hesitating, and having that hesitation treated as something to work through.
Imagine showing discomfort, and feeling the conversation continue as if what you offered didn’t change anything.
The plan stays in place.
The expectation stays intact.
What you feel is registered, but it doesn’t get to alter the direction of events.
With horses, this often looks like consistency, structure, progress, or kindness. And still, the horse starts to adapt. Sometimes loudly. Sometimes quietly. Sometimes in ways that take a long time to notice.
This is where escalation begins.
Not as bad behaviour, but as the natural response to a relationship that cannot slow down, shift direction, or reorganise around what is being communicated.
What this book explores is not behaviour, but the moment where listening stops being a conversation and becomes a form of management — and why, at that point, horses begin to escalate.
Once you see that moment, it’s hard not to recognise it elsewhere — in your relationships, your work, your family, the way you’ve learned to cope, comply, and keep going even when something in you wanted to slow down.
This book stays with that moment.
It asks a question that most people have never been invited to sit with:
What if listening isn’t what you think it is?
And what if your horse knows that better than you do?