ArizonaRealCountry.com 13 June 2018 LAND FOR SALE 3 ACRES with runway privelages; shared well. Bring your horses and airplane! $99,500 MLS 5602101 8 ACRES HORSE PROPERTY flat and usable; private well + 4 shares in a shared well. $160,000 (agent/owner) MLS 5657012 47 acres HORSE PROPERTY that adjoins State Trust Land. private, secluded and easy access. $198,500 MLS 5382128 16 ACRES in Congress with water & power. Great views and borders State Trust Land. Horses welcome! Maybe split into two 8-acre parcels. $300,000 or buy 8 acres ($150,000-$160,000) 8 PRISTINE ACRES of horse property in the heart of Wickenburg. Great Views! Can be split into two - 4 acre lots (survey available). Build on one and sell the other! $189,500 MLS 5740224 Saddle Up Realty and Property Management Looking for a summer place in the White Mountains of Arizona? Maureen knows the mountains and can find you a summer home! Give her a call and stay cool in the mountains this summer! MAUREEN SERRANO 623-521-2355 mserranosellsre@gmail.com Buddy said he thinks learning isn’t just about absorbing information. To him it’s more about discovery, so as a clinician his goal is to help students discover what feels good to them and their horses; to figure out what works best for them without worrying what’s right or wrong. In others words, to help them to rely on feel rather than a formula. Buddy explained how in his experience people learned better when they’re able to put aside their self-judgments and self-doubts. It makes them calmer and less concerned about themselves, which gives them a relaxed sort of focus that allows them to be more aware of the horse and better prepared to respond to the horse’s needs. I asked how to find this “relaxed focus,” but it wasn’t until I quit trying so hard that I really started to learn. That’s when I could finally work with a horse and be relaxed about it. I could just be there in the moment. When I was able to give up worrying about what’s right and what’s wrong, that was when I was finally able to start experimenting and I realized the horse isn’t as fragile as we want to believe. Horses are pretty resilient actually. You can mess up. You can start heading down the wrong road and when you recognize your mistake you can change course. The horse will forgive you. That was a huge thing for me to come to understand and it only happened when I quit judging my mistakes. When someone would make a bad head shot roping, The Horseman would always say, “It’s a good thing you got rid of that so it won’t come back later.” It was funny, but it was true. We all make mistakes, but the real mistake is worrying about it. So let’s get those mistakes out of the way and get on with it.” GO EASY ON YOURSELF: “It took me a while to figure out I had been trying too hard, and for all the wrong reasons. I was analyzing it too much; worrying about what someone else might do. Instead of focusing on what was going on with the horse and how what I was doing affected the horse, I was judging myself, thinking too much about what I should do and regretting what I’d already done. All that did was distract me from the horse.” DON’T WORRY ABOUT IT: “I had a friend who would see me struggle and say, “Don’t worry about it.” That was a long time ago, but it really helped me a lot over the years. Worry keeps you from learning and from being able to help your horse. It was a big change for me to stop being so judgmental about what was right or wrong, or good or bad, and accept it. I wonder if that was because it wasn’t about the praise to him. It was about what happened between you and your horse. We lose touch with the horse when we worry too much about all the other stuff.” “Sometimes I’ll look at a video working with a horse and I’ll think I could have put a little more pressure on, or maybe I could have done a little less, but I didn’t and that was okay too.” And as it turns out, science agrees with being okay with things may just be the key to finding that relaxed focus. Studies have found that we are better able to learn in an untroubled state of internal calm and quiet. Free from tensions and anxieties, we’re more aware and able to be in the moment. Horses seem to encourage this more natural way of being, which is probably what makes them so important to us. They truly are our teachers, but having Buddy as a guide for five days sure didn’t hurt the learning process. By Buddy Uldrikson Buddy Uldrikson Training at Rancho Rio Bonita: buddyuldriksonhorsemanship.com WHY DO WE GO TO CLINICS?