03/13/2026
Yes 🖤
Why Bending Fixes 80% of C**t Problems
(And Why Most Riders Accidentally Do It Wrong)
Bending a c**t around is one of the most important early foundations in c**t starting. It teaches the horse how to soften, yield, and connect its body to the rider instead of pushing against pressure.
We all want straightness but straightness is
the finished product... softness comes first.
So early in training we often say: "Bend them
until they learn to be straight with softness.”
Most problems in young horses come down to
one simple issue: BRACE!!!!
When a c**t braces, he...locks his jaw, stiffens his neck, tightens his rib cage, pushes through the shoulders, runs through pressure. Once that brace travels through the body, the rider loses control of the feet.
However, Bending is not about pulling the head around.
💡 True bending means: the rib cage yields, the inside hind steps under, the shoulder softens. If the head bends but the body stays stiff, you are just folding the neck, not training the horse.
Just pulling the head around creates a fake bend.
You’ll see:
❌the neck folded
❌the shoulder still locked
❌the rib cage stiff
❌the hind legs trailing behind
Nothing actually changed in the body. That horse is still braced just with its nose tipped sideways.
One thing many people also overlook is that bending helps a c**t mentally regulate. A bent horse is thinking instead of reacting when done correctly. It redirects the brain from flight mode to focus mode.
This is why many trainers bend a c**t when:
✔️they get anxious
✔️they want to speed up
✔️they lose focus.
C**ts that stay straight and stiff often: lock their neck, push through the bit, run through pressure.
Bending breaks that brace.
A bent horse cannot fully brace, run straight through the bridle or lock its shoulders. When a c**t bends correctly, the inside hind leg steps underneath the body and that does several important things.
1. It disengages the motor,
2. slows their feet,
3. gives you control of forward motion.
That’s why bending is such a safe control tool when a c**t gets worried or wants to run. Because even with all the groundwork and preparation, things don’t always go as planned. You’re working with a young horse that is still learning how to handle new situations, and sometimes they need your help thinking through it while maintaining FORWARD MOTION.
As riders, we need tools that allow us to stay safe while helping the horse find a better answer.Don’t take bending a horse around for granted. It’s one of the most important safety and communication tools you have.
You cannot fix a horse by holding them together from the front. You fix them by:
💡unlocking the body (forward motion)
💡controlling the feet
💡releasing the brace.
Bending is simply the tool that allows all of that to happen. Softness has always been the language of great horsemen. A young horse is not just learning cues they are learning how to think when pressure appears.
MBR Performance Horsemanship LLC
Elsabe Hausauer
No Better Cat
Aint Seen Any Better
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Picture credits to Skye Harris doing a great job bending this c**t around and working on fundamentals. (I love this picture and ask her for permission to share)
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