01/28/2026
I saw this and had to share â€ïž I'm so lucky to have parents who let me coach and they show up with hot coco and hands ready to help. Thank you to my parents who encourage.the kids and keep coming back for more.
There comes a moment at the barn when your child looks less like the little kid you once helped into tiny bootsâŠ
and more like someone learning how to truly ride on their own.
As parents, itâs tempting to do more.
To correct every transition.
To replay every circle, every test, every lesson in our heads.
To want the best so badly that we forget why they started riding in the first place.
But hereâs the truth many of us learn slowly:
Your child doesnât need you to be their instructor.
They need you to be their parent.
The instructorâs job is to teach position, balance, feel, and timing.
Your job is something much harder â and much more important.
Your job is to:
Stand by the arena through the heat, the dust, and the long ride days.
Clap even when the ride didnât feel perfect.
Be the calm voice after a tough lesson.
Be the safe place when confidence wobbles.
Sometimes, the greatest support isnât instruction.
Itâs presence.
When you step back and just cheer, you give your child room to grow. You allow them to:
Take ownership of their riding.
Learn patience through crooked circles and missed transitions.
Discover confidence that doesnât depend on constant correction.
And one day, long after the boots are worn, the breeches are stained, and the horses have changed, they wonât remember every score or comment.
Theyâll remember who was there.
Theyâll remember:
You showing up.
You believing.
You letting them try, struggle, and find their balance.
Because in the end, horseback riding doesnât just build riders.
It builds feel, discipline, and character.
And parents â quietly cheering from the rail â are a big part of that.
So when the moment comesâŠ
Step back. Take a breath. And just cheer.
Youâre doing more than you know. đ