Nervous? Me?
March 25, 2009
Tips for managing your pre-horse show jitters.
From America’s Horse
The amount of pressure you perform best under varies from person to person.
When your nervousness exceeds your optimum levels, you lose focus and your skills suffer. Here are a few ways to manage that anxiety you feel before an event.
Plan Ahead
- Make lists of the things you need to do, pack or clean before you leave.
- Find necessary items ahead of time to avoid frantic last minute searches.
- Load your tack and clothes the day before so you can take a mental inventory and make sure you don’t forget anything.
Slow Down
- Planning ahead allows you to avoid overwhelming stress and concentrate on the competition.
- Rushing to get the horse or yourself ready only magnifies unproductive stress.
Exercise
- Working off your stress relaxes your muscles and helps you get a good night’s sleep.
- Exercise speeds the flow of blood to your brain, allows you to think more clearly and releases endorphins into your bloodstream, giving you a sense of happiness and well-being.
Use valuable stretches and exercises from AQHA member publication America’s Horse to reduce stress before competition and to build your riding strength when you can’t get to a horse. These tips help you combat any stiffness and soreness in the saddle to improve your riding.
Relax
- Use relaxation techniques at the event to help calm pre-performance jitters.
- These will take your mind away from nervous feelings and reinforce your energy in a positive manner.
- Tension prevents you from riding your best, so think about what part of your body becomes most tense before you perform.
- To relieve physical tension: contract you’re the tense muscles as tightly as possible, hold the tension for a few seconds, relax and then relax even farther to a state of complete relaxation.
Breathe
- When you’re nervous, the quality of breath you take is lower and shallower than usual.
- Exhale slowly through your mouth, feeling the tension leave your body.
- The Sam Houston State University Counseling Center recommends thinking “I am” as you inhale and “calm” and you exhale.
Imagery
- Imagine a pleasant scene using all of your senses or imagine seeing all of your anxieties leave your body.
- Rehearse your competition in your mind.
Friendly Faces
- The company you keep at the event should encourage you to excel.
- You friends, family, trainer or whomever you socialize with can have a calming effect on your nerves or can increase your anxieties.
- Surround yourself with encouraging, understanding individuals.
America’s Horse offers supportive and encouraging advice with its valuable tips from AQHA Professional Horsemen and women. AQHA members get this award winning publication free!
Diet
- As the food you eat decreases in nutrition, so does the availability of nutrients that de-stress your body.
- Eat foods low in fat and protein, and high in complex carbohydrates, like pasta, whole wheat bread and granola, for a calming effect.
- Avoiding sugar alleviates the spike and crash of your energy level.
Use a variety of relaxation techniques in different situations and make a mental note of which ones work for you. Eventually, you will develop a pre-competition ritual that keeps nervousness from undermining your competitive edge.
Go to QuarterFest on Our Dime: Contest Entries Due Friday!
AQHA members have a great opportunity to win a trip to QuarterFest: A Celebration of the American Quarter Horse. This one-of-a-kind event, May 1-3 in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, will be a chance to ride, touch, observe and learn how to care for your American Quarter Horse.
If you’ve visited AQHA’s new web site, americashorsedaily.com – and you want to visit QuarterFest – here’s the deal: In 200 words or less, tell us which tip on americashorsedaily.com you have benefited from most, and explain why. On the site, you’ll find tips and advice on training, recreational riding, showing, horse health and breeding – so you have lots to choose from.
Send us your entries no later than March 27. And please adhere to the word limit; longer essays will be disqualified. We’ll only accept one entry per person. The contest is open to AQHA members over age 18, and the winner will be notified by April 3.
The prize includes airfare to Murfreesboro from anywhere within the contiguous United States, hotel accommodations and event admission. Visit America’s Horse Daily for complete rules and to submit your entry.
Comments
4 Comments on “Nervous? Me?”
Add a Comment


March 28th, 2009 at 10:59 pm
FIRST OF ALL MY SON AND I ARE NEWBIES TO THE HORSE WORLD. WE ARE ALSO NEW TO SHOWING.WE HAVE NOT BEEN BLESSED WITH BEING RAISED IN IT. MY FARTHERS FAIMLY HAS HORSES IN ALABAMA. WHEN HE PASSED AWAY WE TOOK HIM HOME FROM OKLA TO HIS RESTING PLACE, THAT HE WANTED HOME.MY SON WAS 11 AND I EARLY 40′S NOT A YOUNG ONE TO START THIS.AS WE WERE SETTING IN A BIG PASTURE SOLE SURCHING ON HOW WE WERE GOING TO BE WITHOUT ARE ROCK DAD . I FELT THE HOT BREATH ON MY HEAD THAN NUGING ME TO GET UP, SHE IS MY,MY ALPHA, IM MOCHA FLOWING SAVE ME FROM BEING LOST AND ALONG. IM SO BLESSED THEY SOLD HER TO ME.MY SON WAS PICK OUT ALMOST THE SAME WAY.IT WAS LIKE DAD WAS SAYING OK DAUGHTER THIS WILL KEEP YOU BOTH BISSY.BOY IT DOES. AND OH BOY I HAD NO IDEA WHAT I HAD GOT MY SELF INTO. FIRST SHOW WAS A LONG ONE, TULSA CIRCUT DEC 08 -JAN 09;I JUST HOPE I CAN KEEP MY SON INTO SHOWING,E HAS A GIFT,IT TAKES ME HOUR HE CAN GETTHEM TO DO IN A SHORTER TIME. AND WORKING ALL THESE GIRLS AND NEW LITTLE COLT. IT WAS TUFF. I WANT TO THANK YOUR MAGAZIE FOR & ALL YOUR INFO IN THE AMERICAN HORSE DAILY,AQHA WEB SITE AND ALL THE GREAT DVDS.KEEP UP HE GOOD WORK THERE ARE A LOT OF NEWBY AND IT IS A LITLLE OVER WEILMING TO NOW WHAT TO DO.STUFF TO BRING . ETC.and sorry for my speling its late. im not to good with the pc stuff,.keep up all this good info. thank you rebecca & cedrick
June 15th, 2010 at 6:03 am
[...] biggest competitor is yourself. If you’re worried about beating someone else’s score, you’re probably not going to do well. Go do your job: Rope, [...]
September 2nd, 2010 at 10:28 am
[...] starting from the shoulders down. Working on relaxation starts at home but should carry over into competition. However, Kristie says, it’s an active form of relaxation. You have to visualize it and practice [...]
October 29th, 2010 at 4:02 am
[...] ago, the number of seizure warrants, accompanying paperwork and care of confiscated animals became overwhelming. Today, investigating and seizing neglected and abandoned animals is his full-time [...]