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Addison and his brothers continued to break horses the old way. Then a quarter horse he was particularly fond of had an accident. "A cowboy tied one hind leg to the horse’s neck, and the horse started throwing a tantrum. The other hind leg slipped on the mud, and the horse cracked its pelvis and couldn’t get up," he says. "So we had to put it down. After that I tried a better way, to see what was lacking. And what was lacking was communication."
Addison saw that when a horse puts its ears forward or drops its head or licks its lips, it is open to communication from humans. He saw that a person who approaches a horse head-on frightens it more easily than someone who approaches from the side, with head down. He saw that the best horsepeople are neither aggressive nor submissive.
"If you’re selfish, you disconnect, and if you give too much, you disconnect," he says. "If you’re good to yourself and the horse, that’s communication."
On the first morning of our clinic, Addison sat in a square of shade outside a round corral. We were joined by a half-dozen or so young Native Americans who regularly come to Addison’s to learn about horses and to be in his stabilizing presence. (As an example, Addison, divorced in 2001, is raising his ex-wife’s two sons, 18 and 16, and an adopted daughter, 7.) He manages to tell jokes, field calls on a cordless phone and train horses all at the same time.
Paula McCaslin stood in the ring with a light gray Arabian mare who had led her Arapaho pursuers on a 30-mile chase two days before. Today, the mare kept trying to crawl under the corral fence. Addison spoke to McCaslin in short, repetitive sentences.
"Make her run," Addison said.
"Yah!" McCaslin hollered. "Yah!" The mare broke into a trot. Eventually, she stopped and, ears pricked forward, looked at McCaslin. "That’s the kind of look you want," said Addison. "When she’s ready to communicate, she’ll drop her head." Sure enough, that’s what the mare did. But as McCaslin approached, she turned away.
"OK, make her run," said Addison.


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