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As the horse trotted past, he explained, "I’m making it so the horse can rest only when she’s paying attention to Paula." He was satisfied with how it was going. "She’s seeing that Paula’s not in there to hurt her or threaten her," he said. "And she’s a smart horse too; she’s in there thinking."
Within an hour, McCaslin was stroking the wild mare. Next, she haltered the horse and clipped her to a "hang line," a rope threaded through a ring firmly attached to a cable strung tight about 12 feet above the corral.
This is the centerpiece of Addison’s technique. The mare was tied just tightly enough that she could stand comfortably only when directly below the ring. If she stood off to the side—or reared, or otherwise resisted—the line pulled her head uncomfortably. The hang line had the added benefit of being far enough from the fence that she wouldn’t hurt herself if she made a fuss. After some wrangling, she stood as alert and relaxed as a show horse.
Then McCaslin stroked her with a strip of tarp attached to a long pole. Addison explained that "tarping" prepares the horse for any human-caused movement—flapping raincoats and the like. The mare twitched at first, but soon got used to it. That done, McCaslin petted, leaned against, hugged and draped herself over the mare. Within three hours of picking the untamed mare out of the group in the holding corral, she was riding the horse.
I was so transfixed by the process, by how quickly that mare started to trust McCaslin, that I decided to train a horse too. I went into the corral, Addison rolling alongside me. Remembering that he’s also a spiritual leader whose twice-weekly sweat lodges attract people from around the world, I was half expecting some shamanistic insight on which horse to choose. But he said only, "Which one do you want?" I pointed to a compact black stallion.
I picked him because he was beautiful. I also picked him because he was—as stallions go—small. I was scared. When I was 7, my mother bought a pony for me and my older sister. His name was Bobby. He had the body build of a big ball and the soul of a mercenary. Bobby had an affinity for a holly tree into which he deposited me with enough regularity that I still dream about it. We sold him when I was 9. Since then, I had ridden only half a dozen times—always on the oldest, slowest horse I could find. The black stallion read my past perfectly and proceeded to treat me with total disrespect.
"Make him run," said Addison, dragging on a cigarette from one of the two packs of Kool Filter Kings he smoked that day.
But the stallion ignored my "yahs," my claps and my attempts to slap him on the butt with the lead rope. He stopped. He turned his butt to me. He whinnied to his friends. I looked to Addison, but he was silent. Some 15 people watched. The stallion walked, stopped and occasionally broke into a desultory trot. I waved my arms at the horse and wished the ground would open up and swallow me whole.


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