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Heal Your Horse

The #1 Habit Riders Overlook

Season 1, Ep. 9

What separates a good rider from a great one? According to Dan, it’s not flashy exercises or quick fixes—it’s repetition, fitness, and mindset.


In this episode, Nika sits down with international rider and coach Dan, whose career spans from the junior European Championships to over 15 years of training riders in the UK and Italy.


They explore why the fundamentals never stop mattering, how to address “bad habits” with clarity and consistency, and the role of rider fitness in building confidence in the saddle. Dan also shares his coaching philosophy: listening first, acting second, and empowering riders to be self-sufficient rather than dependent on a trainer.

Whether you’re chasing medals or just aiming to ride with more confidence, this episode is packed with practical wisdom.

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  • 16. Fear, Confidence & The Rider’s Mind: How to Rebuild Trust with Yourself and Your Horse — with Kimberly Dunn

    01:04:21||Season 1, Ep. 16
    In this powerful and honest conversation, Nika Vorster is joined by Kimberly Dunn — clinical hypnotherapist, mindset coach, and lifelong horsewoman — to unpack the psychology of fear in riders and how to finally move through it.After two decades in the horse world, Kimberly has helped hundreds of riders rediscover joy and confidence through her Enlightened Equestrian Program and Ride or Cry Kit. Together, she and Nika explore:Why “just be brave” and “get back on” often make things worseThe link between the rider’s nervous system and the horse’s behaviorWhat regulation really means — and how to do itHow to rebuild confidence after a fall, trauma, or motherhoodThe 3 daily practices to stay calm, grounded, and connectedIf you’ve ever felt ashamed of being scared, lost your spark, or wondered why your horse mirrors your emotions — this episode will change the way you think about fear forever.🎧 Listen to learn how to rewire your mind, reset your body, and ride from calm confidence instead of survival mode.
  • 15. Ride Like a Woman: Yoga, Sensitivity & the Feminine Seat – with Caroline Gaya

    56:06||Season 1, Ep. 15
    In this transformative conversation, Nika Vorster sits down with Caroline Gaya — international dressage rider, yoga teacher, and equestrian coach — to explore the deeper connection between body, breath, and horse.Caroline shares how yoga first entered her life when her body cried out for balance after years of professional riding. What began as a simple class soon revealed itself as the bridge between her own nervous system and her horse’s.Together they unpack:How yoga reconnects riders to their body’s natural rhythm and “neutral state.”Why sensitivity — not strength — is a rider’s greatest asset.How to balance masculine drive with feminine flow in training.What it really means to “ride like a woman,” honouring your cycle, your energy, and your intuition.Caroline offers three simple grounding practices riders can use right away and reveals the biggest lesson horses have ever taught her: your sensitivity is your strength.If you’ve ever felt disconnected from your body or burned out by “pushing through,” this episode will help you soften back into flow — for you and your horse.
  • 14. The Chestnut Mare Method: Lessons in Kindness, Leadership & Letting Go — with Emma Actis- Nika Vorster

    53:11||Season 1, Ep. 14
    In this soulful episode, Nika Vorster sits down with Emma Actis, founder of Emma Actis Horsemanship and creator of The Chestnut Mare Method. Emma shares her early experiences growing up on a cattle ranch, the moment a young rescue horse named Charger changed everything she thought she knew, and how a lifetime of listening, failing, and observing has shaped her gentle, intuitive approach to horsemanship.Together, they explore:Why “difficult” horses are our greatest teachersHow to communicate through body language, play, and empathyWhy true leadership isn’t about dominance, but emotional consistencyThe surprising connection between softness, strength, and self-awarenessThis episode is a reminder that real horsemanship isn’t about control — it’s about curiosity. And that sometimes, the hardest horses arrive to show us the parts of ourselves that need softening most.
  • 13. Emotions Aren’t the Enemy- Nika Vorser- Dr Anne Marie King

    56:46||Season 1, Ep. 13
    What if your emotions weren’t getting in the way of your success—but guiding you toward it?In this transformative episode, Nika Vorster sits down with Dr. Anne-Marie King, medical doctor turned elite performance coach and creator of The Realignment Method. Together, they unpack why so many high achievers—especially equestrians—get caught in cycles of pressure, perfectionism, and burnout.Anne-Marie shares her four-part Realignment Process: 1️⃣ Non-Resistance – accept what you feel 2️⃣ Non-Judgment – understand, don’t fight it 3️⃣ Non-Attachment – release control of outcomes 4️⃣ Alignment – reconnect with excitement and flowThey explore why high performers often confuse suffering with success, how emotions serve as powerful intelligence, and the subtle gender differences in how men and women approach growth. Whether you’re an athlete, leader, or rider chasing your next level—this episode will help you free yourself, not fix yourself.
  • 12. Get Good With Horses - Nika Vorster- Zoe Coade

    01:00:35||Season 1, Ep. 12
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  • 11. Equestrian Athletes: YOUR EMOTIONS AREN’T THE ENEMY

    56:46||Season 1, Ep. 11
    What if your emotions were the key to your next level — not the obstacle?In this powerful conversation, Nika Vorster sits down with performance psychologist and coach Dr Anne-Marie King to explore how high achievers can release emotional blocks that keep them stuck in cycles of proving, perfectionism, and burnout.Dr Anne-Marie shares her four-step Realignment Process — non-resistance, non-judgment, non-attachment, and alignment — a practical framework that helps ambitious people get out of their heads and back into flow. Together, they unpack how to turn emotions into intelligence, why women often hesitate to claim their own growth, and how to reconnect with what feels genuinely exciting and alive. If you’ve ever felt driven but drained, this episode will help you realign — and rise.
  • 10. Strength, Mobility & Riding: What Equestrians Need to Know.

    47:33||Season 1, Ep. 10
    What happens when your gym strength doesn’t translate to the saddle?In this episode, Nika Vorster talks with dressage rider and founder of Equibody Fit Fitness, Jack, about the gap between general fitness and rider-specific fitness. Jack shares how his powerlifting background left him with tight hips and poor mobility, and how retraining his body — even learning the splits — transformed his riding at Grand Prix level.Together, they discuss Equibody’s mission to help riders build a body that “just works,” the differences in training for men and women, and why most riders should focus on the 80% foundations rather than the last 10% of optimization. If you’ve ever felt strong in the gym but stiff in the saddle, this episode will change the way you think about rider fitness.
  • 8. Horse Depression- An introduction

    01:02:11||Season 1, Ep. 8
    What if the “dangerous” horse isn’t dangerous at all—but depressed or misunderstood?In this episode, Nika Vorster speaks with equestrian coach and author Joanna (Horses Explained) about horse psychology and the overlooked mental health of our equine partners. Joanna shares insights from her book Understanding Horse Depression, explains the difference between temperament and personality, and breaks down the four temperament types that shape how horses respond to training. Together, they explore how rider energy and emotions influence horses, why labels like “difficult” can hide deeper issues, and how rehabilitation rooted in patience and empathy changes outcomes. Joanna also tells the story of her horse Ella, a so-called “dangerous” mare who became a trusted partner through understanding and trust.Joanna wants to clarify a few things from the conversation:The Research citation is credit to a 2012 study by Carole Fureix and Martine Hausberger.-The link to the study: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22761752/ Clarification on horse depression- This is a brief introduction to horse depression. The first step in recognizing subtle signs is knowing your individual horse and being familiar with the equine ethogram so you can distinguish species-typical behaviours from those that may suggest a problem. Depression in horses is a real, diagnosable condition with specific symptoms; I’d love to dive deeper into this in a future conversation.Definitions to include:Temperament: A horse’s inborn way of reacting to the world—how sensitive he is, how quickly he startles, and how easily he settles. Temperament shows up early, is largely genetic, and remains stable over time. We can shape responses, but not the core reactivity.Personality: The whole picture—temperament plus learned patterns from experience and environment, along with quirks, preferences, and social habits. Personality evolves over time, but core traits tend to stay recognisable.In short: Temperament is innate; personality is temperament shaped by environment and experience. By improving the environment and handling, we can influence (not replace) aspects of personality while respecting the horse’s nature.To work or contact Joanna directly: Book a Horse Personality Portrait: www.horsesexplained.comInstagram: @horsesexplainedMedia/Lessons/Workshops: horsesexplained@gmail.comUpcoming book: Understanding Horse Depression — releasing Spring 2026.