エピソード

  • 103: When Traditional Care Wasn't Enough: Trish & Teddy's Story
    2026/03/03

    I’m delighted to have Trish Collins, owner of a 30-year-old mare called Teddy, joining me today to discuss the challenges of supporting a senior horse. We unpack the dietary changes and behavioral quirks of a senior horse and discuss the value of natural nutrition, homeopathic remedies, and holistic care.

    Changing Appetites

    Senior horses like Teddy often change their preferences or skip meals. Trish learned to stay flexible, offering alternatives and listening to Teddy’s cues rather than forcing a rigid feeding schedule. Even at 30, Teddy now displays curiosity, an enthusiasm for food, and she engages with her environment. Trish noticed how she regained her energy, playfulness, and mental sharpness after implementing a tailored nutrition and care plan.

    Nutrition

    A consistent, nutrient-rich diet is essential for senior horses. Proper nutrition supports appetite, digestion, weight maintenance, and overall vitality, even in horses with health issues or on medications.

    Observing and Responding

    Trish developed confidence by watching Teddy closely, noting her likes, dislikes, and reactions. This observation has guided adjustments in feed, supplements, and care routines, empowering Trish to make informed decisions.

    Natural and Complementary Approaches

    Homeopathic remedies and medicinal plants are important for supporting Teddy’s appetite and vitality. Natural options can complement standard care, especially when conventional solutions are limited.

    Consistency and Patience

    Teddy’s progress did not come from one dramatic change. It came from Trish’s steady and consistent changes, made after observing Teddy closely and implementing thoughtful adjustments. Nothing was rushed. Trish learned that improvement often occur quietly and gradually, not all at once. Staying patient, sticking with the plan, and allowing Teddy the time she needed proved far more powerful than constantly changing course.

    A Stress-Free Environment

    Stress-free environments are crucial for senior horses to thrive. Allowing Teddy to roam freely and move on her own terms improved her appetite, mood, and overall quality of life.

    Preventative Strategies

    The strategies Trish used with Teddy also serve as a model for younger horses. Paying close attention to their diet, movement, and health early on helps to prevent any future challenges and sets them up for longevity.

    Emotional and Owner Insights

    Trish found that supporting her own horse felt far more emotional and overwhelming than helping clients with theirs. She learned that staying observant, trusting what she was seeing, and allowing room to adjust the plan helped to calm her anxiety.

    Trish’s confidence did not come from having all the answers. It came from paying attention, staying flexible, and consistently moving forward.

    Links and resources:

    Connect with Elisha Edwards on her website.

    Masterclass: How to Trust Your Horse Instincts with Confidence (even when everyone else disagrees)

    続きを読む 一部表示
    54 分
  • 102: What Your Horse's Body Is ACTUALLY Trying to Tell You
    2026/02/24
    Over the last few episodes, we’ve explored topics related to mindset, how we approach our horse’s health, what we notice, and how to interpret what we see.This week, I help you understand what your horse’s body is actually telling you, and, more importantly, how to recognise those signals with clarity and confidence.You Know More Than You ThinkYou’ve accumulated years of data from observing your horse directly. Every time you pick up their feet, watch them move, notice shifts in their energy, skin, coat, eyes, or behavior, you’ve been learning. The problem is that you don’t trust what you’re noticing. Your horse’s body is dynamic, and its chemistry is changing every millisecond, so you need to bring the power back to yourself.Why We Doubt OurselvesSelf-doubt usually comes from three patterns. First, we treat our observations as less valid than measurable data, even though lab tests are only snapshots of a moment in time. Second, we confuse observation with diagnosis, jumping from “stiff today” to catastrophic conclusions without enough information. Third, we minimize what we see because we are afraid of what it might mean—both overreaction and avoidance block clear decision-making.StructureStructure includes posture, muscle development, hoof quality, coat condition, body composition, and movement patterns. Those are visible and measurable expressions of deeper processes. Structural changes are often a result of diet, stress, movement-related issues, environmental issues, toxicity, and time. A dull coat, dropped topline, or poor hoof quality reflects what has been happening internally over weeks, months, or longer.FunctionFunction is how the horse moves through the world. It includes energy levels, behavior, digestion, respiratory patterns, appetite, and emotional expression. Functional shifts usually occur before structural breakdown. Subtle changes in manure quality, food aggression, pacing, anxiety, coughing, or stiffness are often early signals. Addressing those signs early prevents bigger problems later.ConnectionConnection reflects emotional well-being, trust, and a sense of safety. Changes in willingness, engagement, affection, or reactivity may signal physical discomfort or unmet needs. Health challenges such as chronic pain or metabolic issues can alter a horse’s emotional state. A shift in connection may indicate a hidden health issue.From Observation to UnderstandingClear thinking requires separating observation from interpretation. An observation is specific and descriptive. A diagnosis requires evidence. Patterns matter more than single moments. When did it start? What makes it better or worse? Is it constant or intermittent? Patterns reveal root causes and guide informed action.The Whole Horse PerspectiveEvery symptom exists within a system. Stiffness may be related to limited movement, cold weather, circulation, trimming, or management practices. Digestive changes may be due to stress, diet, or environmental factors. Viewing the whole horse allows you to respond thoughtfully rather than react fearfully.Framework Builds ConfidenceObservation without structure leads to anxiety. Observation within a framework leads to clarity. When you record patterns, make thoughtful adjustments, and monitor outcomes, your confidence grows naturally. You begin making decisions based on knowledge instead of fear.Knowledge and Action Work TogetherUnderstanding how the horse’s body systems connect strengthens your decision-making. You do not need perfect certainty before taking action. Thoughtful changes, followed by observation, build experience and trust in your own judgment.Community Reduces IsolationHealth journeys can feel lonely. Shared learning, pattern recognition, and collaborative problem-solving provide perspective and reassurance. Noticing how other horses move through similar challenges helps normalize recovery and refine expectations.Trust Is the FoundationYour horse communicates through structure, function, and connection every day. The goal is not perfection. It is presence, awareness, and the willingness to trust what you see. Confidence grows when you combine observation, understanding, and action. Links and resources:Connect with Elisha Edwards on her website.Masterclass: How to Trust Your Horse Instincts with Confidence (even when everyone else disagrees)
    続きを読む 一部表示
    47 分
  • 101: The Three Things Standing Between Your Horse and Their Health
    2026/02/17
    We're getting uncomfortably honest today.In this episode, I continue the conversation I began early in January, to support you with invaluable mindset and perspective shifts, and the knowledge to empower yourself to make the best decisions for your horse, to get the best outcomes with their health and your relationship with them throughout 2026, the year of the Fire Horse.Invisible WallsMany dedicated owners are following protocols, investing in care, researching, and trying every recommended solution, yet true wellness still feels just out of reach. That is often not due to a lack of effort, but invisible internal walls that unintentionally block any progress. Those walls are built from habit, fear, and misplaced trust in external systems, rather than relying on direct feedback from the horse. Once you see them, meaningful change begins to happen. You can’t change what you can’t see. But once the patterns become visible, everything can shift.Wall #1: Prioritizing Being Right Over Being ResponsiveConventional wisdom often overrides individual feedback. Feeding charts, supplement labels, trimming schedules, and doing “what everyone does” can become more important than what your horse is showing you. Textbook health is based on averages and generalizations, whereas your horse’s health is based on its unique metabolism, stress response, digestion, genetics, and environment.Standardized ModelsNo research paper applies universally to every horse. Horses living in the same herd, on the same feed, and in the same environment, will still show completely different imbalances and needs. When we force them into standardized models, we risk damaging their health trying to make them fit systems that were never designed for them.Real progress begins when feedback takes precedence over protocol.Textbook HealthTextbook health is theoretical and based on statistical significance. It gets repeated as a universal truth. Individual health is dynamic and constantly changing. Your horse doesn’t care about recommended feeding charts or daily minimums. It cares about what its body needs today.True responsiveness means asking: Is this actually improving observable wellness? If not, it’s not working. no matter how good the reviews are.Wall #2: Fear Disguised as ControlOver-management often stems from anxiety. Restricting turnout to prevent injury, limiting forage to control weight, isolating horses for safety, and excessive blanketing to prevent cold can create the fragility they were meant to prevent.Fear-based ManagementHorses are designed to move, graze, socially regulate, and adapt to weather. When those natural systems are suppressed, metabolic dysfunction, ulcers, behavioral issues, weakened hooves, and chronic stress can follow. Fear-based management creates systems that require even more management.Allowing horses live more naturally builds resilience. Micromanagement builds dependence.Control = AnxietyControl is often anxiety projected onto the horse’s body. A powerful shift occurs when the question changes from “How do I prevent every possible problem?” to “What does my horse need to become more resilient?”Wall #3: Trusting Protocols More Than FeedbackSupplements, feeding systems, and management routines are tools, not guarantees. When supplements or medications continue for months without any noticeable improvement, when balanced feeds do not result in better coats or stronger hooves, when calming supplements replace environmental or training changes, it means protocol has replaced feedback.SupplementsSupplements should function as feedback tools, not permanent fixes. Management should serve the horse’s biology, not the owner’s schedule. “This is how we’ve always done it” is not a sufficient reason to continue something that isn’t working.Your horse’s body is the curriculum. Observable wellness is the only true test.The Confidence Triangle: Physical, Emotional, MentalTrue wellness depends on three interconnected systems working in balance:Physical healthEmotional well-beingMental clarityYou cannot supplement your way out of emotional stress. You cannot manage your way out of physical pain. You cannot train your way out of mental overload. Those systems influence one another constantly. When one is compromised, the others follow.Holistic HealthHolistic health requires integration, not fragmentation. Instead of chasing symptoms, support systems. Instead of reacting to problems, create conditions for wellness. Instead of working against their nature, work with the horse’s biology.When the Walls Come DownWhen responsiveness replaces ego, fear loosens its grip, and feedback becomes the guide:Problems are caught earlier.Money stops flowing toward ineffective solutions.Resilience strengthens.Chronic issues begin to shift.Decision-making becomes confident instead of anxious.Partnership deepens.Healing often occurs not because the perfect product was found, but because the barriers ...
    続きを読む 一部表示
    51 分
  • 100: Why Your Horse Stops Talking (And How to Listen Again)
    2026/02/10

    Welcome to our 100th podcast episode!

    In the last episode, we discussed permitting yourself to trust your instincts. Today, we continue that discussion, diving even deeper into the topic.

    Tuning In

    Horses are constantly communicating their needs, but we often stop noticing the subtle ways they demonstrate how they feel physically, emotionally, and instinctually. By slowing down, tuning in, calming down, and asking what they need, we can start seeing them clearly again.

    Physical Silence

    Early intervention means noticing whispers of pain before they escalate. Horses often show early discomfort through subtle cues, such as stiffness, girth sensitivity, or reluctance to move, but those signals are often dismissed as personality quirks. Ignoring physical signs can ultimately lead to chronic health problems.

    Emotional Silence

    When horses express anxiety or stress, and it is dismissed or medicated rather than addressed, they stop communicating their emotional needs. Separation anxiety, behavioral stress, and high arousal are not problems to suppress. They’re messages that require consistent attention, gradual training, and emotional support to rebuild trust.

    Instinctual Silence

    Ignoring the natural biology of a horse (Social needs, movement requirements, and grazing behavior) creates systemic stress, metabolic dysfunction, and delayed healing. With long-term confinement, isolation, or mismanaged diets, horses become quiet, masking their real health and welfare needs.

    Human Awareness

    Our own anxiety, busyness, or problem-focused mindset can block communication. Horses mirror our nervous state, so pausing, grounding yourself, and observing calmly allows subtle signals to emerge. Daily wellness check-ins, curiosity-driven observation, and tracking patterns will help you identify root causes before problems escalate.

    Re-establishing Communication

    Shift from “What’s wrong?” to “What does my horse need?” Focus on body, mind, and spirit. Pause, breathe, and observe before taking action. Small, consistent practices, including meditative observation and affirmations, can help you maintain a focused mindset, reinforce trust, and encourage your horse to start communicating once again.

    Tracking Patterns

    Observe your horse’s energy, movement, social behavior, and emotional responses every day. Look for correlations with diet, herd dynamics, weather, or schedule changes. Noticing patterns allows early intervention, supports holistic well-being, and prevents symptoms from worsening.

    Prevention and Wellness

    Horses never stop talking. By creating space to listen and responding thoughtfully, you become a true health advocate. Supporting wellness instead of chasing symptoms fosters partnership, helps catch issues early, and leverages your horse’s innate wisdom for better health outcomes.

    Links and resources:

    Healing Horses with Elisha: Links and resources

    Learn more about Healing Horses Their Way 2026

    Pay-in-full or 3-month payment plan

    And for extra flexibility we also have a 6-month payment plan​

    Either way, you’re stepping into an experience that your horse will be grateful for.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    39 分
  • 99: The Permission You and Your Horse Have Been Waiting For
    2026/02/03

    We’re talking about permission today.

    In last month’s Firehorse Fierce episode, we briefly touched on permission-seeking. Today, I clarify what that really means.

    Too often, we turn to another professional opinion, recommendation, or protocol before fully understanding what we are facing. The truth is, you know your horse better than anyone. So, this episode is about allowing yourself to trust what you already see in their eyes, feel in their body, and sense in their energy.

    Permission Starts With You

    Permission does not come from professionals, protocols, or expert opinions. It comes from you. In an industry full of strong opinions and conflicting advice, it’s easy to believe you need someone else to validate what you already see. But as your horse’s primary caregiver, you are the one who knows their baseline, their patterns, and when something feels off. That lived knowledge truly matters.

    Waiting vs. Being Paralyzed

    There is a difference between pausing to calm your fear so you can make a clear decision and being paralyzed while waiting for external permission. Most hesitation comes from fear of being wrong, not from lack of care. When your doubt delays your decisions, the horse often pays the cost.

    Outside Opinions

    Every outside opinion can quietly erode trust in your own observations. Over time, decision-making shifts away from the horse and toward outside voices, even though your horse is communicating clearly through changes in energy, movement, digestion, and behavior. Those early signals are meaningful. Disease seldom shows up loudly; it builds through whispers long before it screams.

    Expert Support

    Professional support has a place, but professionals are consultants, not permission givers. You remain the decision-maker. True advocacy means staying grounded in what your horse is showing you while using outside expertise to support, not override, that awareness. Flexibility matters far more than rigid adherence to any single philosophy.

    When You Trust Yourself

    When you give yourself permission to listen and act, everything changes. Communication becomes clearer, stress decreases, and trust deepens. When their whispers are heard, horses don’t need to scream. Your horse is counting on you to trust what you already know.

    Links and resources:

    Healing Horses with Elisha: Links and resources

    Learn more about Healing Horses Their Way 2026

    Pay-in-full or 3-month payment plan

    And for extra flexibility we also have a 6-month payment plan​

    Either way, you’re stepping into an experience that your horse will be grateful for.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    29 分
  • 98: When Knowledge Becomes Noise (And How to Filter What Actually Matters)
    2026/01/27

    Today, we’re continuing our conversation about mindset and perspective when it comes to your horse’s health.

    This year, I have received many messages about navigating information overload and conflicting advice about your horse’s health. In this episode, I focus on the vital and often missing emotional support needed for making clear, grounded decisions.

    Stay tuned to learn the difference between knowledge that truly serves you and information that simply creates more noise.

    When Knowledge Turns Into Anxiety

    The more you try to take in, the harder it becomes to filter out the noise. That can result in analysis paralysis, where no option feels safe, and doing nothing starts to feel easier than making a decision.

    Conflicting Expert Opinions

    Different practitioners adopt different approaches. Metabolic, biomechanical, emotional, traditional, and alternative approaches all highlight different aspects of the picture, and without a way to bring them together, the information can become extremely confusing.

    General Advice

    What works for most horses will not always work for your horse. Each horse has a unique body, history, genetics, and energy. Trying to force a generalized protocol onto an individual horse often delays progress and creates more frustration.

    Past Experiences

    Previous losses, mistakes, or missed signs can quietly influence current decisions. Guilt and urgency from the past can cloud your ability to stay grounded and respond clearly in the present moment.

    The Decision Filter

    Clear decisions require a simple framework. Before acting on new information, it should pass three questions:

    Does this align with what I’m observing in my horse right now?

    Does this address the root cause or only manage symptoms?

    Can I implement this consistently with the capacity I have today?

    Observation Comes First

    Your day-to-day observations matter more than generalized recommendations. What you notice in your horse’s body, behavior, and patterns is primary information. Expert advice is valuable, but it comes second.

    Root Cause Over Quick Fixes

    Urgency often pulls us toward symptom management. While comfort matters, lasting improvement comes from understanding what is happening beneath the surface and addressing the underlying cause.

    Consistency Over Complexity

    A simple and consistent approach is far more powerful than a complicated, sporadic plan. What you do consistently, day after day, matters far more than accessing all the latest research or trends.

    Reducing the Noise Restores Clarity

    Slowing down the flow of information, focusing on careful observation, and sticking to a simple, clear plan helps reduce anxiety and creates space for healing. As you become calmer and more consistent, your horse will likely begin to stabilize too.

    Trusting Yourself

    You are the one who knows your horse best. Outside expertise has value, but your insight deserves equal weight. Confidence grows when knowledge and self-trust work together.

    Links and resources:

    Connect with Elisha Edwards on her website.

    Join my email list to be notified about new podcast releases and upcoming webinars.

    Healing Horses their Way: Get more information and join the waitlist

    続きを読む 一部表示
    29 分
  • 97: The Courage to Wait: When Your Horse Needs You Present, Not Panicked
    2026/01/20

    Last week, we looked at how easily our sense of urgency can spill over onto our horses. We explored ways to manage our fears and the urge to intervene when all our horses need is the time and space to heal.

    Today, I take that a step further by explaining how healing is a steady, repetitive, and imperfect process that requires our trust and patience.

    Imperfect Progress

    Horses require consistency, observation, and time for their nervous systems to process changes. Owners often act out of fear or urgency, switching practitioners, modalities, or approaches mid-process. But when we simplify our approach, tension is released, and both horse and human can move at a natural pace. Even though visible results may take weeks, progress is happening beneath the surface.

    Self-Awareness

    If you are anxious, impatient, or reactive, your horse will feel it and reflect it back. Healing your horse begins with you regulating your own nervous system and showing up with presence, patience, and clarity, rather than trying to control the outcome.

    Integration and Patience

    Healing unfolds in stages. Setbacks, plateaus, and integration periods are normal. Your horse’s body needs time to adjust to new movement patterns, nutrition, and modalities. Owners need to embrace this pace, trusting that chemical and neurological changes are happening even when the results are not immediately visible.

    Small, Consistent Steps

    Choose one approach at a time for your horse and commit to it for at least three to four weeks before evaluating progress. For yourself, establish one daily practice that supports your nervous system- a short walk, breathwork, or grounding ritual. Consistency beats intensity.

    Observation Without Judgment

    Notice any changes in your horse’s movement, energy, behavior, or body without labeling them as either good or bad, and observe your own emotions without self-judgment. Journaling helps you track patterns, separate emotions from reality, and build confidence in your decision-making.

    Integration Practices

    Support your horse with rest, social time, and basic care. Let them lie down, play with friends, or simply relax without interference. Similarly, honor your own needs. Regulated owners make better decisions and create an environment that fosters true recovery.

    Reflection

    Track progress with photos, videos, and regular check-ins with trusted practitioners. And for yourself, spend 15 minutes weekly reflecting on what shifted, what was hard, and make the required adjustments.

    Managing Urgency and Fear

    Recognize when the urge to act comes from fear, not clarity. Ask yourself: “Will this action move my horse toward healing in the next 28 days?” and “What small step respects my horse’s and my own capacity today?” Small, deliberate actions will keep healing on track.

    Two-Track Approach

    Take immediate, low-risk actions while planning high-leverage actions for the future. That honors urgency without hijacking the process, allowing progress to continue steadily while you maintain clarity and focus.

    Links and resources:

    Connect with Elisha Edwards on her website.

    Join my email list to be notified about new podcast releases and upcoming webinars.

    Healing Horses their Way: Get more information and join the waitlist

    続きを読む 一部表示
    47 分
  • 96: Frozen in fear to fire horse fierce: Your 2026 transformation
    2026/01/13
    I have spent the past few weeks reflecting because the start of a new year naturally brings a desire to change what we do, how we do things, or even how we think.If you’ve been sitting with a quiet sense that something needs to shift, for yourself or for your horse, this episode is exactly what you need to hear as we step into 2026.Pay Attention to Your FeelingsWhen you sense that something is different with your horse, pay attention because it matters. A strong connection helps you notice subtle shifts long before anything obvious shows. Ignoring that gut feeling often leads to endless research, outside opinions, and overthinking, which only adds confusion instead of clarity.When Caring Turns Into Freeze Freezing, overthinking, and second-guessing are proof of how deeply you care. The weight of responsibility can feel overwhelming, especially when your horse’s health is on the line.Analysis Paralysis and Lost IntuitionToo much information can shut down your intuition. Articles, courses, podcasts, and social media create noise that drowns out the quiet knowing you gain from daily observation and experience with your horse.The Information CollectorWaiting to know everything before taking action keeps change out of reach. Confidence does not come from more information. It comes from deciding and taking action, even if the steps are small or imperfect.The Permission SeekerLooking for opinions from vets, trainers, or social media delays leadership. Horses don’t need thousands of opinions. They need an owner willing to advocate, make decisions, and guide their care with clarity and intention.The Worst-Case SpiralerImagining disasters will drain your energy and stall progress. Indecision becomes a costly choice when fear prevents you from acting. Moving forward requires grounding, focus, and shutting out both external noise and internal catastrophizing.Indecision Versus Intentional ActionDoing nothing is still a choice. Creating a plan, committing to it, and adjusting along the way brings stability to both horse and human. Calm, centered leadership will have a direct effect on your outcomes.Intuition as Valid DataGut feelings are just as important as science. Daily observations, patterns, and responses are meaningful information. Writing them down turns intuition into evidence and builds confidence in decision-making.Alignment MattersDecisions that contradict your beliefs and instincts disrupt flow. When actions align with your values and intuition, outcomes improve. When they don’t, stress rises and progress often stalls.Fire Horse Energy for 2026The Year of the Fire Horse calls for boldness, movement, and decisive action. It favors momentum over perfection and independence over approval. It’s a push to stop waiting and start acting.Imperfect Action Over Perfect PlanningHorses benefit more from timely, intentional effort than from endless preparation. Small, thoughtful changes often lead to noticeable improvements and strengthen trust between horse and owner.Become the Expert on Your HorseCreating a health profile for your horse helps you notice patterns and understand what has led to their current state. Knowing where things have shifted or gone off balance guides the changes your horse truly needs.Fire Horse Goals vs. Frozen GoalsFrozen goals keep you stuck in learning mode. Fire horse goals are action-based: you create a plan for your horse, implement it, and adjust as you go. Taking steps- even if they are not perfect- builds confidence and leads to results.Simple Changes Create Real FeedbackSmall changes give immediate information. Observe what happens, write it down, and adjust as needed. This makes observations into valuable data and strengthens both trust and clarity.Support Without Surrendering AuthorityBringing in help doesn’t mean giving up leadership. The right support aligns with your beliefs, respects your intuition, and works with your understanding of your horse.Community Builds ConfidenceConfidence grows in connection. Shared experience, accountability, and support reduce isolation and replace judgment with learning.Stepping Forward in 2026 This is the year to stop waiting and performing for others. Step up for your horse with courage, commitment, and consistency. Remember that perfection is not a requirement.“Your horse would rather you try at 70% certainty than wait for 100%.”Links and resources:Connect with Elisha Edwards on her website. Join my email list to be notified about new podcast releases and upcoming webinars.Free Webinar Masterclass: Four Steps to Solving Equine Metabolic Syndrome NaturallySave your seat in Elisha's 2-hour live workshop Detox Done Right.Healing Horses Their Way: Sign up for the 6-month payment planHealing Horses their Way: Get more information and join the waitlist
    続きを読む 一部表示
    34 分