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#equestrian #horse #horse chi horsing No matter how long you have been working with horses or living with them, this online seminar 1 is primarily about you. How our thoughts and feelings are reflected in our body language and actions and how a horse perceives us holistically. Here Alexandra will teach you the connections of the nature of horses, how they think, communicate and work with all types of resistance to restore their natural order. All other online seminars build on this. This part 1 is the original from online seminar 1, which consists of 3 parts. Part 1: The horse's three communication levels and their psychological significance for the horse. How our unconscious behavior not only shows itself in our interactions with horses, but how it can also be recognized when we understand it in our private life, at work, in the family and in all relationships. Why we have to understand the function of vibration and energy in order not to constantly walk through the horse's natural structure and thereby dull our horse. Part 2: How and why you can develop your personality with the horse using chi horsing as quickly as possible. The horse as a measuring device for our inner balance, ways to a fulfilled life and dealing with your horse with dignity through body and energy awareness. What the horse's gift is to lead us to peaceful concepts when its behavior is seen and recognized from the perspective of chi horsing and the complex knowledge of Far Eastern teachings. Part 3: Body language and empathy in building relationships between humans and horses. Conditioning or authentic and mindful communication and the different meanings for the development of horses and humans. Learning through pain to form obedient beings as a simple and outdated educational system that comes from the last generations and that we often pass on unconsciously and self-destructively. As can be seen from the practical example of hoof picking, through how many small, incompetent movements the horse can uncover destructive behavioral patterns in the lifestyle of its owner and the consequences thus make handling the horse dangerous.