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SUSTAIN YOUR E.A. PRACTICE

17 members • Free

NR Women Coach Community

114 members • Free

Horses Connect

121 members • Free

6 contributions to Horses Connect
HOW IT BEGAN - and where it’s going
i first recognised the positive effects horses had on people way back in the ‘70’s - (I’m old 🤣) However, it took until 2014 plus a lot of life experience, training , and finding the right business partner before Horses Connect was born. We started offering therapeutic horse riding and then developed ground based equine assisted learning programs. About 4 years ago - because we had an impossible waiting list with nowhere to refer people - we created our own externally accredited training courses, and are now recognised as an accredited training centre by both ITOL - www.itol.org - and IPHM - www.iphm.co.uk, We train experienced horse people in Therapeutic Horse Riding Coaching and in Equine assisted Personal Development/Learning Coaching. We’re in the process of implementing a licensing system so that suitably qualified coaches can offer Horses Connect Coach Training. It’s a work in progress, but we’re steadily getting the T’s crossed and the I’s dotted. Everything we do is built on the fundamental principle that our horses are equal partners in the work and never considered as tools or props. We’re based in the West of Ireland, where the value of equine assisted work is just beginning to be recognised 😊 Where did your horse adventure begin?
HOW IT BEGAN - and where it’s going
3 likes • Jan 18
When my children were 2, 2, 2 and 3 years old and all public services had available were admin waiting list letters, we privately accessed Equine Assisted Services for them. It was a transformative experience for all of us on many levels. When they lost this service, my eldest daughter’s physical health deteriorated rapidly. They needed services, I needed services and I was in a privileged position to be able to up-skill, build upon my existing experience, create this for us and share it. It is my passion to co-create supports for the phenomenal EAS professionals nationwide so our services can have viability and we can focus on ethical and safe service provision for our clients and our equine partners.
Connecting to Now
Today, as I packed away the Christmas decorations and prepared rooms for visitors over the New Year — knowing I’ll be away — I found myself thinking about those who didn’t make it this far into 2025. Friends.Family members - Two-legged and four-legged. And I caught myself wondering how many of us will be here this time next year and what we can learn from our horses 🐴 Horses live quietly and constantly. Not in fear — but in presence. They don’t assume tomorrow. They don’t rush past today. They meet each moment as it is, with the bodies and beings who are actually here. The herd teaches us something simple and profound: Be fully with who is here. while they are here. Not perfectly. Not urgently. Just honestly. A breath. A touch. A moment of attention. That is often enough. Invitation Take a quiet moment today and ask yourself: 🐴 Who am I grateful for right now? 🐴 Where might I be rushing past presence? 🐴 How can I meet today more fully, without borrowing worry from tomorrow Horses don’t measure life by length.They measure it by connection. And connection is makes the world go round 💕
Connecting to Now
0 likes • Dec '25
I love this
NEW FREE MINI-COURSE
As EA coaches, Disability Awareness is ESSENTIAL! The mini-course in the Classroom will give you an overview of what that means in practice. The information refers to the legal requirements in the Republic of Ireland, so please check what's required in your location. Watch this space for a more in-depth accredited version
NEW FREE MINI-COURSE
1 like • Dec '25
Absolutely phenomenal Eileen!! What a gift. Thank you.
New Free Course Alert!
Introducing 'A Playful Guide to Horse Archetypes' Imagination, curiosity, and ethical equine-assisted personal development combined. This short course is a fun, creative exploration of how horses can appear as characters in a client’s unfolding story during equine-assisted personal development sessions. Before we begin, here’s an important Horses Connect reminder: This is a playful tool. It’s not science, psychology, or behaviour interpretation. We never ‘read’ horses or assign meaning to their behaviour. We do not analyse the horse or the client. We do not symbolise or interpret emotional states. Instead, we: honour the horse as a sentient being stay firmly in the personal-development lane support client agency and imagination let story lead, not analysis celebrate curiosity + creativity Archetypes in this course are simply light, imaginative invitations to notice how a horse’s presence, movement, or stillness can shape a moment, just like characters shape a scene in a story. Because sometimes… - a calm horse can represent an Anchor - a curious one can represent an Explorer - a watchful one can represent a Sentinel - a wandering one can represent a Space-Maker - a steady presence can represent a Companion And sometimes the most meaningful thing is: ‘They’re just being themselves, and that’s enough.’ This course gives you: ✅ A playful, ethical creative tool ✅ Story-based prompts that avoid interpretation ✅ Language that keeps you in your lane as an Equine-assisted Personal Development Coach# ✅ Ways to invite imagination and possibility ✅ A gentle method to your own deepen presence and awareness Who this is for - Equine-assisted personal development coaches - Horses Connect trainees & CPD learners - Anyone who loves imagination, horses, and ethical facilitation Who this is not for - People looking for psychological meaning or symbolism - Anyone wanting to analyse horse behaviour or client emotions - Therapeutic interpretation approaches Our mantra for this course:
New Free Course Alert!
1 like • Oct '25
Bud the exploring companion.
HOW HORSES HELP NEURODIVERGENT ADULTS
We're often asked to explain the seemingly unexplainable effect that simply being around horses has on people - especially those with anxiety, or neurodivergence. While the research is scant, and most of the evidence is anecdotal and experiential, we've put together a short article to help you answer that question - for yourself, or your clients 🙂
3 likes • Oct '25
I would love to work on a literature review on this topic with you and submit to academic journals.
2 likes • Oct '25
@Eileen Bennett great so we do a literature review. Then we look to partner with a research university to do a qualitative research study compiling the ‘anecdotal’ evidence into smth quantifiable.
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Sue Kelly
2
9points to level up
@sue-kelly-7308
Mother of four. Director of EquiSense.

Active 21h ago
Joined Aug 21, 2025
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