Johanna Lassnack's Best Tips:
Mental Training for Riders
Mental coach Johanna Lassnack shares her best tips for mental training in equestrian sport. Read all about her valuable insights here! đ§
Amanda
Tue 10 May - 22
Johanna Lassnack's Best Tips:
Mental Training for Riders
Mental coach Johanna Lassnack shares her best tips for mental training in equestrian sport. Read all about her valuable insights here! đ§
Amanda
Tue 10 May - 22
Johanna Lassnack is a Swedish lecturer, entrepreneur, rider, and appreciated coach for young athletes. She is also the author of the Swedish book âA mental spur: Take your riding to the next levelâ where she wants to help riders who are struggling with insecurities to feel safer on horseback.
We asked Johanna for some of her best tips regarding mental training for riders and concrete tools to help reduce feelings of fear and nervousness. Enjoy!
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Preparation is key
âPrepare as much as you can, it will give you peace of mind. Make sure you are ready for the level you are going to compete at and that you and your horse feel safe with the tasks. If you do not, I recommend you stay on a level where you feel comfortable a bit longer before proceeding to a more difficult level.Â
Be on time and prepare a careful schedule. Avoid unnecessary pressure and stress. Make sure to eat and sleep enough the night before and check your packing list to ensure that you have not forgotten anything.â
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Start visualizing
âOne of the strongest and most powerful tools for succeeding with an achievement is visualization. It is actually something that a lot of elite athletes do. The brain does what we ask it to do. Therefore, itâs important to avoid the word ânotâ when you make your plan. Itâs a common mistake to think âI should NOT ride with stiff hands this roundâ or âI am NOT going for five strides on that distanceâ. If you talk to your brain in a negative way, the result will most likely be negative as well. Simple as that!Â
When visualizing your performance, itâs necessary to get the right feeling. Take a few minutes and go through the ride with the feeling of how you sit on your horse, how your horse moves under you, and how you ride relaxed and focused. If youâve already felt what you want to feel when you perform, your brain will recognize the situation once you get on track.Â
Fill your brain with positive thoughts and feelings before your round. This will make it easier to prevent any negative thoughts. Replace all thoughts of what NOT to do â with thoughts of what to do.
Change from thinking âI should NOT ride with stiff handsâ to âI am going to ride with relaxed and soft handsâ instead.â
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âSee failures as horse jumping obstacles. We should jump over â and overcome â them, not avoid them.â
â Johanna Lassnack
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Stay focused
âA lot can happen when you warm up. Someone might be standing in your way, shouting from the stands or disturbing you in other ways. Itâs easy to get distracted. Do you have a plan for what to do when you lose focus?
The most important thing is to define exactly when you are losing focus â and why. Once you have defined when your focus disappears, you can quickly take it back. But it only works if you have a plan for how to deal with it.
For example, if you lost your focus to someone sitting in the stands, you can take it back by thinking of a task linked to your performance, for example: âNow I will practice collected canterâ.â
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See failure as an opportunity to learn
âWhen things do not go as planned, it is important to learn to handle it as a lesson. Of course, itâs okay to feel disappointed. But mental strength means you can see failures as lessons.
Failure tells us that we lack some form of knowledge. Itâs important to be able to analyze what went wrong and practice that. If your horse refuses a vertical out of turn â you need to practice jumping verticals out of different turns. Itâs all about preparing, training on your weaknesses and coming back stronger. See failures as horse jumping obstacles. We should jump over â and overcome â them, not avoid them.â
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đâšFeeling inspired?
Want to read more about Johanna Lassnack? Check out our interview with Johanna here!