06/23/2026
Most people see the hands-on part of bodywork: massage, stretches, modalities, the visible work on the horse.
What they don't always see is everything underneath it:
- Learning anatomy deeply enough that you can feel it through your hands.
- Learning behavior well enough to know when a horse is talking before it escalates.
- Learning when not to intervene.
- Learning how much interpretation this work really requires.
Whether from your experience as an owner or as a professional, we'd love to hear about the common misconceptions you've experienced or encountered when it comes to bodywork in the comments below.
06/22/2026
Some horses change our whole way of seeing the body, and then we realize how much there is still to learn. That’s really what we try to stay rooted in here: ongoing education, curiosity, and staying connected to the bigger picture of equine wellness.
If you're someone who likes to keep learning (whether you're a horse owner, bodyworker, or somewhere in between), we put together a monthly newsletter to share what we're seeing, teaching, and thinking about in real time.
It’s a simple way to stay in the loop without having to hunt for information everywhere.
Each month you'll get:
• Practical, horse-first education you can actually use
• Updates on courses, workshops, and upcoming learning opportunities
• Tools and resources to support your own practice or horse care
• A steady flow of ideas that help you see the horse a little differently each time
If that sounds like your kind of space, you can sign up below and start receiving emails.
https://swml6.share-na2.hsforms.com/2lYhH9m51QBGzirePGacRYQ
06/16/2026
Not every session looks like progress.
Some days working on horses feels obvious with big changes, clear responses, and satisfying answers.
And other days it feels subtle. Quiet. Almost like nothing happened… until you see them move the next day, or the rider notices a small shift, or the horse just seems a little more willing in their body.
Those “small” days matter just as much.
Would you take a moment to share your stories in the comments? The best way we all learn is from each other.
06/13/2026
Our Equine Massage Certification Program is built to create that level of confidence.
Applications are now open for our September 7, 2026 cohort.
Apply today: equine-kneads.com/apply
Spots are limited to just 10 students to ensure individualized mentorship and meaningful hands-on support throughout the program.
06/12/2026
OH what a day! I spent the day with 2 of my grandchildren. They had me going for 13 hours straight. I wouldn’t change a thing - it was hard, physically, but my cup is full.
The physical hard… that got me thinking. Did I make a mistake having the surgery after my car accident? I don’t think so… but it’s freaking hard sometimes.
Here’s something to consider….
The body adapts… until it doesn’t.
I was born with scoliosis.
My body adapted.
For decades, it adapted remarkably well. I was active. I played sports. I ran. I worked horses. I maintained myself with chiropractic care, massage, exercise, and good medical care. I avoided medications whenever possible. I had more surgeries than I care to count, but every time my body figured out a way to keep going.
Was it perfect? No.
Did I have flare-ups and rough periods? Absolutely.
But my body was functioning. It had developed strategies, compensations, and adaptations that allowed me to live a very full life.
Then I was involved in a car accident.
And just like that, the compensation patterns my body had relied on for decades were no longer enough.
The system that had worked for so long couldn’t keep up with the new demands being placed on it.
That accident ultimately led to life-changing surgery:
T10-S2 spinal fusion
Bilateral SI kickstands
L2-S2 TLIF
Today, some of my biggest victories are things most people never think about.
Crossing my legs.
Sitting back on my heels.
Feeling my thigh.
The things we take for granted become monumental when they’re gone.
This experience has profoundly changed how I think about compensation patterns in horses.
As bodyworkers, we are often in a hurry to “remove compensation.”
We hear it all the time.
“Release the compensation.”
“Break the pattern.”
“Correct the dysfunction.”
But maybe we need to spend more time understanding the history before trying to change the present.
Maybe we need to ask more questions.
Maybe we need to understand what that compensation is accomplishing before we decide it needs to disappear.
Because compensation is not always the problem.
Compensation is often evidence of the body’s intelligence.
The body knows when something isn’t ideal. It develops strategies to survive, perform, and function despite limitations.
Sometimes what appears “wrong” is actually the reason the system is still working.
And this is where I struggle with some of the messaging in our industry.
Everyone seems to be searching for the quick fix.
The immediate result.
The dramatic before-and-after.
The social media post that makes them look like the hero.
The egos can be exhausting.
“My way is the only way.”
“If you’re not using this tool, you’re behind.”
“Your current bodyworker doesn’t know what they’re doing.”
It’s become less about understanding the horse and more about marketing certainty.
But here’s the reality:
We are not veterinarians.
We do not diagnose.
So how do we decide which compensation patterns should be changed?
How do we know how much to change?
How do we know which patterns are protecting the horse and which patterns are no longer serving the horse?
I believe the answer is found in function.
When a compensation is still allowing the system to function effectively, we may simply be working with a body that has found a successful strategy.
Not optimal, perhaps.
But successful.
The conversation changes when the compensation is no longer working.
When performance begins to decline.
When discomfort begins to increase.
When movement quality deteriorates.
When the horse can no longer maintain the balance it once could.
Sometimes these changes are obvious.
Sometimes they remain sub-clinical and difficult to diagnose.
But that is often where thoughtful bodywork has tremendous value—not because we are diagnosing disease, but because we are helping support a system that is struggling to maintain the adaptations it once relied upon.
The goal shouldn’t be to remove compensation.
The goal should be to understand it.
At Equine Kneads Academy, this is exactly what we teach.
Not shortcuts.
Not miracle techniques.
Not a promise that you’ll fix every horse.
We teach practitioners how to think.
How to assess.
How to ask better questions.
How to understand the relationship between anatomy, physiology, adaptation, compensation, and function.
Because before you change a pattern, you should understand why it exists.
And sometimes the greatest skill a bodyworker can develop is knowing the difference between a compensation that is helping and one that is no longer enough.