Mane Brain: The Science of Smarter Riding
Welcome to Mane Brain, the podcast where neuroscience meets the saddle! Hosted by Audrey Paslow, a board-certified neurologic physical therapist and expert in rider biomechanics, this show dives deep into the brain-body connection that makes great riders.
Each episode explores the science behind balance, coordination, flexibility, strength, breathing, and timing—essential elements for equestrians looking to improve their performance. Through expert interviews, rider fitness strategies, and neuroscience-backed insights, you’ll learn how to train smarter, ride better, and unlock your full potential in the saddle.
Mane Brain: The Science of Smarter Riding
The Three Riding Illusions: Strength, Effort, and Stillness
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Many riders work incredibly hard to improve their riding—but sometimes the beliefs guiding that effort are the very things holding them back. In this episode, we explore three common illusions that can quietly limit progress in the saddle.
Episode Description
In the previous episode of Mane Brain, we introduced the Neuro Rider Stack, a framework describing the layers of performance required for effective riding: capacity, coordination, and communication.
We also discussed why improving fitness alone doesn’t automatically translate into better riding.
But even when riders understand that skill development requires more than strength and conditioning, many still fall into a set of very common traps. These are what I call the Three Riding Illusions—ideas that feel intuitive from inside the rider’s body but don’t hold up when we look at riding through the lens of neuroscience and motor control.
The Strength Illusion: “Strength creates stability.”
Strength is important for building physical capacity. It improves joint stability, tissue resilience, and the ability to absorb forces from the horse. But true stability in the saddle depends on how the nervous system coordinates movement, not simply how strong the muscles are.
The Effort Illusion: “Trying harder creates coordination.”
When riders struggle, the natural instinct is to try harder—tightening muscles, concentrating more, or applying more effort. But excessive tension can actually interfere with the sensory feedback the brain needs to coordinate movement. Skilled riding depends on organizing effort efficiently, not simply increasing it.
The Stillness Illusion: “Stillness equals control.”
Quiet riding is often mistaken for stillness, but effective riders are not motionless. They are dynamically synchronized with the horse’s movement, continuously adapting posture and timing. What appears quiet is actually the result of well-timed coordination, not rigidity.
Understanding these illusions helps riders rethink how progress actually happens.
Instead of chasing strength, effort, or stillness alone, riders can begin developing the deeper coordination and timing that live in the upper layers of the Neuro Rider Stack.
Because good riding isn’t about becoming stronger, tighter, or more still.
It’s about learning how to organize movement in partnership with the horse.
Mane Brain Podcast is part of Anchored Seat's mission to bring neuroscience to the saddle! Learn more about training programs and clinic opportunities at www.anchoredseat.com.