Because Horses are Hurting.
Biodynamic Craniosacral Care is a soft, gentle therapy that asks the equine cranial bones and the sacrum to return (float) back into the natural positions they were born in. It is a beautiful and effective blend of Science and Energy Work.
Biodynamic Craniosacral Care is not
Veterinary Medicine, Chiropractic Care, or Massage Therapy.
This work will bring your horse back to balance and health.
Horses living in the human world are having a hard time. 90% of horses have sustained injuries by age 5, compromising their health, mood, and athletic ability.
A typical scenario may initiate with a series of events and may start with a head injury. That pain manifests in the lower back, the sacrum. This sacrum dysfunction weakens the hindquarters and taxes hind joints. As the hind end becomes more dysfunctional, the front legs will take over much more of the work that the front end is not designed to do. I often see horses with overdeveloped lumbar muscling (looks like a roach back), an overdeveloped front end and neck, and underdeveloped haunch.
Most horses collect a series of injuries over time, and I do not often see a horse that has suffered one catastrophic event. Over time, they eventually collect enough to become poor-functioning and lame.
Horses respond to BCSC when they defy Veterinary Diagnosis and other treatments.
You will see this work referred to as therapy, which it is.
I like to use "Care," which is a better word for the work. The terms are used interchangeably.
It is more than you might imagine.
The trauma for a horse can begin during a difficult foaling. or on the first day of life with a kick from their dam or run in with a stall wall. Slippery footing and other obstacles.
We think most of the early trauma is a direct result of being born in a stall and then the constraints of living in captivity, versus mustangs, zebras and other wild equids.
It isn't just the asymmetrical head. It is deeper than that and is manifested throughout the body
pull-back incidents, athletic accidents, pasture accidents, trailer accidents, traumatic training methods, poorly fitting tack (saddles and bridles), severe bits,
training too young, halters on foals,
surgery, poor dentistry, poor farriery.
The list is lengthy and is unique to each horse.
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