02/27/2026
Your Hands Are Not Brakes - Your Seat Is. Here's What That Actually Means!
If your students are stopping their horses with their hands, they're doing it wrong and their horses are telling them that every single time they brace, root, or throw their head. The stop lives in the seat, not the fingers.
Here's how to teach it:
The seat is your most powerful aid and your student is sitting on the most sensitive part of the horse's back, directly over his center of gravity. The horse feels every shift, every brace, every collapse which means the seat can either block movement or invite it and most riders have no idea they're doing either one.
What a halt aid should look like:
It's not a pull... it's a sequence...
Exhale → drop the weight into the saddle → rotate the seat bones down and forward → plug into the horse's back → then the connection travels through the elbow to the hand to the rein.
The pressure the horse feels in his mouth is connected to the increased weight on his back. The halt comes from the whole body working together and not from two hands hauling backward on a snaffle.
Try this off the horse first:
Pull a chair up to a table. Sit tall, feet flat on the floor, both hands resting on the edge of the table. Now exhale, rotate your seat bones down and forward, and gently pull on the table edge as your seat gets heavier in the chair. Feel that? That's your halt aid. That's what your horse feels when you do it right. Run this exercise with your students before they ever get in the saddle and watch the lightbulb go on.
Why this matters:
A horse stopped with hands alone learns to brace against pressure, root against the bit, and ignore escalating rein contact. A horse stopped with a connected seat aid learns to listen to the lightest whisper from his rider's body. Teach the seat first and the hands will follow.