SIGN UP
FORGOT MY PASSWORD
GUYS

16 fun in the sun summertime dates

MORE
  • GUYS MAIN
  • GET A BF
    • CRUSH MUCH?
    • ICE BREAKERS
  • DATING 101
    • DUDES DECODED
    • CUTE DATE IDEAS
    • SPLITSVILLE
  • ASK BILL & DAVE
  • DEAR CAROL
  • WHAT GUYS THINK
  • SWEETIE
  • MEANIE
ADVICE

My dad is sexually abusing me. How can I tell my mom?

MORE
  • ADVICE MAIN
  • IN THE NEWS
  • DEAR CAROL
  • FAMILY
  • FRIENDS
  • SCHOOL
  • TOUGH STUFF
  • ON THE JOB
    • GET STARTED
    • BABYSITTING
    • GOAL GETTER
    • DREAM JOB
  • DO GOOD
    • GET INSPIRED
    • TAKE ACTION
FUN STUFF

25 things to do before school lets out

MORE
  • FUN STUFF MAIN
  • STAR SIGNS
  • BLUSH MUCH?
  • SURVEY SAYS
  • CLUBS
  • ADVICE QUEENS
  • CRAFTS
  • RECIPES
  • CONTESTS
  • WINNERS
  • ROCK YOUR WEEKEND
  • YOU WROTE IT
ENTERTAINMENT

It’s puppy love with The Last Dogs: Dark Waters

MORE
  • ENTERTAINMENT MAIN
  • GOSSIP
  • STAR STYLE
  • GL EXCLUSIVES
  • EDITOR'S PICKS
  • BOOK CLUB
STYLE

Dream on with a DIY dream board

MORE
  • STYLE MAIN
  • FASHION
    • CUTE & CHEAP
    • STYLE 911
    • TRENDS WE HEART
  • BEAUTY
    • BEAUTY SPY
    • BEAUTY TRENDS
    • BEAUTY 911
    • HAIR STYLES
    • HAIR TIPS
    • SKINCARE
  • HOW TO
  • FAB UP YOUR LIFE
HEALTH & FITNESS

Short shorts-approved moves for toned legs

MORE
  • HEALTH & FITNESS MAIN
  • WORKOUTS
  • RECIPES
  • EAT RIGHT
  • HEALTHY STUFF WE HEART
  • YOUR BOD
    • SKIN
    • HAIR
    • BOOBS
    • DOWN THERE
    • PERIODS, PERIOD
    • EVERYTHING ELSE
QUIZZES

Who's your celeb style clone?

MORE
MAG

Show some #GLcrew love, babes!

MORE
  • MAG MAIN
  • INSIDE THIS ISSUE
  • COVER SHOOT
  • BEHIND THE SCENES
  • BE IN THE MAG
  • EDITOR'S BLOG
  • OUR BOOKS
  • ABOUT US
VIDEO

Bella Thorne rocks WAT-AAH!'s Move Your Body Flash Mob

MORE
avatar

Becca G.

is modding

Lauren R.

is modding

 
 
 

GL PROFILES

More Friends = More Fun

MY ACCOUNT

MY PROFILE

CREATE A PROFILE

 
 

GL
Tweets !

AN HOUR AGO How to know when taking a risk is the right thing to do: Click Here!

13 HOURS AGO The 7 caffeine-laced products that could disappear: Click Here!

14 HOURS AGO Treat your toes to an at home pro pedi: Click Here!

 
 
 
Girl's Life Newsletters

sponsored links

ADVICE | ON THE JOB | DREAM JOB

14 Comments | Add Yours

Snag that dream job: I wanna... train horses

 
 

Check these out, too...

  • I wanna be...an engineer!
  • What's your dream job?
  • I wanna be... an author!
  • I wanna...train tigers!
  • Dream on with a DIY dream board
I got a chance to talk to Pamela White, a horse massage therapist, trail guide, therapeutic riding instructor and dancer. Talk about an awesome career! Here’s what she had to say about her work and how YOU can get involved.

Girls’ Life: Tell me about your jobs.

Pamela White: I am an equine massage sports therapist. I work for the U. S. park police as a volunteer. The park police has classes where they train officers to become part of a mounted unit. Most of the trainees have never ridden horses before, so it’s more stress on the horse. They pull really hard on the reins, so I’ll work, for example, on the horse’s neck. Other times, I’ll give the horses a massage to just let them have a fun day. I also guide the public trails in Rock Creek Park.

I am also trained as a therapeutic riding instructor. I work with children and adults who have physical disabilities or sensory processing issues. They’re “able-bodied,” meaning they can walk on their own, but they’re not quite coordinated or grounded. When you’re on a horse, you are not really experiencing the gravity of the earth. It’s the horse that is conducting that gravity for you. The natural rhythm of the horse—it’s kind of like being on a boat—can realign your vestibular system (inner ear) so that it impacts your balance. It is as if the body knows what it should be doing but, because of the disease, hasn’t been able to achieve it. Riding seems to trigger memory to tap back into what nature should have been. I’ve seen children who couldn’t walk normally and were awkward in their balance, but after therapeutic riding, could walk well. This is also extremely helpful for confidence.

GL: You’re also a dancer. How do you relate dance to your work with horses?

PW: I used to get up early in the morning and go to the barn to feed the horses. While they were eating, I would turn on music and dance. I never realized that one horse, Stonewall, was watching me the whole time. One day, I was visiting the barn, and it was a very cold day in January. There was another volunteer who was grazing Stonewall. I was just visiting, so I wasn’t dressed properly for the weather, but I wanted to chat with her while she was grazing. I figured I would do a little dance warm up to get my body moving rather than just standing there. I started to do what Isadora Duncan called a “trot run” and suddenly I heard this clip-clop, clip-clop, clip-clop behind me. I turned around and Stonewall was following me! The next time I came to the barn, the first thing I did was go to the paddock to see him and all I did was just roll my head to the right and then the left. And then he did too. He kept following my movements exactly. I had established a relationship with him. He was my dance partner.

GL: What is your ultimate goal?

PW: My goal is for the able-bodied folk who don’t want to actually ride the horses to use dance to learn to move and experience the horse-human relationship. Riding obviously has clinical benefits. At the same time, there is a lot to be gained from just interacting with the horse on the ground. Generally speaking, I would take one person and one horse into a space at a time.

[Ultimately, I want] to get a little fixer-upper farm, not so many acres that I can’t handle it, probably three horses and a dance studio attached. You could learn dance inside and go out to apply it with the horse. I could do workshops and retreats. I could have a cottage on the property so people could have a place to stay.

GL: How did you get involved in such unique careers?

PW: I did not grow up with horses. I took a job in D.C. government for child welfare and hadn’t been in this job but a week when a secretary came up to me and said, “D.C One fund is a D.C. employee program where we all give money to a charity. Now is the time for the campaign, so you have to give money.” I was like, “I haven’t even gotten my first paycheck and they’re already asking me for money!?” They had a catalog, so I flipped through it and saw something I had never seen before called the Northern Virginia Therapeutic Riding Program. I gave them a little money, which ended up being about as much as a bail of hay costs. I decided that wasn’t generous enough, so I started volunteering.

At that time, there was only one instructor who was struggling with managing all her classes. I thought, “If only I knew how to do this, I could help.” I started training to get accredited and noticed that there were plenty of volunteers to help with the children, but I started to feel like the horses weren’t that happy. They weren’t being stimulated. They just got one child after another and went around in a circle. It made me think the horses may not even like that we ride them, so I decided make it all about the horses. I can’t tell you how much I love it. I would wake up at 5:30 to go to the barn before I had to go to work with hay sticking out of my hair, but it was worth it because I love it so much

GL: What is the most challenging part about your job?

PW: I don’t have my own horses, so I’m constantly working with horses where I don’t have control. Some riders are not the nicest to the horses. It sometimes feels like I put all this energy into helping the horse and then it can just be undone. Also, some riders don’t do a good job of cleaning or taking care of their horses. Some places too, don’t have places where the horses can just play. It can be frustrating to try to help horses with all these restrictions.

The second thing is the average person does not recognize the importance of engaging their horse and giving them inspiration. Horses want stimulation and want to be challenged just like humans. There’s a challenge with trying to get people to see the horse as more than an object. People get attached to and love their horses, but they don’t always have a level of respect for them.

GL: What is the best part about your job?

PW: Definitely a horse expressing happiness with you. The best part is understanding the horse communicating his or her happiness. Don’t you love it when you’re trying to explain something to somebody and they just get it? That’s what it can be like. It would be a lie to say riding isn’t fun. But, when you get to ride and feel like you and your horse are one, it’s the most amazing feeling. You really do feel like you can fly. It’s just so freeing, for both you and the horse.

GL: Do you have any advice for girls interested in pursuing similar careers?

PW: First, learn as much about the horse as you can—know the horse’s body, see how similar it is to ours, learn about what they eat, what their diseases are, what different types of horses there are. Then, start volunteering. Just help out in the barn and be around horses without riding them, get to understand their personalities, before you start riding. What tends to happen is that people want to ride and objectify the horse. For me, that’s not the way to do it. You have to learn about grooming the horse, taking care of the horse, interacting on the ground before you ever get on one.

Nowadays, so many schools require community service. Volunteering is a wonderful way to get credits, even if you’re just helping in the office. Riding can be very expensive, so volunteering is a good way to enter because if you put in extra time in the beginning, your riding may not be as expensive later on. Find out about and visit barns in your area. Many cities have a mounted police unit. You can call and visit to see what it’s like.

If you’re interested in working with horses from a therapeutic standpoint, learn about what kinds of disabilities kids have. Different kids have different problems and personalities. Would a relationship with a horse be helpful in a certain case? If so, why? Understand how the natural rhythm of horseback riding can help physical disabilities.

Check out this video to learn more about the horses at Rock Creek Park (psst…you can see Pamela at 2:50!):

BY KRISTEN YEUNG ON 4/20/2011 3:25:00 PM

POSTED IN Dream Job

< PREVIOUS   NEXT >   

14 Comments | Add Yours
SORT: OLDEST FIRST | NEWEST FIRST
 

I love riding so much, and I work at a local SIRE center over the summer, which helps teach disabled kids to ride, but I don't want to go into it as an actual job. I would like to go pro with riding and make the USDF young rider program in a few years....

report

by fudgemonkey on 4/27/2012 7:43:26 AM

 
 

This is almost exactly what i want to do... i'm better and more patient with animals than people. I think i want to own an equine rehabilitation centre

report

by Melissa227 on 1/21/2012 9:16:05 PM

 
 

MOD! MOD! MOD!
would being a lawyer be a good choice of a job 4 when im older? i wanna make lots of money.. (and im good at argueing.lol).




Hey girlie,

Haha, if you love arguing, this could totally be a great option for you! Remember that becoming a lawyer requires 4 years of undergraduate education plus a commitment to law school - so, if you don't enjoy studying law, past cases, ethics, etc., this might be really tough for you to get through. It'll be great money once you actually get out of school and start working, but a lot of money won't make you enjoy a job you aren't meant to do. Just listen to your heart and your interests in order to choose a career - passion comes first, money second Smile 
Lauren C.

report

by dallys on 10/21/2011 11:27:14 PM

 
 

I would love to have a horse so much!!!! I get to take lessons during the summer when I visit the states but it's an average of 10 lessons per year. Frown not the greatest but still really awesome! I got to work with some of the horses- grooming, sponging, riding, lunging and massaging. There's this one horse that I worked with a lot that was pretty spooky and I sponged him and then i got to massage him with a towel it was awesome because he was acutally calming down! SO COOL!

report

by Nikichic on 10/11/2011 12:27:19 AM

 
 

that would be pretty neat!!! Smile

report

by i<3tennis on 9/17/2011 8:44:50 PM

 
 

omg! I am so sad. I have always wanted to be a horse rider, but I actually have never ridden a horse without someone holding onto its bridle. Frown I have wanted to MY WHOLE LIFE!!!!! I love horses, I wouldn't even mind mucking out stalls. Plus we don't have a big enough property, and horses are expensive. Frown

report

by alkrox17 on 5/10/2011 8:44:08 PM

 
 

Aww this article makes me realize how much i love my horse. I would give anything for him! Even my house! He is the best ever! Riding a horse is the greatest feeling!
My aunt works with challenged kids and adults who ride horses for therapy. Sometimes i go out and help and its totally worth it seeing those kids and even adults' proud smiles. I love horses and love spending my time with them, especially my baby Sauney<3!

report

by stormbeauty on 5/2/2011 6:51:29 PM

 
 

Thanks GL for posting this.I have 4 horses Candie , Teddy,Vegas(Likatruzippo),and my miniature horse Coors. Everyone says riding isn't a sport.BUT IT TOTALLY IS! I ride english and western and I drive my mini horse.I have been riding for 7 years and I love it

report

by Likatruzippo7 on 4/23/2011 9:20:33 AM

 
 



mod mod mod
hey im sooo happy about a wk ago i had about 3 pimples on my face (in very noticeable spots) now they're gone! how do i prevent them from coming bak?




Hey girlie -- wash your face with a face wash that contains salicylic acid Smile




Brittany G. 
Brittany G.

report

by oceanlover69 on 4/22/2011 10:08:50 PM

 
 

GottaLoveLaura: Preach. Everyone always tells me that riding isn't a sport, but it so is!

report

by lillibug618 on 4/21/2011 12:36:27 PM

 
 

Wow! This is soo cool. I love horses too! I have a horse, his name is Tony. He is a palamino rocky mountain horse. This makes me want to volunteer and do something with horses.

report

by canadianfawn on 4/21/2011 9:37:22 AM

 
 

Im so glad you did a horse-related post! im a horseback rider, i do jumping. A lot of people dont consider is a sport, but hello- its in the olympics. also, i have to say, ITS WAY HARDER THAN SOCCER, FOOTBALL, BASEBALL, ETC. the basbeall, soccer ball, or basketball cant kill you. a baseball doesnt have to option to buck you off onto the ground. a basketball doesnt know how to trot walk or canter. Riding a horse is controlling it as well as competing in a sport. YOU make the horse trot. YOU have to get the horse to canter. I fell off last tuesday because i didnt help guide the horse over a jump, so she swerved it and i got a mouthful of dirt. think its easy still? nopeee.

report

by GottaLoveLaura on 4/21/2011 8:18:24 AM

 
 

I'm really glad GL did a job feature/interview on a career with horses. I absolutely love horses! They are my favorite animal. I've always wanted to have my own horse and work with them in the future. This gives me more ideas of other jobs with these magnificent animals. Thank you GL!

report

by shastagirl11 on 4/21/2011 12:50:42 AM

 
 

I love horses so much! Its very true that riding them is fun and between the horse and rider, its probably the best bond you could have! Smile im so glad you posted this on here

report

by midnightluver96 on 4/20/2011 8:27:17 PM

 
You must be signed in to post a comment. SIGN IN or REGISTER

ADD A COMMENT


 

 

 

  • RENEW
  • SUBSCRIBE
  • GIVE A GIFT
  • DIGITAL EDITIONS
  • ACCOUNT STATUS
 
Monday again? Sigh. What kind of student are you?



 
 
WIN
TODAY
GRAND
PRIZE
GIVEAWAY
CALENDAR
Strawberry Watermelon

Flavor: This fruity combo of two all-time best-selling flavors makes a delightfully sweet treat.

Fab Fact: In 2001, Lip Smacker blended two of its best-selling glosses.

Be a GL Buzz Babe!

 
Exclusive deals. Instant updates. Special surveys. Free swag to try, share and review. Sound amazing? Welcome to GL Buzz Babes.
CLICK HERE to join!
 
Posts From Our Friends

sponsored links

  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Privacy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Home
  • Free Newsletters
  • Subscribe
  • Give a Gift
  • Renew

  • Model for GL
  • Pay Bill
  • Questions?
  • Contact Us
  • © 2013 Girls' Life Acquisition Co. All Rights Reserved.