The Rider Ego vs. The Horseman Standard: Turnout, Horse Karma, and Clear Boundaries Daniel Bluman Part 2
5/27/202644 min
It is easy to get wrapped up in the competitive environment when prize money and recognition wait at the gate. Our natural human instinct causes us to objectify horses as high-speed pieces of equipment or treat them like sentimental human pets, yet both approaches cause immense confusion for the animal.
When challenges arise, a rider focuses strictly on overriding the obstacle in front of them, whereas a horseman steps back to evaluate the wider picture and protect the partnership.
Daniel Bluman breaks down the psychological differences between these choices, sharing the real-world management practices that establish what he calls horse karma. He discusses why daily turnout and social connection create a healthier brain for an athletic horse, allowing them to remain sound and happy for years.
- What is Horse Karma?: Daniel shares a childhood story from Colombia that shaped his belief that treating every horse with empathy always pays it forward.
- Clarity is Humanity: Loving a horse means giving clear, decisive training directions instead of treats, carrots, and confusing human sentimentality.
- Becoming Indispensable: Learning how the animal functions biologically makes a person scarce and highly valued, securing a sustainable livelihood.
- Managing Social Validation: Daniel urges us to handle the craving for online recognition and instead celebrate the unseen daily lifestyle.
Meet Daniel
Daniel Bluman is an Olympic athlete and co-founder of Bluman Equestrian. He is an entrepreneur and a producer of horses who believes patience is a massive competitive advantage. His philosophy rests on the conviction that horses are our teachers, and our primary mission is to provide them with respect and dignity.
Explore the mission at:
This episode is brought to you by:
Connaway & Associates Equine Insurance Services, Inc.
The friendly and knowledgeable team at Connaway & Associates brings together more than 30 years of experience to offer a wide range of insurance services, including horse insurance, farm insurance, and liability insurance.
Visit www.connaway.net | @connawayassociates | facebook.com/connawayassociatesequine
Chapters and Time Stamps:
0:00 Horses are not equipment
4:00 Stop canceling riders you don't understand
5:10 Why clarity is kindness
8:32 The problem with humanizing horses
9:33 Why Daniel turns his horses out together
11:26 What stall life does to a horse's eyesight
12:54 When science catches up to horsemanship
14:00 Why the same ring every day limits your horse
17:00 The disappearing horseman
21:40 Horsemen always earn more than riders
25:35 Show jumping's social license problem
28:00 Managing the social media validation trap
35:50 Rapid fire questions
Clips
Transcript preview
First 90 secondsDaniel Bluman· Guest0:00
If the recognition is always going to come from the result, whatever you won or you didn't win, then you're really missing out on the most important part. You know, the cool part is our lifestyle. That is what's cool. That is what's beautiful.
Noëlle Floyd· Host0:16
Welcome back to part two with Daniel Bluman. If you missed part one, pause this right now and listen back to that discussion. Today, get ready because this conversation is a guide to checking your ego at the gate and showing up for your horse.
Daniel Bluman· Guest0:38
Dear horse world, it's Daniel Bluman.
Noëlle Floyd· Host0:41
I, I wanna acknowledge what you're talking about is the antithesis of objectification. Do you know what I mean when I say that?
Daniel Bluman· Guest0:50
Yeah.
Noëlle Floyd· Host0:51
Because being in a sport and being in an industry that buys and sells horses, that the horses are athletes and the horses are a conduit for people to accomplish their goals, especially people who potentially are new to the sport or who are... They maybe have more access because of their f- social, socioeconomic situation. I am really moved by the fact that what you're talking about is truly the opposite of objectifying a horse. That when people... I've, I've heard you, and I both know people who talk about horses