Bodywork 4 Horses

Bodywork 4 Horses

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Bodywork 4 Horses offers Therapeutic & Sports Massage Therapy for Horse & Rider & PEMF Services.

Provides Equine Massage Therapy Services Pre & Post Event as well as for Maintenance and Injury

Photos from Koper Equine's post 06/22/2026
06/20/2026

Meliorism comes from the Latin melior, meaning “better.” It is the belief that the world can be improved through thoughtful action, education, and the choices we make every day.

I like to think that massage therapy, fascial therapy, and education are my small contribution to that idea.

Every horse that moves more comfortably, every owner who learns to recognize subtle signs of discomfort, and every person who begins to see their horse through a lens of curiosity, empathy, and understanding creates a ripple effect.

Through hands-on therapy, I help horses find greater comfort, mobility, and freedom within their bodies.

Through education, articles, and awareness, I hope to help people better understand how movement, posture, fascia, compensation patterns, aging, training, recovery, and overall wellbeing are interconnected.

Knowledge changes observation.

Observation changes decisions.

Better decisions improve welfare.

And improved welfare improves lives.

I may not change the entire world, but I can help make the world a little better for the horses and people within it.

This is my version of meliorism in practice: using what I know, sharing what I can, and helping create a little more comfort, understanding, and compassion than existed before.

Perhaps you can do the same in your own corner of the world.

https://koperequine.com/connection-the-oldest-language-of-the-nervous-system/

06/08/2026
Using the Horse’s Parasympathetic Nervous System to Release Tension from Past Incidents 06/03/2026

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/using-horses-parasympathetic-nervous-system-release-tension-ceq5f?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_ios&utm_campaign=share_via

Using the Horse’s Parasympathetic Nervous System to Release Tension from Past Incidents by Jim Masterson It’s been my experience when working on horses that have had an accident in the past such as a fall; going over backward; running into something; or an accident in a trailer, that the bodywork will often uncover what the horse’s body has been blocking out, sometimes for years. W...

06/02/2026

Always important to evaluate the ENTIRE horse!

THE SYMPTOM IS IN THE FOOT. THE CAUSE IS OFTEN SOMEWHERE ELSE.

A horse becomes footsore.

The natural assumption is that the problem must be in the foot.

Sometimes that's exactly what's happened.

An abscess is in the foot.

A puncture wound is in the foot.

A crack is in the foot.

The problem and the symptom occupy the same place.

But not always.

A horse lands toe-first.

What you see is in the foot.

The cause may be hock arthritis.

A horse starts wearing one foot faster than the others.

The symptom is in the foot.

The cause may be a change in how the horse is loading its limbs.

A horse repeatedly loses a shoe from the same foot.

The symptom is in the foot.

The cause may be a movement pattern that has changed because the horse is uncomfortable elsewhere.

A horse develops bruising in the same area over and over again.

The symptom is in the foot.

The cause may be altered movement from joint disease higher up.

A horse develops contracted heels.

The symptom is in the foot.

The cause may be persistent avoidance of loading part of the limb because something else hurts.

A horse grows noticeably uneven feet.

The symptom is in the feet.

The cause may be asymmetry elsewhere in the body changing how those feet are loaded.

A horse struggles on hard ground.

The pain shows in the feet.

The cause may be endocrine disease affecting the lamellae.

A horse develops laminitis.

The pain is in the feet.

The damage is in the feet.

Yet the process often begins with insulin dysregulation or other hormonal disturbance long before the foot shows it.

A horse develops recurrent abscesses.

The symptom is in the foot.

The cause may be chronic lamellar damage that has been present for months or years.

A horse struggles to turn.

The symptom may look like foot pain.

The cause may be the hocks.

Or the stifles.

Or somewhere else entirely.

A horse doesn't want to go forward.

The feet may be blamed.

The cause could be orthopaedic pain.

It could be gastric disease.

It could be respiratory disease.

It could be something else altogether.

The point is not that the feet are unimportant.

Quite the opposite.

The feet are often the first place the horse reveals that something is wrong.

But they are not always telling us where the problem started.

One of the most valuable habits in equine healthcare is learning not to stop at the first thing you can see.

The foot matters.

But it is attached to a whole horse.

And sometimes the foot is not the problem.

It's the messenger.

Photos from Bodywork 4 Horses's post 05/31/2026

My heart will always have a special place for Arabians where are my roots lie deep in the horse industry! Thankful for Linda Clay for letting me come love on her beauties today with some maintenance bodywork! 🐴💖🙌🏻

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Kansas City, MO
64118