Horse Show Nerves — Why “Just Stay Positive” Doesn’t Work

Hey! Prefer to listen instead of read the Newsletter? I got you! The Resilient Reiner Newsletter also comes as a podcast! 🎙️ 

If “just stay positive” worked, the warmup pen would be full of Pinterest quotes and zero anxiety.
But… here we are.

And listen—positivity isn’t evil. I’m not out here trying to cancel good vibes.

I’m just saying: “stay positive” is not a strategy. It’s a bumper sticker.
And bumper stickers don’t help when your brain goes feral at the gate.

So today we’re debunking five self-talk myths that keep riders stuck—especially under pressure—and I’m going to give you a simple replacement that works when your brain is basically a raccoon in a trash can.

The Day “Stay Positive” Made Me Worse

Let me set the scene.

I’m at a show (or a pressure ride—whatever your version is). Pattern in hand. Warmup pen doing warmup-pen things… meaning: chaos, opinions, and at least one person trotting like they’re fleeing the scene while COPS cameras roll.

I’m doing what a lot of us do. I’m checking tack. Running the pattern in my head. Trying to look calm on the outside like I’m the kind of person who drinks water and journals.

But internally?

My body starts doing that thing.

Hands get a little tight. Breath gets a little shallow. Vision narrows. Everything feels… louder. Faster.
And my brain goes:

“Okay. So. What if we embarrass ourselves?”

And instead of dealing with what’s actually happening in my body, I try to fix it with positivity.

So I start telling myself stuff like:

  • “You’re fine. You’re good. You’ve got this.”

  • “Stay positive.”

  • “Don’t think negative.”

  • “Good vibes only, cowgirl.”

And my nervous system is like:
“Cute speech. Anyway—PANIC.”

Because here’s the thing: when you’re activated, forced positivity can feel fake. And when it feels fake, your brain doesn’t go “oh okay great!”
It goes: “We’re lying. Something must be REALLY wrong.”

So now I’m not just nervous.

Now I’m nervous… and also trying to police my own thoughts while riding.

And that is how you end up riding like a zombie pageant queen smiling through a house fire.

The shift for me wasn’t “more positivity.”

It was truth + tools – aka the stuff we drill inside Mental Gym for Equestrians. 

I finally went:
“Okay. Yep. I’m activated. That’s what this is.”

I took two long exhales. I let my jaw unclench. I picked one job—ONE cue—and I went in with:
“Eyes up.”

Not “be positive.”
Not “don’t mess up.”
Just: “eyes up.”

And did I feel like a Disney princess floating through the pen?

No.

But I was present. I did my job. I rode my horse. And that’s the win we’re actually after.

The 5 Myths (and what to do instead)

X Files Myth GIF by The X-Files

Gif by the-x-files on Giphy

Myth #1: “Just stay positive.”

Here’s why this one backfires:

Your nervous system does not speak Inspirational Quote.
It speaks safety and danger.

So if your body is screaming “danger,” and your brain is trying to slap a “Live Laugh Lope” sticker over it… it doesn’t calm you down.

It can make you feel faker. Tighter. More frantic.

Replacement: Truth + next controllable thing.

Try this instead:
“Yep. I’m activated.”
“Next controllable thing: exhale.”
“Next cue: rhythm.”

Positivity isn’t bad. It’s just not CPR.

This is exactly why I teach riders to stop arguing with their brain and start working with their nervous system first — it’s a core piece of what we drill inside Mental Gym for Equestrians.

Myth #2: “If I’m nervous, I’m not ready.”

Nope.

Nerves are not proof you’re unprepared.
They’re proof you’re human and your brain is being dramatic because it cares.

If nerves meant “not ready,” nobody would have ever won anything ever.

Replacement: Nerves = activation. Readiness = process.

I want you to start calling it what it is:
“This is activation.”
“This is my body giving me energy.”
“I have a process.”

Because when you make nerves mean “I’m doomed,” you spiral.
When you make nerves mean “I’m activated,” you stay in your job.

Myth #3: “I have to calm down before I go in.”

If you wait until you feel calm… you’ll be circling in the warmup pen until retirement.

Calm is lovely. I’m a fan.
But show day does not always offer calm.

Replacement: Regulated enough > perfectly calm.

The goal isn’t “nothing is wrong.”
The (immediate) goal is: “I can still ride.”

Quick tool:

  • Two long exhales (breathe longer out than in)

  • Drop your shoulders

  • Unclench your jaw

You don’t need to be a monk.
You need to be regulated enough to steer the ship.

Myth #4: “Being hard on myself keeps me sharp.”

This one is sneaky because it feels like discipline. And oh my gosh I have to pry it from the clutching grasp of almost all of my students in the Mental Gym for Equestrians!

But your brain doesn’t hear: “do better.”
It hears: “danger.”

And when your body reads danger, you get:

  • stiff hands

  • tight legs

  • tunnel vision

  • rushed timing

  • and a horse who’s like, “why are we both panicking right now?”

Replacement: Clear > cruel. Use your “coach voice.”

Swap the insult for an instruction.

Instead of:
“Don’t be an idiot.”

Try:
“Breathe.”
“Sit.”
“Show him the stop.”

You don’t need a bully.
You need a coach. Preferably one who isn’t unhinged.

Myth #5: “If I mess up early, it’s over.”

That is not a fact.

That is a tantrum… in a cowboy hat.

Pros don’t win because they never bobble.
They win because they recover fast and keep riding forward.

Replacement: Recoveries are a skill.

I like to have my favorite “reset phrase” that I tell myself then we move tf on and ride. Because in the middle of the ride is not the time for a tantrum. 

Here’s some of my reset phrases you can steal:

  • “Reset.” 

  • “Thank you. Next.”

  • “New run starts… now.”

  • “Still in it.”

The fastest way to lose the whole run is to move into the mistake and start paying rent.

Your brain isn’t broken. It’s overprotective. Sweet little thang. 

And “stay positive” is basically you trying to calm a wildfire with a scented candle.

So this week, don’t try to be positive.

Try to be honest.
Try to be regulated enough.
Try to be in your present cue.

If today hit a little too close to home — and you’re tired of trying to “think positive” your way through adrenaline — come do 5 Days to Confident Competitor with me.
It’s short, practical, and it trains the skill that matters: how to stay in your job when the pressure hits.

Ride with confidence,

Nicole

Reply

or to participate.