The Mental Skill Pro Riders Use to Make Fast Calls Mid-Run

The difference between an okay run and a money run is usually one fast decision.

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You’re loping along and you guide your horse into that right circle. You’re thinking ahead—because you want that circle nice and wide, so you’ve got room. Ten good strides across the arena to set up and execute your lead change pretty as a picture.

So you lay the rein across your horse’s neck… and right then, someone clomps around up in the bleachers. A cell phone gets dropped. A little feedback on the PA system.

Your horse doesn’t blow up. They stay with you.

But they bobble—just a tiny bit—and they cut the corner.

And now you’ve got a split-second decision to make:

Do you push to get the circle back?
Do you leave it alone and keep the rhythm?
Do you fix it now… or ride forward and set up the next job?

Because what you do next affects your timing, your line, and the whole rest of the run.

And here’s what most riders don’t realize:

It’s rarely the bobble that costs you the run.
It’s what you do right after the bobble.

Fast-Paced Doesn’t Mean “Speed”

So let’s talk about what’s actually happening right there.

Because when people hear “fast-paced,” they think I mean speed—like “run faster.”

But that’s not what I mean.

Ranch riding and reining patterns are high-input. There’s a new job every few seconds. Your eyes are tracking, your body is adjusting, your horse is listening, and your brain is making tiny decisions constantly.

And the reason riders struggle to make fast calls mid-run isn’t because they don’t know what to do.

It’s because in the show pen, especially when show nerves kick in, your brain starts prioritizing protection over precision.

That protection mode changes your attention in two really common ways:

1) Your attention gets too narrow (tunnel vision)

You lock onto the thing that went wrong—
the bobble, the corner, the judge, the lead—
and you stop seeing the full picture.

That’s when riders say things like:

  • “I couldn’t think.”

  • “I got stuck on that one part.”

  • “I was so focused on fixing it that I missed my setup.”

  • “I lost my timing.”

2) Or your attention gets too noisy (mental chaos)

This is when your brain starts running ten tabs at once:

  • “Was that enough?”

  • “Did they see that?”

  • “Okay don’t mess up the lead change.”

  • “Wait—what’s next?”

That’s when riders describe it as:

  • “I blanked out mid-pattern.”

  • “I started overthinking in my run.”

  • “I kept second-guessing mid-run.”

  • “I rushed my pattern.”

And here’s the key:

In a high-input pattern, you don’t have time to debate yourself.

Because every time your brain hesitates, your body gets late.

And when your body gets late, you start chasing—chasing position, chasing setup, chasing the last mistake—
and that’s where “one tiny bobble” turns into a run that underperforms.

So the goal isn’t “be perfect.”

The goal is to make clean decisions inside tiny decision windows… and then ride forward.

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The 3 Ways Riders Miss the Decision Window

Now, I want you to see your own pattern inside this, because most riders have a default way they fail to make split-second decisions that must be made during a ride.

What I see from my work with riders is it usually shows up as one of three things:

1) Freeze / Fog / Blank Out

This is the “buffering” feeling.

You’re still moving, but your brain goes quiet—not in a present, confident way… more like fog.

And afterward you’re like:

  • “I don’t even remember that part.”

  • “I just… blanked.”

  • “I knew the pattern and then it was gone.”

That’s blanking out mid-pattern.

2) Rush / React

This one feels like trying harder.

You tighten, you get quick, you start pushing and over-riding—because your brain thinks urgency will fix it.

But the result is usually:

  • you get ahead of your horse

  • you lose feel

  • you shorten the setup

  • you over-cue and over-ride

This is “I rushed my pattern.”

3) Second-Guess / Renegotiate

This is the sneaky one because it sounds responsible.

You’re trying to make the right choice, but you keep renegotiating the plan while you’re already doing it.

And that’s where riders lose commitment and timing:

  • “I should’ve just ridden it.”

  • “I changed my mind halfway through.”

  • “I kept second guessing and then it got messy.”

That’s overthinking in your run.

And here’s the line I want you to remember:

Freeze, rush, and second-guessing are different symptoms…
but they share the same root problem:

Your nervous system hijacks your attention… and your attention hijacks your decisions.

The Mental Skill: Decision Windows

So here’s the mental skill pro riders have trained—whether they’d call it this or not:

They understand Decision Windows.

A Decision Window is that tiny slice of time where you still have options.

In a run, it’s literal. It can be one stride… two strides… maybe three—and that’s it.

After that, you’re not deciding anymore.

You’re reacting.
Or you’re fixing.
Or you’re chasing.

And this is why one little bobble—like your horse cutting the corner—can suddenly feel like your whole run is slipping away.

Not because the bobble was huge… but because it shrunk your Decision Window.

You had a plan: wide circle, ten strides, plenty of time for a clean setup+execution for the lead change.

Then the moment happens.

And now your brain has to answer a question fast:

“Do we keep the original plan?”
“Do we adjust the plan?”
“Do we fix this?”
“Do we leave this and ride forward?”

That choice happens inside a tiny window.

And this is the part riders miss:

Most riders think the goal is to make the perfect decision.

Pro riders are playing a different game.

Their goal is to make a clean decision inside the window, then fully commit to it—so their body stays organized and their horse keeps trust.

Because a messy, half-committed decision is what blows up your timing.

So when we talk about making fast calls mid-run, what we’re really talking about is this:

Can you notice the Decision Window… and choose on purpose before it closes?

Because when you can do that, you stop spiraling.

You stop chasing.

And you start riding like the run is still yours—even when it isn’t perfect.

What Pros Do Differently After a Bobble

Now I want to give you a super practical way to understand what pros do here—without turning this into a “here are 37 things to remember” episode.

When a pro feels that bobble… they don’t go straight to fixing.

They go straight to reading the moment.

They ask—almost instantly—three questions (not consciously like a checklist… but functionally):

1) “Do I still have my rhythm?”

Because rhythm is what buys you time.

If the rhythm is still there, your Decision Window is still open.

If the rhythm is gone, now you’re in damage control—different play.

2) “Do I still have my line?”

Not “is it perfect,” but “is it usable.”

Because you can ride a slightly imperfect line with commitment…

…but if you start yanking, pushing, or micromanaging, you’ll blow the setup completely.

3) “What’s the next job?”

Not in a frantic way.

In a present way.

Because the fastest way to lose a run is to mentally stay in the last maneuver.

That’s where people spiral:

  • replaying the mistake

  • trying to make up for it

  • riding the past instead of riding the next three strides

And this is where Decision Windows become everything.

Pros stay in the window because they’re not emotionally negotiating with the run.

They’re riding information.

They’re making one clean call, then executing it fully.

A simple reframe that changes everything

Here’s the reframe:

A bobble is data. Not danger.

If your brain labels it danger, you’ll go into protection mode: freeze, rush, or second-guess.

If you label it data, you stay in the Decision Window long enough to choose.

And that’s the whole skill.

If This Is You, Here’s the Fix

Now, if you’re reading and thinking:

“Okay, I get it… I can literally feel those windows closing on me mid-run.”

Good.

Because awareness is step one.

But the actual fix isn’t “try harder next time.”

The fix is to train your brain and nervous system to stay online when the window shows up.

That’s why I built 5 Days to Confident Competitor.

Because if you freeze in the show pen, blank out mid-pattern, or start overthinking mid-run… you don’t need more information.

You need a simple, structured way to train:

  • staying present under pressure

  • regulating fast when something changes

  • and making clean decisions before the window closes

5DCC is five days. Short. Simple. No overwhelm.
And it’s designed to give you the foundation for fast calls mid-run—so you can stop spiraling and start finishing your runs like you meant to.

If you want it, grab 5 Days to Confident Competitor. It’s the simplest place to start.

Ride on with confidence, 

Nicole

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