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Human touch Learning about yourself wasn't on the course outline. When Lisa Hartley saw Geary Whiting's horse massage courses advertised online she saw they included classes on equine anatomy, technique, saddle fitting and marketing. There wasn't anything on the syllabus about Eastern philosophy, passion, holistic health or having a "zest for life." Hartley traveled from her home in Mobile, Ala., to Whiting's ranch in Douglas City anyway. She was all set to learn horse massage. But during the course Hartley took last month she found out Whiting has a not-so-hidden agenda to get his students to examine their values, as well as their physical and emotional well-being. "You learn about yourself. You just find yourself, find who you are, where you're going, what you want to do, instead of having your friends and family tell you what you want to do," Hartley said. OK. But what does finding yourself have to do with horse massage? Whiting said his students need to straighten out their own priorities before they can heal an aching animal. "If you're unsure of yourself, you cannot expect your horse to give into you and have confidence in you," Whiting said. "A lot of people are disenchanted with their lives," he said. "It's my job to put fire in their veins, put passion in their lives." He does that by taking up to six students at a time through five-day courses. The classes cost $1,300, which includes meals and lodging. During the week students live in cabins on his ranch situated along Reading Creek in the mountains of Trinity County. Whiting said there is plenty of demand for those who can massage performance horses, which can cost tens of thousands of dollars. "You have to consider the horse an athlete," said Whiting, a personal trainer and massage therapist who worked with athletes and professional dancers for more than 30 years before going into equine massage. Rather than beat students over the head with his philosophies on better living, Whiting said he slips in lessons on human health while teaching massage techniques. During a recent class he talked about directing a horse's energy field to promote good digestion in the animal, a method he said originated in the Orient. But the talk on equine energy led to a discussion of human potential. "It's Western in it's approach; it's Eastern in it's philosophies," he told his students. "The only limitation is what takes place between the ears." Whiting's course outline may not list classes on setting personal priorities, but it does include dinner on the town in Weaverville, two-hour lunches, campfire talks and techniques on easing a headache. Life slows down among the pines. Two-hour lunches are mandatory. Whiting has a hammock set up in the shade of the dogwoods for naps after lunch. If a student is using it he'll fall asleep on a picnic table by the creek. In addition to Hartley, who just finished up a course in human massage, the students in Whiting's May class included a tax accountant and software consultant from Dallas, a lawyer who recently moved from New York City to Southern California, a nurse from Mount Shasta and an 11-year-old girl from Cayucos. Bennie Davidson of Mount Shasta said she took a massage course prior to enrolling in Whiting's, but she wasn't happy with it. Whiting's course is "not just horse massage. It's a whole concept of living," Davidson said. "It's a whole holistic way of bettering yourself. He's teaching living and massage. What you give out there you get it double back. You have to have a connection with whatever or whoever you're massaging," Hartley said. Currents editor Damon Arthur can be reached at 225-8226 or by e-mail at darthur@redding.com photos by Andreas Fuhrmann/Record Searchlight |
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