Training & Rehab

Postural correction protocol based on the AI analysis of 02/08/2026. Focus: rider postural symmetry and horse lumbar relaxation.

Cross Asymmetry Detection

⚡ Methodology Note

Asymmetry data (centimeters, percentages, correlations) are AI-generated estimates through visual inference, not measurements from physical sensors. Improvement projections are AI predictive estimates.

The AI analysis highlights a left hip collapse of the rider with consequent elevation of the right shoulder (~+1.8 cm, AI estimate). This asymmetry generates an estimated unbalanced load on the saddle: ~58% left seat bone / ~42% right seat bone.

Effect on the Horse

Reactive contracture of the left Longissimus Dorsi muscle. The horse stiffens to support the asymmetric weight, limiting impulsion and causing the 14cm drift on the center line.

AI Correlation

The software detects an estimated ~94% correlation between the rider's hip collapse and the horse's lumbar stiffness. The contracture at minute 1:45 is not a horse problem, but a defensive reaction to the unbalanced load.

Tension Map (AI Scan)
CONTRACTURE Longissimus Dorsi L OK RIGHT SHOULDER +1.8 cm 58% 42% SADDLE PRESSURE DISTRIBUTION AI estimate (visual inference) — 02/08/2026

Postural Recovery Protocol

To correct the functional asymmetry (high right shoulder and left hip collapse) and neutralize the effect on the horse's lumbar contracture, exercises targeting proprioception are needed: the rider's ability to sense their own body in space.

In the Saddle

Leonardo's Antenna

Action: During working trot, release the left hand from the rein (holding both with the right hand) and point the left index finger upward, trying to touch the sky.

Biomechanical effect: By pointing upward, the left hip is forced to "open," stretching the compressed Quadratus Lumborum. The right shoulder is forced to lower for balance. The pressure on the horse's back decreases instantly.
Ground Work

The Asymmetric Bridge

Action: Lying on the ground, knees bent. Lift the pelvis into a "bridge" position. Once up, slightly lift the right foot off the ground (just 2 cm). Keep the pelvis perfectly horizontal.

Biomechanical effect: Those with left hip collapse will see their pelvis "drop" to the right. The exercise trains the left oblique abdominals to support the weight correctly in the saddle.
Contact

The Glass of Water

Action: Imagine holding a full glass of water in each hand, filled to the brim. The thumbs must be the highest point, the knuckles should face each other. If you tense your shoulders, the "glass" tilts.

Biomechanical effect: By keeping the hands "soft and deep," the elbows relax. This reduces the tension of the horse's Brachiocephalicus muscle, allowing it to relax and lower the neck.

Exercise → Expected Result

Each exercise corrects a specific postural error of the rider, eliminating the cause of the penalty on the horse:

Postural Error Effect on the Horse Corrective Exercise Expected Improvement
Right shoulder high (~+1.8 cm, AI est.) Neck stiffness, nose above vertical Leonardo's Antenna +1.0 (Gaits)
Left hip collapse (~58/42%, AI est.) Left lumbar contracture, blocked impulsion The Asymmetric Bridge +1.5 (Impulsion)
Rigid hand (trapezius tension) Contact resistance, head tossing The Glass of Water +1.0 (Submission)

Stirrup Length Check: Verify that the stirrup leathers are the same millimetric length. Sometimes, from using one side more than the other, the leather stretches over time, accentuating the asymmetry.

Post-protocol projection
~81%
from 78.25% → Estimated gain +2.75%

By resolving the rider's postural asymmetry, the system predicts the elimination of contact resistance and an increase in fluidity through diagonals and circles.

Submission
7.5
+1.5
Gaits
8.0
+1.0
Impulsion
8.0
+1.5
Accuracy
8.5
=
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