December 28, 2010

FLASHBACK ....Cybil Syndrome!

At least once a year I like to flashback to Cybil Syndrome.  It effects mostly NEWBIES, but if you get too close to the dust ---well---- the syndrome can happen.


A few of you have heard me mention "Cybil Syndrome" it goes like this...

Cybil Syndrome, I found it to be the most terrifying aspect of those first few endurance rides...it can affect the rider, it can affect the horse, and may God bless and keep you safe if both horse and rider get it. Rider symptoms: The rider will present as a calm sane individual at the pre-ride check in. Having conditioned the horse for long slow distance, having prechecked gear, worked out feed regimines and taken a solemn vow of "to finish is too win." There are virtually no pre-ride symptoms other than racing thoughts, and perhaps an increase in the rider's heart rate. After all this is a first endurance ride, and the rider plans to just take it easy, enjoy the trail, the woods, and get a completion. Now I've contemplated if over night ride managment sneaks into your camp and sprinkles some kind of "Cybil Dust" in your coffee mug....I don't know for sure how it happens, I just know it does happen.

Ride day ---- the newbie rider presents on her pretty and nicely conditioned for LSD horse. The timer sends you out, and suddenly the Newbie becomes Cybil. Look at all those horses and they are all moving out in front...oh my God I can't finish last, this is my first race (did she say race?), oh the shame of it! The dual personality emerges and out pops full blown Cybil Syndrome, the crazed newbie, trying to out run the hot shoes, and doing it for at least a mile or two.

The other side of the coin is a fairly put together new rider, who has not caught the syndrome (or ride management thought they were going to be caught and just spread the Cybil dust around camp....some drifted onto the horse's hay). The horse and rider team present sanely, and head out on the trail, they look spectacular! Then a horse passes the team and Cybil Syndrome strikes the horse. The equine who could have given pony rides at the fair to tiny children suddenly gets the "Look of Eagles", and muscles start popping up and the rider feels the horse actually gathering up under the saddle, then they are off!!! All the while the rider is trying to do all those nice things she read about in the books she bought on endurance riding. The horse is galloping on after the pack, while the rider is hanging on for dear life ( she never practiced riding at speed as she had no plan or intention of doing so), grabbing for the horn on the saddle that doesn't have one because they are now using an endurance saddle. You hear screams of something like "whoa Black Betty!!!" as the horse races down the trail with the pack.


Cybil Syndrome can also happen at the vet check. If the rider is afflicted their unsuspecting crew (spouse) will greet their sweet wife and ask how they can help. All normalcy ends at that point as Cybil has arrived. She's hot, she's tired, and she's in back of the pack. How could that HAPPEN? He says, " honey, I thought you just wanted to finish"? Where she then glares at him and ponders the various methods of poisoning, and collecting on the insurance for a "faster horse." The husband turns pale and gazes into the woods wondering if she was abducted by aliens and who is this woman"? If only the horse is afflicted, the horse will come bounding into the vet check, with eyes glittering, dancing around like something from "The Black Stallion Returns", the vet becomes dizzy spinning the circle with his stethescope trying to listen for gut sounds. He never gets to, but in fear of his life figures a horse with that much energy is good to go, but he does have some concerns about the rider who is standing bent over, long strands of mane hair entangled in her fingers, hands on knees, face frozen in fear...



When all is said and done the pair will finish pretty near last, just like they would have if all things had gone well and pair had not been afflicted. That is the irony of Cybil Syndrome.  ~E.G. 2008

4 comments:

  1. Ozzy, who does indeed give pony rides at the annual open house, has had a bout or two of Cybil Syndrome. -_-

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  2. My TK is exactly like that!

    During training he is slow as molasses, I can put anyone on him, and he just cruises along. I've never seen him fussed about other horses or leaving a pack or anything. But at a "race" (we've only done two) we are out to finish first at any cost and I am clinging on for dear life! It's really terrifying!

    I wonder what the cure is? Riding at speed and practicing stopping from a gallop? Or just going to ride after ride until it just doesn't matter to him anymore? I have been tempted to cut endurance riding out of my plans for next year and focus on jumping instead - it somehow seems safer! :) hehe

    Good luck with your Cybil this coming season EG! :)

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  3. Hahah, my husband has avoided all Cybil Syndrome by never ever coming to rides. My horse, on the other hand, drinks the kool-aid at every ride!

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  4. Yes...my perfectly sedate trail horse metamorphs into something unrecognizeable.

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