Strides To Solutions

Esther Adams

Strides To Solutions uncovers how animal-assisted psychotherapy—from equine sessions to canine companionship—rewires the brain for lasting cognitive and emotional gains. Join host Esther Adams, a trauma-informed psychotherapist with a doctorate in psychology, as she shares powerful client stories, expert interviews, and hands-on exercises designed to strengthen attention, memory, executive function, and resilience. Tune in for actionable strategies that transform barnyard breakthroughs into real-world success. esthernava.substack.com

  1. Why Avoidance Makes Anxiety Worse: The Neuroscience of Escaping Fear

    16h ago

    Why Avoidance Makes Anxiety Worse: The Neuroscience of Escaping Fear

    Imagine that every time a smoke alarm went off, you left the building without ever checking whether there was a fire. The relief on the porch would be real. But you’d never learn that almost every alarm was false, and over time the alarm itself, not the fire, would start running your life. That, in one image, is what avoidance does to anxiety. In this episode of Strides to Solutions, I trace the maddening paradox at the center of anxiety: avoidance works. You dodge the presentation, your anxiety drops, and your brain files it away as a win. The problem is that the very thing that makes you feel better right now is often the thing that makes the fear stronger later. We walk through five stops to understand why. Why relief is a genuine reward that trains your brain to keep escaping. Why leaving early robs the brain of the only evidence that could correct a false alarm. What actually shifts among the amygdala, hippocampus, and prefrontal cortex when you avoid a fear versus when you face it safely, and why facing it builds a new safety memory rather than erasing the old one. Why anxiety spreads until one avoided elevator becomes all elevators and a person’s world quietly shrinks. And what modern neuroscience says about turning it around, which looks less like white-knuckling through fear and more like engineering moments of surprising safety. There’s a bonus stop too, the reframe I find most clarifying. So much of anxiety isn’t really about the feared event at all. It’s about the not knowing. Which raises the question of whether anxiety is less a disorder of fear and more a disorder of uncertainty. If your world has been getting smaller, this one reframes that shrinking entirely. Not as proof the world is dangerous, but as the predictable footprint of a brain doing exactly what avoidance trains it to do. And it can be untrained, gently, with support, one small act of approach at a time. A note before you listen: this episode is a map of the terrain, not a substitute for care. Exposure works best with a trained therapist, so if anxiety has been shrinking your life, please consider reaching out to someone who does this work. Listen in, and let’s take the stride from escaping fear toward something you can actually use. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit esthernava.substack.com

    19 min
  2. The Neuroscience of Loneliness

    19h ago

    The Neuroscience of Loneliness

    We treat loneliness like a feeling to be ashamed of, somewhere near sadness, and we assume that feeling it means something is wrong with us. But a growing body of neuroscience tells a different story. Loneliness may be less an emotion and more a survival signal, as basic and bodily as hunger, thirst, or pain. Hunger tells you the body needs food. Loneliness may be the brain’s way of telling you that you need other people. In this episode of Strides to Solutions, I trace that signal across five stops. Why loneliness isn’t actually about being alone, and why some people thrive in solitude while others feel unreachable in a crowd. Why social rejection borrows the brain’s physical pain circuitry and genuinely hurts. How chronic loneliness can quietly turn on itself, rewriting the brain’s expectations until it starts manufacturing the very disconnection it fears. What years of that signal do to the heart, the immune system, and the aging brain. And finally, which interventions actually loosen its grip, which turn out to have far less to do with adding more people to your calendar than you’d expect. There’s a bonus stop too, about whether the modern world has accidentally set this ancient system up to fail. A Stone Age social brain, tuned for a small face-to-face tribe, set loose in a world of thousands of thin digital connections and vanishing community. If loneliness has been sitting on your chest, this one reframes it entirely. Not as proof you’re broken, but as an alarm doing its job, sometimes stuck in the on position, in a world that pulled us apart faster than our brains could adapt. And alarms, unlike verdicts, can be answered. Listen in, and let’s take the stride from a lonely brain toward something you can actually work with. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit esthernava.substack.com

    21 min
  3. What Stanford Psychology Knows About Show Nerves That Equestrian Culture Has Never Said Out Loud

    May 2

    What Stanford Psychology Knows About Show Nerves That Equestrian Culture Has Never Said Out Loud

    Every rider who has ever tried to breathe through the anxiety at the in-gate knows the same frustrating truth. You pushed it down far enough to get through the test. But the riding that came out was not the riding you trained. And the score that came back did not reflect what you have built at home. Most conversations about show nerves end up in the same place. Manage it better. Breathe more. Trust your training. And those suggestions are not wrong exactly. They are just aimed at the wrong point in the process. In this episode of Strides To Solutions, host Esther Adams introduces James Gross’s Process Model of Emotion Regulation, one of the most well-supported frameworks in psychological science, and applies it directly to competitive Western Dressage showing. The model identifies four intervention points in the emotional sequence: situation selection, attentional deployment, cognitive reappraisal, and response modulation. The research is consistent that the earlier you intervene, the more effective the strategy and the less cognitive cost it carries. And response modulation, the breathe and push it down approach that most riders default to at a traditional show, is the latest, most expensive, and least effective of the four. The episode walks through what happens cognitively when a rider enters a traditional show environment, why all of the remaining regulation strategies are competing for the same finite pool of attentional resources that the riding itself requires, and why the performance that results is often not a fair measure of the training that has been built. Then it makes the case that online Western Dressage showing, evaluated by United States Equestrian Federation licensed judges with Large R and Senior Large R credentials, counting toward the Western Dressage Association of America’s national recognition programs, is not a shortcut or a consolation prize. It is a situation selection strategy. The most powerful intervention point in the entire emotional regulation sequence. Choosing a competitive context where the threat load is calibrated to your current regulated capacity, where the evaluation is real and the challenge is genuine, but the emotional cascade does not begin fully activated before you ever pick up the reins. This is not a pep talk. It is a framework. And once you hear it, the in-gate looks completely different. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit esthernava.substack.com

    16 min
  4. The Grief Aging Equestrians Were Never Given Language For

    Apr 8

    The Grief Aging Equestrians Were Never Given Language For

    You have been in horses long enough to know that something is shifting. Maybe it is the way your horse moves now compared to three years ago. Maybe it is your own body asking for more recovery time, more deliberate attention, more honest conversations with yourself about risk. Maybe it is the ambitions you are quietly revising without quite admitting you are revising them. Maybe it is all of it at once, arriving simultaneously, with no clear event to organize around and no social script for what you are carrying. Nobody warned you that this particular grief would be this heavy. Nobody told you it would arrive this quietly, in increments, inside a relationship that is still ongoing. Nobody gave you a framework for grieving something that has not ended yet but is already changing everything. In this episode of Strides to Solutions, Esther Adams does exactly that. Five named frameworks for what aging equestrians actually experience: the Living Loss Model, Identity Grief, Present-State Anchoring, the Caregiver Ethical Load, and the Cumulative Resilience that only comes from having loved horses long enough to have lost some of them. Drawn from the research in her new book, The Horse Shaped Hole: Navigating Equestrian Grief, this episode is for the rider who is still showing up to the barn every day while quietly carrying something she has never quite been able to name. Until now. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit esthernava.substack.com

    18 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

Strides To Solutions uncovers how animal-assisted psychotherapy—from equine sessions to canine companionship—rewires the brain for lasting cognitive and emotional gains. Join host Esther Adams, a trauma-informed psychotherapist with a doctorate in psychology, as she shares powerful client stories, expert interviews, and hands-on exercises designed to strengthen attention, memory, executive function, and resilience. Tune in for actionable strategies that transform barnyard breakthroughs into real-world success. esthernava.substack.com