Understanding Horse Depression

By Joanna Lepiarczyk

Understanding Horse Depression

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A groundbreaking look at today’s “healthy body, broken spirit” phenomenon in domestic horses, and how we can change it.

A horse’s eyes, once bright and curious, now look sad and dull. His head, once held high, now hangs low. His body, once full of energy, seems tired and lifeless. What is the cause of distress this horse is experiencing? His body is healthy, but his spirit seems broken.

Traditionally, humans care for horses’ physical needs—feeding them, grooming them, and ensuring they are sheltered from the harsh elements. But their emotional well-being, equally if not more important, has long been neglected, as their subtle signs of distress can easily go unnoticed.

In these pages, lifelong horsewoman and horsemanship educator Joanna Lepiarczyk explores how horses, like humans, are social animals with complex emotional landscapes. Drawing on recent research, she explains how horses form bonds, experience stress, and suffer from mental health issues like depression. Lepiarczyk translates scientific findings into practical advice and strategies for identifying signs of depression and improving equine mental well-being, including:

- The stress-depression connection
- The role of learned helplessness
- How changes in attention, posture, and responsiveness indicate mental health concerns
- Signs of anhedonia (inability to express joy) in horses
- Depression risks and treatment steps

By bringing horse depression to the forefront, Lepiarczyk helps horse owners, riders, and trainers understand and support the mental health needs of their horses—skills that will foster deeper bonds and better care.

Joanna Lepiarczyk

Joanna Lepiarczyk grew up around horses on a small, family-run riding facility in Europe where her daily life revolved around chores, training, and the kind of slow, steady observation that teaches a person to notice what others often miss. She learned early on that horses speak through posture, breath, and subtle shifts in energy that reveal how they feel long before they act. Her work now centers on the mental well-being and inner life of the horse. As an Equestrian Canada–certified Competition Coach, she draws on classical horsemanship and a habit of watching first, acting second. Over the years, she has added formal study to that foundation, including veterinary thermography, equine orthopedics, conformation, and the psychology of working with horses with coursework through FEI Campus and veterinary-led programs. Together, threads to inform her work as she studies the ways strain, stress, and emotional load shape a horse’s experience, and how thoughtful training and management can support a sense of ease. Joanna is the creator of social platform @Horses Explained and a regular contributor to equestrian media. Her book, Understanding Horse Depression, brings together lifelong experience, professional practice, and current research to explore how horses navigate stress, shutdown, and resilience. She lives and works in Burnaby, British Columbia.