Shut Up and Listen episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 18, 2026 · 25 MIN

Shut Up and Listen

from Relatively Stable · host Kimberly Carter

The Ability to Be TaughtWhy horses care less about what we think we know.What if the most important learning skill isn't intelligence?This week, Kim Carter begins with a one-minute drone video of horses running across a field in Upstate South Carolina and follows an unexpected thread into a much bigger question: What does it mean to pay attention?From horse-crazy barn rats and child labor law research in the pre-internet era to a stubborn girth buckle, fragmented attention, working memory, and the surprising science behind learning styles, this essay explores why children often learn differently than adults—and why horses may be some of the best teachers we have.Along the way, you'll discover:• Why research has largely debunked the idea of visual, auditory, and kinesthetic learners• What psychologists mean by working memory—and why instructions sometimes seem to vanish before we can use them• The surprising reason adults often struggle more than children when learning something new• How modern life trains us to divide our attention into smaller and smaller pieces• Why horses consistently reward curiosity, presence, and the willingness to be a beginnerAt its heart, this isn't a story about riding lessons.It's about competence, attention, and the increasingly rare ability to stop what we're doing long enough to receive new information.Whether you've spent your life around horses or have never touched one, this episode offers a fresh perspective on learning, listening, and why some of the most important lessons in life begin when we're willing to admit we don't already know the answer.Featured topics:Attention • Learning Styles • Working Memory • Neuroplasticity • Horses as Teachers • Child Development • Adult Learning • Focus in a Distracted World • Personal GrowthKey Quote"The best learners are people willing to breathe through their discomfort and listen. And if we're lucky, the horse is patient enough to wait for us to remember how." Get full access to Stable Roots at stableroots.substack.com/subscribe

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Shut Up and Listen

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This episode was published on June 18, 2026.

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The Ability to Be TaughtWhy horses care less about what we think we know.What if the most important learning skill isn't intelligence?This week, Kim Carter begins with a one-minute drone video of horses running across a field in Upstate South...

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