Leadership Through Presence: Lessons from the Snake and the Horse
From Shedding to Stepping Forward: Leadership Lessons for Today’s Leaders
In my Brainz Magazine article, I reflect on what leadership really looks like — not as a performance metric, but as an embodied practice rooted in presence, relationships, and truth.
For many years, I believed leadership meant pushing forward through exhaustion, struggle and self-denial. I worked relentlessly — training, qualifying, creating programmes — but still felt out of sync with the work itself. It wasn’t until I slowed down, listened to my body and learned from the horses that I truly understood where leadership begins.
Horses don’t respond to force — they respond to presence. They reflect what we are before we articulate what we say. That shift — from performance to presence — taught me that leadership is:
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Regulation before direction
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Clarity before force
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Relational connection before control
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Shared responsibility instead of solo heroics
The transition from the Year of the Snake to the Year of the Horse symbolises a leadership evolution:
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The Snake helped us shed old patterns — endurance without alignment; over-functioning; exhaustion as proof of commitment.
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The Horse invites us to step forward with presence, rhythm, and relational awareness.
This isn’t about doing less — it’s about doing what actually lasts.
Explore the full article to dive deeper into how embodied leadership transforms not just our results, but the way we move through life and work