Leadership Through Presence: Lessons from the Snake and the Horse

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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:

  • Regulation before direction

  • Clarity before force

  • Relational connection before control

  • Shared responsibility instead of solo heroics

The transition from the Year of the Snake to the Year of the Horse symbolises a leadership evolution:

  • The Snake helped us shed old patterns — endurance without alignment; over-functioning; exhaustion as proof of commitment.

  • 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

From Shedding to Stepping Forward – Leadership Lessons from the Year of the Snake and the Year of the Horse