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  • What is Zero?
    Feb 17 2026

    The word "Zero" comes from work with the neurodivergent community. It describes an internal state of regulation and resiliency — the place inside us where we can pause, process, and choose our response.

    From Zero, we can truly hear horses.

    Horses are prey animals. Their instinct is to move away from perceived danger. What feels inconvenient to us is often intelligent survival. As a fellow social species, when we ask horses to follow or trust us, we must check — and double check — the environment we’re inviting them into.

    Sometimes it’s as subtle as pointing to an object and using a tail swish gesture to say, “You don’t have to worry about that.”

    When we see horses through an ethological lens — not as beasts of burden, but as socially intelligent prey animals — we begin giving them something powerful: A voice.

    And that voice starts with our willingness to listen.

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    14 Min.
  • Who is Sharon Wilsie?
    Feb 11 2026

    In this first episode of Giving Horses a Voice, Sharon Wilsie shares the origin story behind her work with equine body language — and the turning point that changed everything.

    Sharon explains how years of working with neurodivergent students and rescue horses led her to notice something most people miss — the slow, precise micro-gestures horses use to communicate. Not behavior. Not obedience. Not pressure-and-release mechanics.

    In this episode, you’ll hear:

    • The difference between training responses and relational communication

    • What “inner zero” first meant before it had a name

    • How observing horses without interfering revealed a conversational structure

    This is not an episode about techniques.

    It’s about perception.

    If you’ve ever felt like your horse was trying to tell you something — but you didn’t have the map to understand it — this is where that map begins.

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    18 Min.