

Some women have done all the right things and have started to feel like everyone else in their life is holding the reins.
That's all. That's enough.
WHAT IT IS
A half-day at a working horse farm in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
A small group of women. Four horses. No riding. Coffee in the morning, real food at midday.
No journaling prompts. No sharing circle. No one will ask you to set an intention.
WHO IT'S FOR
- —The woman who is fine, and is tired of being fine.
- —The woman who can read everyone else in the room but has stopped reading herself.
- —The woman who is good at her job and good at her people and quietly running on empty.
- —The woman who would never call this a retreat to her friends. Especially her.
WHAT HAPPENS
You arrive. You don't have to be anyone yet.
You watch the herd for a while. No agenda.
You go into a round pen with a horse. No saddle, no bridle, no reins. You and her, and whatever you brought with you.
She tells you the truth. You leave with it.
THE SHAPE OF THE MORNING
First hour
Coffee. The herd. You're allowed to just watch.
Middle hour
One horse. No tack. Just you, asking — without words — for her to walk with you.
Closing hour
A meal together. We talk if you want to. Otherwise we don't.
THE HORSES
The horses you'll meet are part of the Decode herd. Some came here rescued. Some came here broken. All of them have learned, with time, what a quiet human feels like.
They're not props. They're not trained to do anything in particular with you. They will respond to whoever you actually are when you walk through the gate. That's the whole point.
WHAT YOU DON'T HAVE TO DO
- —You don't have to ride.
- —You don't have to share anything about your life.
- —You don't have to cry, or not cry.
- —You don't have to know anything about horses.
- —You don't have to be "ready."
THE PRACTICAL PART
WHO RUNS IT
Dawn — founder of Decode Horsemanship. She's worked with horses every day for years and with people in leadership for longer than that. She'll be in the round pen with you. She doesn't perform. She doesn't push. She'll be there if you need her and out of the way if you don't.