š“ When Trust Trembles
Thereās a rhythm to mustang trust training ā a rhythm that doesnāt always move forward. Some days, it feels like harmony. Other days, it feels like a song that suddenly forgets its melody.
Not long after the moment I shared in Flokiās Trust, when his nose brushed my cheek in a whisper of courage, our rhythm faltered. The same mustangs who had learned to seek my calm suddenly found reason to doubt again. It happened fast ā faster than I could breathe or reason through ā and by the time stillness returned, the air felt heavy with the sound of splintered trust.
No one was hurt ā not in the way that leaves marks. But fear leaves its own kind of bruise, invisible yet deep.
I stood there long after the commotion faded, trying to find words for the hollow ache that follows a setback. Thereās fear, of course ā fear for their safety, fear of what could have been worse. Yet mostly, thereās heartbreak. Because trust, once earned, feels sacred. Losing even a piece of it feels like betraying a prayer you didnāt realize youād said aloud.
However, the truth about mustang trust training ā real, ethical gentling ā is that itās never a straight line. Itās a circle that widens and tightens with every touch, every breath, every moment of doubt. Horses donāt measure us by perfection; they measure us by what we do after things go wrong. So thatās what I tried to hold onto.
When quiet returned, I went back to the pasture. I took off Flokiās halter and let the soft autumn wind do the talking. I didnāt ask for anything, not even forgiveness. Instead, I just stood where he could see me and waited for the rhythm to begin again ā one heartbeat, one breath, one small promise at a time.
Because gentling isnāt about control. Itās about listening, especially when the silence hurts. And sometimes, the truest kind of trust isnāt in the moments that go right ā itās in the choice to keep believing after they donāt.
