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"If you were asked to make a list of all the people you love, how long would it take until you put yourself on the list? Years ago, when asked this question, Tim Hayes didn't have an answer. But today, after working with horses for more than 30 years, he not only puts his name on the list, he puts it first. When humans learn to love themselves, they become more compassionate. They become better parents, children, husbands, wives, partners, and coworkers. In fact, they have more successful relationships in general. Over the course of his career learning about horses and horsemanship, and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"If you were asked to make a list of all the people you love, how long would it take until you put yourself on the list? Years ago, when asked this question, Tim Hayes didn't have an answer. But today, after working with horses for more than 30 years, he not only puts his name on the list, he puts it first. When humans learn to love themselves, they become more compassionate. They become better parents, children, husbands, wives, partners, and coworkers. In fact, they have more successful relationships in general. Over the course of his career learning about horses and horsemanship, and eventually teaching it to others, Hayes gained an understanding of the profound social skills evident in horse relationships. In Horses, Humans, and Love, his follow-up to Riding Home-the book Robert Redford called "A beautiful volume of healing and love between man and nature" and Temple Grandin said was "Essential reading"-Hayes explains how and why when humans emulate these 10 qualities of herd dynamics witnessed in horses in their own human relationships, they naturally express and thus demonstrate the true altruistic meaning of what we call "love," both for others, and for ourselves"--
Autorenporträt
Tim Hayes holds a BA in Psychology from The University of Vermont and is an internationally recognized natural horsemanship clinician who teaches throughout the United States, Canada, Europe, Australia, and Mexico. He is an adjunct professor of Equine Therapy at the University of Vermont and Vermont State College, and a visiting instructor for The University of Connecticut and University of Vermont Departments of Animal Science, teaching courses in natural horsemanship. He is a contributing expert consultant and columnist for EQUUS Magazine, Horse Network, and Huffington Post. Hayes is the author of Riding Home: The Power of Horses to Heal and lives with his wife Stephanie and their horses in Johnson, Vermont (hayesisforhorses.com).