Don't be Selfish: Stop Helping, Start Asking

Episode Description

What if the most trust-building thing you can do - with another person, with your community, with your horse - isn't demonstrating your competence? What if it's showing your need?

In this episode, Tessa takes on one of the most counterintuitive ideas in leadership, horsemanship, and human connection: that we don't build trust by offering help. We build trust by asking for it. Drawing on research from Simon Sinek, Brené Brown, and Adam Grant, and bringing it all the way into the barn, this episode will change how you think about misbehavior, community, and what it actually means to lead - whether you're leading a team, a clinic, or a horse.

Key Takeaways

We don't build trust by offering help — we build trust by asking for it. This single idea, from Simon Sinek's 2024 conversation with Trevor Noah at Brilliant Minds, is the thread that runs through the entire episode. When you refuse to ask for help, you are not being considerate. You are denying someone the honor of showing up for you. That, Sinek says, is selfish.

Brené Brown's research on leadership and trust reveals something that surprises almost everyone. When leaders are asked what builds trust for them in their relationships with the people they lead, the answer isn't reliability or competence. It's being asked for help. Adam Grant cites the research backing this up — including a 1969 study by Jecker and Landy confirming what Benjamin Franklin observed 300 years earlier. We like people we help more than people who help us. The ask is a gift to the one being asked.

The Rat Park experiment, which Tessa heard from Simon Sinek in that same Brilliant Minds conversation, reframes addiction as an isolation problem rather than a substance problem. When rats lived in an enriched social environment, they tried the drug-laced water but chose not to keep using it. Community changed what they needed. This experiment becomes the bridge into the barn — and into one of the most important reframes in this episode.

The barn sour and buddy sour horse, through this lens, may not be a training problem at all. It may be an enrichment problem. A horse who is desperately herd-bound may be a horse who has never been given another genuine source of safety and connection — a horse who is under-resourced everywhere else. The training question shifts from "how do I make leaving less painful" to "how do I become a portable source of safety?"

A misbehaving horse is a horse asking for help. The horse that bucks, spooks, refuses, shuts down, or won't load is communicating something. When we receive that communication as an offense rather than an ask, our trust erodes — and that erosion telegraphs immediately. The horse feels it. Their trust drops in response. The circuit goes negative. But when we receive the misbehavior as an ask and respond with curiosity rather than correction, we teach the horse that asking is safe. And a horse who has learned that asking is safe is a completely different partner.

The ask lives in four dimensions in the equine world. Between horse and human — inviting the horse to participate in solving the puzzle rather than controlling the answer. Within our community — borrowing knowledge, ideas, tack, experience, and giving others the gift of being useful. Professional to professional — the clinician or instructor who asks a peer for help models that expertise and curiosity are not opposites. And instructor to student — asking what they're feeling, whether this is landing, what they've learned elsewhere. That last one is the most vulnerable and the most important.

Vulnerability minus boundaries is inappropriate disclosure. Brené Brown's reminder that not every ask is appropriate for every relationship, every person, or every moment is the nuance that keeps this episode honest. The ask has to be proportional to the relationship and the readiness of the receiver. Authenticity without empathy, as Adam Grant says, is selfishness. And authenticity, Brené adds, should always be in service of connection — not relief, not performance, not being seen. Connection.

Sources and References

Simon Sinek and Trevor Noah — Brilliant Minds Conference, June 2024. "Simon Sinek and Trevor Noah on Friendship, Loneliness, Vulnerability, and More." Full conversation available on YouTube.

Brené Brown and Adam Grant — The Curiosity Shop Podcast, inaugural episode, March 2025. Available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

Jecker, J. and Landy, D. (1969). "Liking a Person as a Function of Doing Him a Favour." Human Relations, 22(4), 371-378. Referenced by Adam Grant on The Curiosity Shop.

The Rat Park experiment — referenced by Simon Sinek in the Brilliant Minds conversation with Trevor Noah, June 2024.

Connect with Tessa

www.cohesivehorsemanship.com