Asking a Different Question

An online workshop with Tamar Reno
hosted by Kim Carter

📅 Date: Thursday, February 20th | ⏰ Time: 6:00 PM EDT | 📍 Online via Zoom

“Ask a different question. And then wait. And then you might have to do that again. And then you might have to do it again. But eventually, you'll figure out what is the right question. You’ll know it's the right question because you won’t need to ask a different question.”

-First Horse

What happens when we stop pushing for answers and start asking different questions? In this special live workshop, Tamar Reno of Bear Creek Farm and Kim Carter of Stable Roots invite you into a deeper conversation about what it means to shift our perspective—both with horses and in our own lives.

Inspired by Tamar’s First Horse’s wisdom, this workshop explores:

🔹 How our internal narratives shape our relationships—with horses, people, and the land.
🔹 What it means to sit with uncertainty and let the right question emerge.
🔹 Why usual ways of thinking often limit connection, and how to shift into a more fluid, responsive way of being.
🔹 How First Horse’s insight can guide us through personal growth, resilience, and the challenges of rebuilding—whether in horsemanship, community, or daily life.

This is a conversation, not a lecture—an open space for reflection, discussion, and connection. Whether you work with horses or are simply looking for a new way to approach life’s complexities, this workshop will leave you thinking in new ways.

📌 This workshop is free, but registration is required.

🔗 Register by filling out the form below.

Come curious. Come ready to listen. And most importantly, come ready to ask a different question.

  • TAMAR RENO

    With an academic background in Native American Studies focusing on language revitalization, Tamar has taught at a tribal college, developed curriculum for universities and cultural centers, and collaborated on language immersion programs. She has also worked extensively in the nonprofit sector.

    She and her husband John live at Bear Creek Farm, on the aboriginal hunting grounds of the Cherokee, near Tryon, North Carolina. Her days begin and end in the shelter of the Blue Ridge Mountains.

    John and Tamar coexist with their three horse relatives and a dog, a dog who puts the “great” in Great Pyrenees.

    Centering on kinship, Tamar utilizes Indigenous ways of thinking to explore and deepen horse-human relationships. She also traffics in words.

  • KIM CARTER

    Kim Carter is the owner of Bramblewood Stables in upstate South Carolina and the host of Relatively Stable, a podcast exploring resilience, transformation, and the human-horse connection. First and foremost, she is a writer, sharing her work on Stable Roots on Substack.

    A Level 2 EquineFlow practitioner, Certified Financial Education Instructor (CFEI), somatic practitioner in the Compassion Process, and ARIA Level III hunt seat instructor, Kim integrates coaching and mindset work into the daily rhythm of Bramblewood. Her focus is on guiding others through change—whether in the barn or on the page.

    A lifelong equestrian, Kim grew up riding in the hunter/jumper circuit and found solace in horses and storytelling from an early age. She studied English and Art History at Wofford College, building a career as a journalist before anxiety reshaped her path. That shift led her back to the barn two decades ago, where she rebuilt her life alongside a young horse named Max. What began as a personal journey of healing became Bramblewood Stables—a place where transformation, through horses, continues every day.

RSVP.

When you submit the form, Kim will be in touch with Zoom details.