
Coach Your Wild – Sarah Cretegny
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About Coach Your Wild – Sarah Cretegny
Articles by Coach Your Wild - Sarah Cretegny
Why Vulnerability Is the Path to Fulfilment in 2026 – the importance of brave spaces
An article exploring how fulfilment is becoming less about individual resilience and more about relational safety. Anchored in a tender parenting moment and informed by psychological insight, the piece reframes vulnerability not as oversharing, but as a relational practice – one that depends on brave, caring spaces capable of gently holding our truths.
The Year of Rising Wild – A Different Way to Begin
As uncertainty shapes the start of 2026, this article explores a different way to begin the year – one that honours the mind, body, and spirit, and recognises resilience as something built through relationship and support.
Why We First Think Zebras Are Horses – What the Brain Teaches Us About Change, Identity, and Becoming
Have you ever made a meaningful change in your life – a new role, a new boundary, a new way of being – and quietly wondered, Why does this feel so strange if it’s meant to be right?
You may be more at home in this transition than you realise.
The answer lies in how the brain makes sense of the unfamiliar. How we may first mistake zebras for horses… but wait… as that is only the first step.
The Most Genius Gift You can Give yourself This Christmas? Playing.
The most genius gift you can give yourself this Christmas? Play.
My biggest breakthrough this season didn’t come from a strategy session, but from sitting on the floor building a marble run with my son. Play softened my thinking, relaxed my brain, and revealed solutions I couldn’t force my way into. Neuroscience shows why: both play and coaching activate the parts of the brain responsible for insight, creativity, and big-picture clarity.
When we stop pushing and start playing, ideas connect, flow returns, and the whole system shifts. This Christmas, your most productive move might just be the most joyful one.
The Moment She Didn’t Swallow Her Feelings
When her daughter texted, “Mum… this doesn’t feel right,” it wasn’t just honesty — it was a reflection of the work her mother has been doing. Instead of swallowing her feelings, her daughter trusted her body, her voice, and her instinct.
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