Co-Active Balance Is a Verb: Coaching for Perspective
- Cindy Hosea

- Apr 12
- 6 min read
Updated: Oct 17

Forget the steady rhythm of a bicycle—balance in Co-Active Coaching is more like riding a skateboard through a half-pipe of emotional decisions.
You’ve got no handles to grip. No gears to shift. Just you, your stance, and the constant recalibration between momentum and gravity. One foot controls direction, the other keeps you steady—or tries to.
Skateboarders know this: balance isn’t found in stillness. It’s found in movement. It’s dynamic. Messy. Loud. There’s a whole lot of falling before there’s any flow. And that’s what makes it such a gorgeous metaphor for the Co-Active principle of Balance.
When your client’s life feels like a concrete jungle of obligations, risks, and unknowns, your job is to help them lean in—not freeze up. Just like on a skateboard, sometimes the path forward looks like a little push… and sometimes it looks like learning how to fall and get back up without deciding you’re “bad at this.”
You're not teaching them to avoid the half-pipe—you’re helping them learn how to ride it.
In Co-Active Coaching, balance isn’t about achieving a Zen-like state of total stillness. It’s about motion, adjustment, and finding footing even when the terrain is shifting under you. This principle guides clients to new perspectives when they feel stuck between overwhelm and inertia.



