NCEFT National Center for Equine Facilitated Therapy

 

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In Honor

In Honor

November 12, 2012 by Development Director

I can’t tell you his name or show you a photograph; his identity a secret guarded by the Navy.  I don’t have videos of his weekly progress; highlight reels set to carefully timed tracks, the music building until he takes his first steps without help.  What I have is a story.

He showed up a few months ago, baseball cap covering the long scar left by a bullet last Christmas.  Twenty-six and walking with the help of a VA therapist, he came looking for a way back.  Back to being able to hold his son, back to running, back to a life undefined.

Twice a week he makes his way up the mounting block where he stands, arms out, while his physical therapist fastens a gait belt about his waist.  His horse waits nearby in the blocks, head lowered and eyes half lidded.  He closes the distance in two wavering steps, hands reaching to steady himself upon the saddle horn.  He pauses, counting under his breathe, “one, two, three,” and swings his leg over.

Anger, and sadness, and frustration are chipped away by the steady beat of his horse’s hooves.  The day comes when he earns a pair of reins.  No longer a passenger but a rider capable of choice; left or right, walk or whoa.  We head out the double gate and towards the ramp, pausing while he works his feet out of the stirrups.  “Maybe it’s the man in me, but having reins was nice.  I liked that.”  A simple declaration.

He’ll get stronger and begin to ride without a gait belt.  He’ll learn to trot and enjoy his first lap of independent riding.  His physical gains will be measurable, boxes ticked off on his daily patient chart.  On that day we didn’t give him reps.  He’s a veteran, and on that day we gave him joy.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: equine, equine facilitated therapy, heroes and horsemanship, Heroes and Horses, hippotherapy, horse, NCEFT, therapy, veteran, veterans, Wounded Warriors

You can give a voice to the nonverbal

March 6, 2012 by Development Director

Voting for the TechSoup Digital Storytelling Challenge is live!  NCEFT has entered a video, Heroes and Horsemanship, and is elligible for the Audience Choice Award.  The one-minute video showcases the progress of one of the veterans in our 8 week adaptive horsemanship program.  With its innovative storyboard apps that give nonverbal patients the opportunity to communicate, the contest’s prize of a new iPad would be a life-changing opportunity for some of our families.

Finding the video can be a challenge, but look for the one submitted by our social media specialist, Shayna F.  You may be able to find it more easily by chosing the “Popular” button where it says “Order by” at the top of the page.  Thanks to our fantastic support network we’re currently near the top!

http://forums.techsoup.org/cs/p/tsdigs-2012-entervideo.aspx

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: #TSDigs, adaptive horsemanship, Digital Storytelling Challenge, equine, heroes and horsemanship, Heroes and Horses, hippotherapy, horse, NCEFT, PTSD, TBI, TechSoup, therapeutic riding, therapy, traumatic brain injury, veteran, veterans, woodside, Wounded Warriors

The Gift of Opportunity

March 1, 2012 by Development Director

It seems like every week we’ve added another veteran to our morning lesson.  In fact, we’ve been so busy that our videographer has been recruited to help handle the ever-growing group (meaning no video the past two weeks).  So, what have our veterans been up to lately?

At the beginning of the program each rider worked with a horse handler and two sidewalkers, a team designated to keep everyone safe around and on the horses.  Over the past 4 weeks the riders have progressed to the point where they’re now spending part of the lesson completely independent, no leader, no sidewalkers.  Initially riding alone only at the walk, last week’s lesson introduced everyone to the challenging (and thrilling!) experience of trotting without help.  Our adaptive riding instructor, Corie, had the servicemen and women whooping it up through a barrel racing pattern.

Watching the riders maneuver through the course was a lesson in humility.  One of the most challenging life lessons is learning to let those you care about take chances.  It’s tempting to lend a helping hand, to be the little voice on a shoulder offering assistance.  As a horse handler, the moment when you unclip your leadrope and turn to the rider saying, “You have your horse,” is difficult.  It’s offering ownership of the situation to a student who is less experienced than yourself.  Part of you wants to stay clipped on forever, ensuring that your lessons are nearly risk-free.  However, the act of taking chances is the only process by which we grow.  We teach everyone who leads our therapy horses to allow each student the opportunity to succeed, which conversely means offering them the chance to fail.  If a student forgets to ask their horse to turn, their leader will slowly let the horse bump into the rail.  “What happened?” Corie will exclaim, “Did you forget to tell Valentine to go left?”  It’s this process that teaches both patients and students that their actions have consequences.  If we’re always catching someone before they begin to fall, they never learn to tread carefully.

In many ways, letting kids begin to lose their balance is a vital aspect of hippotherapy.  Thankfully, we have the ability to do this while keeping our patients safe, with sidewalkers maintaining light contact but resisting the urge to help out too much.  For those with neuromuscular or sensory disorders, it can be difficult to feel asymmetries or imbalances.  Instead of helping a child each time they begin to drift off midline, perhaps leaning to the right, the therapist may ask for a small left circle from the horse.  The centrifugal force of the schooling figure encourages the rider to fall even more to the right, or outside of the circle.  It takes this greater sensation of imbalance to teach them to find midline, helping the rider learn where the center is and how to stay there.  Taking away support is often the only way to encourage someone to support themselves.

Many wonderful people have summed up the above in less than a sentence.  From Kenneth Boulding who said “nothing fails like success because we don’t learn from it.  We learn only from failure,” to Robert Allen, “There is no failure.  Only feedback.”  A great many men and women have expounded the virtues of missteps, errors, and flops.  However, Henry Ford may have said it best, “Failure is only the opportunity to begin again more intelligently.”  Each moment of our lives is an opportunity, whether for success or otherwise, it is an instant in which anything is attainable.

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Filed Under: Veteran's Program: Adaptive Horsemanship Tagged With: adaptive horsemanship, equine, Heroes and Horses, hippotherapy, horse, NCEFT, PTSD, TBI, therapeutic riding, therapy, traumatic brain injury, veteran, Wounded Warriors

Heroes and Horsemanship: Day Three

February 10, 2012 by Development Director

Whether it’s carriage driving, competitive riding, or just a hobby, a life with horses is a social one.  Though it’s not clear if horseback riding attracts talkative people or instead creates them, the result is the same, a group of people intent on carrying on a conversation until days pass and seasons change.  Like twins separated at birth, we manage to find each other at crowded parties and expansive companies, and upon finding each other refuse to let go, madly quizzing each other on the price of hay, or the best winter blanket.  Ever noticed how our Horse Handlers say each equine’s name before issuing instructions (“Sebastian, walk on”)?  It’s to let the horse know the conversation is no longer aimed at the sidewalker, therapist, or patient, but at them.

For veterans returning from war, depression and anxiety can leave servicemen and women feeling isolated, starting a terrible cycle of social withdrawal.  We often talk about the physical benefits of equine-facilitated therapy, and even the mental benefits, but the emotional ones are just as important.  Our adaptive horsemanship program not only joins together veterans as peers, but brings into the conversation their significant others, children, and friends.  It creates and nutures relationships that are essential to their recovery.  Our arena is such a wonderful place to be, and within its walls are a group of people intent on helping each other become the best possible version of themselves.  We hope you too can feel that sense of friendship as you watch this week’s video, and be sure to stick around until the very end for what must be one of the most inspiring shots of a young veteran and his growing family.

Video: Heroes and Horsemanship: Day Three

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Veteran's Program: Adaptive Horsemanship Tagged With: adaptive horsemanship, equine, Heroes and Horses, hippotherapy, horse, NCEFT, TBI, therapeutic riding, traumatic brain injury, veteran, veterans

A Part of Something Special

September 30, 2011 by Development Director

Photos by Drew Altizer, www.drewaltizer.com

“I wonder if the catering staff feels like part of something special?”  It’s the same question that pops into my head every year at NCEFT’s gala.  These people arrive expecting to pass around platters of mini lobster rolls and seared ahi, and instead find themselves cheering on Fund-A-Need bidders and tearing up while watching the story of a little boy who’s beating the odds.  I guess this question comes unbidden into my mind because I can’t help but feel like part of something special.  Though the name of our non-profit may incite thoughts of grandeur, when it comes down to it we’re more like a family than a titan of industry.  So, to see a fundraiser so enormously successful, so flawlessly executed, it’s enough to give anyone a serious case of the warm fuzzies.

The whole night is almost like a dream sequence; lights dimming as the camera pans past tables covered with checkered cloths to land on a set of chestnut horses standing motionless at the end of the arena.  The riders hold American Flags that stir faintly with the evening breeze as the sound of the National Anthem fills the air.  Fade out to the clinking of silverware and murmur of conversation as guests begin dinner.  As dusk turns to twilight, the energy changes.  Bidder cards are waved in the air, laughter competing with the frenetic pace of the auctioneer’s calls.  Before you know it, tables are emptying and the wooden dance floor rings with the sound of heeled boots beating time to Willie Nelson.  As the crowds begin to thin, a little boy heads back to the barn to say goodbye to his friends.  Wobbling down the aisle in a too big cowboy hat, he carries a bucket of hay, pulling small handfuls out for each of the horses.

What the catering staff feels I’ll never know.  But I can say with certainty that every guest in attendance must have felt the magic that was created in that arena on Runnymede Road last Saturday.  To attend the Gala is to change lives, to help children and adults who turn to NCEFT for horses, hope, and healing.

Filed Under: Heroes and Horses Gala Tagged With: Gala, Heroes and Horses, hippotherapy, Jeans and Jewels, NCEFT, SMCHA

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NCEFT: HORSES. HOPE. HEALING.

Horses. Hope. Healing. Three simple words that when combined have the power to transform lives. NCEFT is centered around helping people. We are about compassion, inclusiveness, and offering the highest level of service to those in need. We do this by harnessing the unique connection between horses and humans. NCEFT is also about community. Many of our clients and families describe NCEFT as a place that feels like home with people who feel like family.

 

 

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