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

NCEFT goes International

August 1, 2012 by Development Director

Check out the following newsletter article from Julie, our Volunteer Coordinator:
 
NCEFT was pleased to welcome a few very special visitors July 2-5.  Four students from Korea National Sport University (KNSU) in Seoul South Korea won a traveling grant called Global Challenge through their school.  They were required to choose a subject close to their major and give a presentation to a panel of professors.  They are majoring in Adaptive Physical Education and chose Hippotherapy as their subject because they volunteered as sidewalkers for Hippotherapy in Korea.  The professors said they won 1st place out of 30 because of their passionate presentation on why Hippotherapy is so important.
 
Students pose with Ben before sidewalking for a Hippotherapy session

How and why did they choose NCEFT were the big questions.  They found NCEFT through PATH and AHA.  Based on all the reviews they read about us and other places is why they chose NCEFT out of the entire world!  This is a pretty big deal.  For those of you that don’t know, there are hundreds of PATH centers all over the world!  Needless to say, we were very honored they chose us.  They also liked our website the best as well.

 
They observed Hippotherapy and Adaptive Riding sessions to start with and were then trained to be sidewalkers so they could participate in actual sessions.  Plus, they were able to interview some of our therapists, riding instructors and clients. They were asked what they would do with the information they gathered.  They said they would present the information to their professors to finish up the project for one and their experience here will go on their resumes to help them get jobs after they graduate.  More importantly, they said they want to spread the word about what great work NCEFT does and how many people we bring hope and healing to.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: equine, equine facilitated therapy, Global Challenge, hippotherapy, horse, korea national sport university, NCEFT, seoul, south korea

Be Worthy.

July 24, 2012 by Development Director

We used to lay sheepskin blankets over our horses’ backs, protecting patients’ gastrostomy tubes from catching on the nappy felt pads.  We learned to work with G-tubes, tracheostomy tubes, AFOs, and hearing aids, and at some point our sense of normal was flipped on its head.  Looking past the medical baggage we would see a two-year old learning to tell her horse to go and stop, or a pair of teenagers talking movies while they warmed-up their horses for a group lesson.  Mundane and ordinary, our conversations rarely touched on their so-called disability.  But every now and then an event would occur to shatter these attempts at normalization, and all too quickly we’re faced with a truth both sharp and dangerous.

“I had a clean MRI.”  She’s a little peanut of child fresh from her day at summer camp, still wearing the hand written name tag proclaiming her assignment to the orange group.  She refuses to be called Miss or Princess, she’s just herself and you better remember it.  “Whatever happens, I know it’ll be okay because I’m not going to die.”  She delivers these statements while clipping oversized ladybug clothespins to her horse’s mane, casually throwing it out there as if we’d asked her favorite ice cream.  You realize despite the headband and floral appliquéd shirt this is not a child, this is a person who is grappling with the very adult reality of life and its fragility.

Working with a survivor is akin to a crucible, an experience that acts to distill you into your most pure self.  You want to be the very best person you can be, to do everything within your power to be worthy of the person in front of you.  You stop acting and start feeling.  Smiles aren’t forced, laughter isn’t faked. For the next 30 minutes you give all of yourself.  The session inevitably comes to end, she dismounts, goodbyes are exchanged, and the horse is led back to its stall.  The saturated reality of life and death begins to fade, replaced with something softer.

Each week isn’t an epiphany. But each week we come a little closer to being worthy.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: disability, equine, equine facilitated therapy, hippotherapy, horse, NCEFT

A Parent’s Perspective

March 21, 2012 by Development Director

Our cheerleaders come in all sizes, but are most often sticky handed, Oshkosh bedecked and under three feet tall.  They shout encouragement while kneeling upon white plastic chairs in the viewing deck, and look-up from impromptu soccer games on the nearby lawn to wave to brothers and sisters riding by on the trail.  Though lacking pompoms and kick pleats, these pint-sized spirit leaders accomplish their goal; they make those they’re cheering for feel special.

Part of this blog’s effort is not only to share our thoughts and experiences, but those of our patient’s families.  Each of NCEFT’s staff members has a unique background that colors our daily interactions.  From firsthand experience living with a sibling with a terminal neuromuscular diagnosis, to suffering the loss of a loved one who’s left us too soon, we all come to the table with a different set of eyes.  The one experience we can’t personally attest to is that of being the parent to a special needs child.  When the opportunity to sit down with one such NCEFT parent presented itself, we jumped at the chance to hear how our facility has affected their son.

D.M. checks out the Woodside Fire Engine at NCEFT's 2010 Holiday Party

It was during the evolution of that conversation we came to a singular conclusion.  Though as adults we may praise the physical and cognitive benefits of hippotherapy and adaptive riding, from this parent’s perspective, the greatest benefit to his son is something much different.  “My son is eight-years-old, has Down syndrome, and has been coming to NCEFT […] for more than five years. His visits to NCEFT are unquestionably the highlight of his week.”

DM (we’re using initials to maintain his privacy) likely can’t remember a life that hasn’t included regular visits with his four-legged friends.  First a patient in our hippotherapy program, he’s since graduated to adaptive riding lessons.  He rolls up each week in style, riding proudly atop his Dad’s shoulders as they head over to grab his helmet.  Often running up the mounting block steps, it’s clear how much “he loves ’his’ horse, Valentine.”

Unless it’s pouring rain, or tornado force winds are ripping through the trees, DM makes sure to fit in a leisurely ride on the sensory trail.  It’s the same each week, he huddles down over Valentine’s neck, head buried in a mane so thick it can’t seem to decide which side to fall on.  His sidewalkers hunch over and tiptoe as quietly as possible across the short stretch of pavement that connects arena and trail.  “DM?”  his Dad faithfully calls out, “DM where’d you go?” Feigning ignorance of his son slinking by behind him—and the giggles coming unbidden from the boy’s mouth—his Dad spins in confusion on the viewing deck.  The group continues their stealthy march until they reach the dirt path, whereupon they dissolve into laughter, celebrating another successful escapade.  “There you are,” Dad exclaims, “Where are you going?  Hey, don’t you have any fun out there,” he jokes, fists on his hips.

Notice a trend? D.M. at last year's Holiday Party.

It’s interactions like these that go so far towards illustrating the ease with which DM interacts with horses.  His Dad believes these lessons have “increase[ed] his overall comfort level, his sense of self and help[ed] him understand more about the care and proper treatment of animals.”  Many of us could likely benefit from improved sense of self, and who among us doesn’t feel special when we’re singled out for something unique.  DM’s Dad  feels like horseback riding is this unique activity.  “Every Friday when he leaves school a few minutes before the end of the day, all his classmates know he’s off to go riding, and many tell him to say hello to Valentine for them. He takes a lot of pride and gets a real sense of contentment from all the positive attention he gets from his peers.”

So, back to the cheerleaders; back to the brothers and sisters, friends, volunteers, and staff who suspend their lives for a moment.  They pause in their work or their games and looking up, find time to wave.  “So, for other parents considering […] hippotherapy or adaptive riding, I would certainly encourage them.  Our experience has been entirely positive, not only for our son, but for our entire family.  We appreciate everything the folks at NCEFT do, and the bonds we’ve built with the staff and volunteers.  They clearly love our son just as much as he loves them.”

Thanks to DM’s Dad for taking the time to sit down with us.  If you’ve got a unique story or perspective you’d like to share with NCEFT, please send ideas and submissions to Shayna@NCEFT.org

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: disability, Down syndrome, equine, equine facilitated therapy, Global Down Syndrome Day, hippotherapy, horse, NCEFT, parent, special needs child, therapeutic riding

You’ve Got the Love

March 10, 2012 by Development Director

As hard as it is for us to acccept, next week will be the final lesson of our first Heroes and Horsemanship Program. Having started in January, riders in this program spent the past seven weeks learning horsemanship at our Woodside facility.  We speak for all involved in saying we never realized just how quickly we’d all form new bonds.  From the men and women who quickly came to love their horses, to the sidewalkers and leaders who became invested in their veteran’s progress, we grew more attached to the weekly lessons than any of us could have imagined.

Though next week will be bittersweet, we can spend this week just soaking up the good.  The plum trees are blooming, the horses’ sleek summer coats are coming in, and life’s never looked so good from the back of a horse.

Video- Heroes and Horsemanship: Week 7 

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

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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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Woodside, CA 94062-4132

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