San Diego Union-Tribune

Horse sensibilit­ies

Taking a step into the equine world at Pine Valley nonprofit to engage with animals works wonders for young hearts and minds

- BY LAUREN J. MAPP

As soon as she stepped into the arena at Heart-NSoul in Pine Valley, Alpine resident Cenovia Elias connected with the ranch’s horses. The 15-year-old stroked their necks and backs and ran a brush through their coats. While she seemed like a natural, her visit to Heart-N-Soul Equine Assisted Therapy on Aug. 4 was the first time Cenovia had interacted with horses. Years of watching horse care videos on YouTube helped prepare her to be with the animals in a safe and respectful way, but spending time with them felt more special than she imagined.

“When I was younger, I got really into horses and I was like, ‘I want to own one of these,’ ” Cenovia said. “I’ve been around goats and chickens, but that’s it, so this is kind of magical.”

Cenovia and her 12-year-old brother visited Heart-N-Soul, a nonprofit, as part of a youth group visit organized by the San Diego American Indian Health Center

(SDAIHC). With three full-size horses, a miniature horse, miniature donkey, chickens, goats, parrots and dogs, the ranch has plenty of animals to interact with.

Equine-assisted therapy is an approach through which individual­s interact with horses with the aim of promoting emotional, cognitive and physical well-being. Through guided activities with a therapist and relationsh­ips with horses, participan­ts can develop valuable life skills and improve their overall mental health.

Founder Jaye Strother, who operates Heart-N-Soul with her husband, Andrew Strother, said one of her regular clients is a 13year-old girl who is being bullied at school. Another is a woman in her late 40s who is navigating problems within her family.

“It’s just a wonderful combinatio­n of animals and counseling,” Jaye said.

Research shows that participat­ing in therapy sessions involving horses can have myriad benefits on a client’s well-being.

Research from New York University published in 2022 found that in a study of children ages 6 to 17, a 10-week, therapeuti­c horseridin­g program reduced symptoms of mild to moderate anxiety and improved emotional regulation. A 2018 study from the University of Delaware and Indian Institute of Technology Bombay

showed that equine therapy can have positive effects on behavioral skills and social communicat­ion for people with autism spectrum disorder.

While many animals have been linked to therapeuti­c benefits, interactin­g with horses can have an additional benefit, as their large stature may seem intimidati­ng at first.

“I can put you on that horse, and it will give you some confidence, it will give you some self-assurance and will help you work on your balance,” Andrew said.

At Heart-N-Soul, sessions typically begin with the client introducin­g themselves to the horse. Although the horses all have names, Jaye and Andrew won’t share them, instead encouragin­g clients to think of their own names for the horses to personaliz­e the experience.

In a conversati­on after their time in the arena with the horses, some of the kids from SDAIHC shared what they named their horses: Brownie, Bloodstone, Cookie and Snickers.

By picking their own names, it can give some insight into how a client is feeling.

“I once had somebody that named my miniature donkey Prozac, which to me was very telling,” Jaye said.

In one-on-one and group sessions, Andrew and Jaye will ask clients whether any of the horses remind them of someone from their lives. Likening a horse to a loved one can help process feelings, especially if someone is grieving.

“It reminded me of my grandmas who passed away,” said Melody Andraca, a 10-year-old SDAIHC youth group member. She said her grandmothe­rs would say they’d be reincarnat­ed as hummingbir­ds, butterflie­s or horses after they died.

The youth group’s session on Aug. 4 also included an activity where one person was blindfolde­d while leading the horses through a simple obstacle course.

As the kids tried to avoid stepping on foam shapes, other kids on either side of them were instructed to give either true or false directions to help them navigate. In doing so, the Strothers aimed to share a lesson about how there can be many distractio­ns in life and people who don’t have your best interests in mind, so it’s important to learn to trust yourself and find trustworth­y friends to confide in.

Jennifer Fuentecill­a, SDAIHC youth program manager, said that many kids today face stress from family, school, social media and peer pressure. She said the center’s staff brought the youth group to the ranch to counterbal­ance that stress.

“It is our hope that being immersed in creation, in nature and in the peace and tranquilit­y that brings,

provides a sense of beauty and escape from stress,” Fuentecill­a said. “Sometimes we don’t realize that youth gets inundated with the demands of daily life, and that they forget that there’s this whole other world that can bring such fulfillmen­t to them.”

In addition to the equineassi­sted therapy on the farm, the Strothers also

take small animals like birds to local nursing homes for in-house, animal therapy group sessions.

Jaye has seen the positive emotional benefits of interactin­g with horses firsthand while undergoing breast cancer treatment. While going through chemothera­py and recovery from a mastectomy, she said the horses were there for her as

a shoulder to cry on.

“They’re very grounding. It brings you back to the present and reality,” Jaye said. “It just really helped settle my nerves a little bit knowing that they don’t care that I had a single mastectomy or I only have one boob. They don’t judge me like that. They still love me like they did before.”

Heart-N-Soul will host a

barbecue, silent auction and bachelor auction fundraiser at Junction Outback in Descanso from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sept. 10. Tickets are $30 each and can be purchase online at bit.ly/ heartnsoul­fundraiser. For more informatio­n about the nonprofit, visit heartnsoul­equine.org.

 ?? JESSICA PARGA U-T PHOTOS ?? Melody Andraca, 10, leads a horse at Heart-N-Soul Equine Assisted Therapy recently as part of a San Diego American Indian Health Center youth group visit.
JESSICA PARGA U-T PHOTOS Melody Andraca, 10, leads a horse at Heart-N-Soul Equine Assisted Therapy recently as part of a San Diego American Indian Health Center youth group visit.
 ?? ?? Sandino Beltran, 12, brushes one of the horses at the nonprofit’s property in Pine Valley.
Sandino Beltran, 12, brushes one of the horses at the nonprofit’s property in Pine Valley.
 ?? JESSICA PARGA U-T PHOTOS ?? Heart-N-Soul founder Jaye Strother fits Melody Andraca with a blindfold before she leads a horse through an obstacle course as part of a trust exercise.
JESSICA PARGA U-T PHOTOS Heart-N-Soul founder Jaye Strother fits Melody Andraca with a blindfold before she leads a horse through an obstacle course as part of a trust exercise.
 ?? ?? Larry Edmonds, youth program coordinato­r at the San Diego American Indian Health Center, passes a feather to Melody for her turn to introduce herself at the equine therapy nonprofit in Pine Valley.
Larry Edmonds, youth program coordinato­r at the San Diego American Indian Health Center, passes a feather to Melody for her turn to introduce herself at the equine therapy nonprofit in Pine Valley.
 ?? ?? Andrew and Jaye Strother operate Heart-N-Soul, which aims to promote clients’ mental and physical well-being through interactio­n with their animals.
Andrew and Jaye Strother operate Heart-N-Soul, which aims to promote clients’ mental and physical well-being through interactio­n with their animals.
 ?? ?? Along with horses, the nonprofit has goats, chickens, parrots, a miniature donkey and dogs. A fundraiser for the ranch will be held Sept. 10.
Along with horses, the nonprofit has goats, chickens, parrots, a miniature donkey and dogs. A fundraiser for the ranch will be held Sept. 10.

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