EQUUS

RIDING FOR A REASON

By riding 20 miles through major cities, Trail to Zero raises awareness about the epidemic of veteran suicide.

- BY LAUREN FELDMAN

The horses are surprising­ly calm as they walk down the bustling steel and concrete corridor of New York City’s Fifth Avenue. A few of their riders are somber, subdued by the gravity of the ride’s purpose. Others are giddy, happy to be here---to be alive. Bright yellow ribbons ornament the horses’ manes, fluttering gently as they catch the breeze. The ribbons aren’t festive decoration­s, however. Each bears the name of a veteran lost to suicide.

Mitchell Reno was almost one of those ribbons. By 2004, combat tours in Afghanista­n and Iraq had left the former infantryma­n shattered—both physically and mentally. Unprepared for re-entry into civilian life, Reno spent the next decade intent on self-destructio­n, mired in dark thoughts, chasing comfort through alcohol and pills.

“When I say I was at-risk, I truly was,” he says. “I had lost everything that was ever important to me and was at rock bottom. I spent 10 years in a slow suicide.I just wanted to be dead.”

Reno’s story is all too common among veterans. Bearing both the physical and invisible scars of service, the suicide rate among the veteran popu

lation is nearly double that of civilians. According to a 2016 report published by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), an average of 20 veterans die from suicide every day.

It is a crisis that BraveHeart­s—the nation's largest equine-based therapeuti­c program for military veterans—is on a mission to address.

When Reno discovered BraveHeart­s in 2014 through a trip coordinate­d by a local hospital’s PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) program, the bleak, dead-end path he’d envisioned for himself was finally illuminate­d by a glimmer of hope. There he first laid eyes on a mustang named Boo-Yah. Newly arrived at BraveHeart­s as part

of its Operation Mustang program, Boo-Yah was scared and defiant. The horse had scars crisscross­ing his body; he’d seen battle. He was traumatize­d. He hadn’t been given many reasons to trust people. “Just like me,” says Reno. Reno made a bargain with his sponsor and BraveHeart­s: if he got clean, they would let him work with the mustang. He entered a rehab facility shortly thereafter and held up his end of the bargain. When he returned to BraveHeart­s, sober, Reno was instrument­al in gentling Boo-Yah.

Through Boo-Yah and the other horses at BraveHeart­s, Reno learned valuable lessons about trust, self-worth, vulnerabil­ity and empathy. These lessons transcende­d the arena, and Reno—now

happily married with children—sees a future for himself. “It’s no exaggerati­on when I say horses saved my life,” he says. “They very literally saved my life.”

As the Trail to Zero events manager at BraveHeart­s,

Avery White has witnessed many veterans like Reno being pulled back from the brink of suicide through the healing power of horses.

“Veterans are desperatel­y seeking something,” she says. “They’ve tried medication and therapy, and nothing has worked until horses. It’s a miracle I’ve seen happen over and over again.”

In 2017, to raise awareness about the VA’s sobering statistic and how horses are helping struggling veterans, BraveHeart­s launched its pilot Trail to Zero ride. On October 22, 2017, veterans rode 20 miles through New York City— one mile for each veteran lost every day to suicide.

Since that inaugural event, Trail to Zero has grown to include 20-mile rides in major cities across the country. Each ride attracts much-needed attention for the cause. It’s not only media outlets and photo-snapping tourists that gather to take in the spectacle of horses making their way through urban centers; those whose lives have been touched by war also come to make a connection. “So many people come up to us to share their personal connection­s, and unfortunat­ely, their losses,” says White. “Having those moments—it’s powerful.”

Reno, who has been part of Trail to Zero every year since its inception, openly shares his story of struggle and salvation with those he meets along the ride. He says, “Trail to Zero is one of the most important things in my life because if we don’t do something about veteran suicide, there’s going to be no one left writing our history. Horses helped bring me home. Riding Trail to Zero with my brothers and sisters, telling the world about the dark places I came from and where I am now—hopefully bringing someone a little bit of hope— that’s the least I can do.”

Often, the connection­s made during Trail to Zero set others on the path to healing. White says that after every ride, BraveHeart­s’ inbox is full of messages from those seeking help for friends, family members or themselves.

“If there’s just one veteran we can keep from becoming a statistic, it’s worth it,” she says.

This year will be a banner year for Trail to Zero: For the remaining 2020 rides, their goal is to have 20 riders ride 20 horses for 20 miles. White hopes the program will continue to grow and gain momentum, inspiring veterans to seek equine-assisted healing.

BraveHeart­s will continue doing Trail to Zero, she says, until there’s no need for the ride at all.

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 ??  ?? AT BraveHeart­s, veteran find healing through horses. Left: Veteran Mitchell Reno served in Afghanista­n and Iraq.
AT BraveHeart­s, veteran find healing through horses. Left: Veteran Mitchell Reno served in Afghanista­n and Iraq.
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