Thursday, August 15, 2013

Horse With A Hole In His Face Comforts So Many



The kids don't care that Hammersmith has some physical disabilities because what is in the soul, matters most. ~Declan


Horse with a hole in his face comforts so many

Hammersmith found love, despite a facial malformation
Hammersmith found love, despite a facial malformation
This story was originally published July 2012.

At Brigitta Bogen’s Texas farm, looks and disabilities don’t matter so much.
Never was that single fact as clear as on a February day this year when a funny looking ex-racehorse came to live on her farm.

Hammersmith was just settling into his large stall with Dutch doors, when a group of excited youngsters burst excitedly into the barn, wanting to get a look at the new guy.

From over the top of his stall door, he peered at them face on, revealing, as if he’d been the poor loser in a fight,  a one-inch hole beneath his right eye, and a crooked, sunken nose.

But the kids, the whole bunch of them, blithely looked upon him, noticing nothing.  They simply greeted him kindly and got on with their daily activities at the barn.

“They were just excited to see him,” Bogen says. “I don’t know if their lack of reaction is due to the fact that I have so many kids here with disabilities, so they’re just used to differences, but, when they met Hammersmith, they did not see a horse with a crooked nose and a hole by his eye.”

They saw a future friend, one who was a little bit different, and a lot like them. Right away, Hammersmith was given a welcoming pat, and welcomed into to their world.

On this arid property, everyone is on equal footing.

For, under the roof of this particular barn in Claude, Texas, children with disabilities and American veterans coping with post war trauma, work alongside able-bodied equestrians; each is engaged in improving their relationships with horses and their own skills as riders, and ultimately, their self-esteem.

“I have so many kids with disabilities here that nobody says anything about somebody’s disability, and they don’t say anything about Hammersmith’s looks,” Bogen says.

A certified instructor in therapy riding, Bogen operates two horse programs designed to help people overcome personal obstacles. In her therapy-riding program, her goal is to help students with physical or mental limitations learn to become capable riders.

“If we have a student with one arm, for example, we’ll construct different reins for that child so that he or she can ultimately learn to ride independently,” she explains. “We work with each child individually, to help them overcome their disabilities” enough to ride their best.

The same can-do attitude guides Bogen’s approach to helping soldiers overcome post-traumatic stress disorder through her program, Horses for Heroes.

Soldiers learn to confront their anger, grief and unresolved feelings by working with these large, gentle animals. Simple acts, like walking into a field and having a horse “choose” a particular soldier to work with, can be the first step in creating a bond and building a foundation that leads to insights about their own psyches, she says.

The premise behind the Horses for Heroes program is that soldiers learn to reflect on different aspects of their own personalities. “Working with horses can help them see how their own attitudes may cause a horse to back off, or come toward them,” she explains.

And now Hammersmith is waiting for his chance to show a soldier or a child how to look past his “goofy” exterior to the gentle soul beneath....

<CLICK HERE > to continue reading Hammersmith's story on my friend Susan Salk's Off-Track Thoroughbreds

Hammersmith enjoys a nice hack on the property
Hammersmith enjoys a nice hack on the property


Such a good boy!
A good boy!

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