tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6916893495636077786.post656185841577586312..comments2024-02-24T22:35:38.566-05:00Comments on Mill Swamp Indian Horse Views: Happiness Is Not For EveryoneSteve Edwardshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05178816218499735580noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6916893495636077786.post-547592237590141692014-08-29T11:21:03.188-04:002014-08-29T11:21:03.188-04:00Thank You Steve! Thank you!
You too Lloyd!
This a...Thank You Steve! Thank you!<br />You too Lloyd!<br /><br />This article (and the comments) speak to me more deeply than you can know. I have spent years battling things that most people do not understand. Sometimes I do not even understand them myself. I fought for years to try to muddle through it without medical help because I was literally Terrified of the diagnosis, the label and the stigma that come with both. I have been on that medication roller-coaster. I take my meds for a while and I start to feel better and decide that I no longer need them and/or that the money is better spent somewhere else and I go off of them again. The medication battle with me is mostly that I hate the idea that there is some part of me that can not be normal without medicinal help. The most consistently beneficial "medication" in my life has always been my horses. In finding the Colonial Spanish, I also discovered this concept of purpose that you are speaking of in your article. I don't know that I have ever been so passionate about something or had something that I could completely immerse myself in(outside of my family) until these horses found me. <br /><br />I absolutely love the phrase "Shooting For Zero". It so eloquently sums up many of my days. <br /><br />I was drawn to your program, through these horses, way before I knew of your work with Veterans with PTSD and also before I was diagnosed with PTSD (among other diagnosis') myself. I am very proud to call you folks my friends and super proud to have some of my horses involved with your program!<br /><br />Keep up the good work and Thank You!<br /><br />~AliciaAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6916893495636077786.post-26425557852890428542014-08-27T06:26:41.639-04:002014-08-27T06:26:41.639-04:00A thought in addendum: Many people who suffer chro...A thought in addendum: Many people who suffer chronic illness, particularly those that come with prolonged physical pain, use what is called the Spoon system..<br />We are a society of chronic over achievers, and I notice that it is often certain people who pressure others to do the over achieving..but I digress..<br />The idea is, that a person has just so much energy, so much will, only so much that they can do without debilitating themselves completely every day...This energy is divided by the denomination of "spoons," which are budgeted and spent on tasks and activities by that person's prioritites. "I am all out of Spoons means it is time to rest and recuperate...live to fight another day, as it were. <br />I personally prefer "Round Tuits" and the Californio Vaqueros concept of "Manana," and "Poco a Poco," or little by little. <br />Round tuits in my mind are more valuable than dollars, and more cannot be acquired by monetary trade. Be sure to budget some for time with a horse, after all, the very first rule of budgeting is, "Pay yourself first." -LloydAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6916893495636077786.post-30476919105137426202014-08-25T06:38:52.587-04:002014-08-25T06:38:52.587-04:00I have spent many hours of skull sweat on this and...I have spent many hours of skull sweat on this and similar subjects..and I am not sure I have many answers..but the questions are good to pursue. <br />Some famous person or another once said that metaphysics provide no answers, but the questions are beautiful. Heinlein I think it was. <br />I wish I had some sort of reliable measure by which I could take note of the societal pressures exerted on a cross section of the population over the last few generations..but that is a big hairy ball of wax...variables ever changing by locale, population group, religion, etc..ad maxima nauseum..I strongly suspect that any result derived beyond a very narrow study would be wildly inaccurate. <br />Empirically however, it is fairly easy to observe that the pressures upon people today are vastly different than what was, and there seem to be so many of them, no matter what the age group. <br />I have been guilty of being the guy who wants to save a world which does not want to be saved..and I am a sore loser..<br />If one assumes that it is highly improbable that the world is going to get easier to deal with any time soon, then one must logically turn to methods of making the small bubble around the individual easier to cope with..<br />In the coming years this will become high art...<br />Increasingly we are finding that equine therapy (I don't like the term..but for lack of better..)is highly beneficial to almost anyone who is willing to hang out with a horse..it matters little what is actually done..from nothing to hot laps around a barrel course to the intricate maneuvers of the dressage course..simply being with the horse is often enough. That fact is something you do not want to argue with the folks of Mill Swamp. Yesterday..A little friction in my family, sort of a stressful day, Mary, Tori, and I stopped at the farm late yesterday evening, and I felt the need to go catch a very anxious horse I am messing with. (I was bugged because I made some mistakes the day before with him, and wanted to see if he came back..he did.)The great side effect was that Legacy, Curly, and Owl Prophet danced up to the gate to soak up some attention, and drained the stress right off of Victoria and Mary. <br />Being something of a social media junkie, I follow several organizations which egage in various forms of equine therapy, from Mill Swamp, to Neat, a more formal therapy organization in Nv, to Carousel Minis..who has a whole herd of mini and micro mini horses who travel to hospitals, hospices, the bedsides of those who are shut in or confined..seemingly with great success..<br />I see many pictures with sickness behind them, but with broad smiles and peace at the front..those smiles tell it all.<br />Horses cannot do it all alone, there is an entire arsenal of medical technology available to today, and it must be used as appropriate to each individual need..<br />But I do urge any, and everybody to find a way to spend some time with a horse..Results may vary, side effects include broad smiles, laughter, peaceful feelings, a little initial fear, and occasionally smelling like a horse.<br /><br />I am not convinced that smelling like a horse is a bad thing..it tends to attract some pretty good people..more clinical trials needed..<br />If you are at a place in life where you feel you cannot cope, please, no matter how difficult it may seem..reach out and ask for help. no matter your station in life, you are human...and important. -LloydAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com