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Unbridled Hearts. Equine Assisted Bereavement (EAB) For Grieving Families. New Song Center for Grieving Children. Founded in 1989 Joined Hospice of the Valley in 2009 Provides year around, bi-weekly peer-to-peer grief support for children, teens, young adults & their caregivers
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Unbridled Hearts Equine Assisted Bereavement (EAB) For Grieving Families
New Song Center for Grieving Children • Founded in 1989 • Joined Hospice of the Valley in 2009 • Provides year around, bi-weekly peer-to-peer grief support for children, teens, young adults & their caregivers • Provides grief education for caregivers, community groups, clergy, medical and mental health professionals
What are We Going to Do Today? • Summarize Basics of New Song’s Equine Assisted Bereavement Program • Identify the Challenges & Rewards of Collaboration • Examine the Development of Grief Activities used with Horses • Review 5 Equine Assisted Bereavement Activities
How Did We Come Up With Our Program? • Approached by an Equine Therapy program • Researched Equine Assisted Psychotherapy (EAP), Equine Assisted Learning (EAL) and Equine Assisted Growth And Learning Association (EAGALA) model • We made stuff up!
What is Equine Assisted Psychotherapy? • Incorporates horses experientially for emotional growth and learning • A collaboration between a therapist, a horse and a horse professional, working with participants to address treatment goals • Participants learn about themselves and others by engaging in activities with horses, then processing feelings, behaviors and patterns
What is Equine Assisted Learning? • Incorporates horses experientially for emotional growth and learning • A collaboration between a therapist and a horse professional working with participants and horses to address educational goals • The focus is on learning specific skills such as leadership, team building and resiliency training for our military warriors.
What is EAGALA? • Offers a standard framework of practice and ethics for providing EAP and EAL • Utilizes a team approach: Horse, Mental Health Professional and Equine Specialist • Focus is on ground work • Solution oriented
What is New Song’s Unbridled Hearts Program? • Combination of EAP/EAL, Worden’s ‘Four Tasks of Mourning’ and New Song’s Program Format • Team Approach: Professionals and Volunteers • Activities are Family and/or Team Based • Serves Families (with children ages 5-17) and Young Adults • 3 Components: Family Day, Peer Night, Grief Camp
How Did We Combine EABwith New Song’s Group Format? We Designed the Program to Include Our Volunteer Facilitators 1 Facilitator per horse Provides support and encouragement during the tasks Helps participants of different ages understand the metaphors/meanings of the activities
How Did We Combine EAB with New Song’s Group Format? (cont.) • We Created a ‘Look’ to the Equine Program that is Similar to the ‘Look’ of a Support Group Night • Sharing Circles, Ice Breakers, Main Activities, Closing • Food! • Coordinator, Facilitators
Tell Me More About the Team Members • Mental Health Professional • Horse Specialist • New Song Facilitator • Horse
Why Family and/or Team Based Activities? • Help bereaved participants identify and understand changes in roles and responsibilities • Encourage families to re-establish and/or strengthen bonds • Re-introduce ‘Family Fun Time’ into the lives of grieving families. (ASU- Family Bereavement Program)
Tell Me More About the 3 Components of Unbridled Hearts Ice Breaker: Getting to Know You
Original Component • Family Day • Open to families currently enrolled in New Song • Small group size (8 families) • Utilizes 5 ground activities • Fee based
1st Activity: Once Upon a Horse (Accept Reality of Loss, Find an Enduring Connection)
Next Component • Peer Night • Open to families currently enrolled in New Song • Set-up in stations (ground activities) • Participants rotate through stations in age groups • Replaces a ‘regular’ group night • No Fee
2nd Activity: New Beginnings (Accept Reality of Loss, Process Pain of Grief, Adjust to a World without the Deceased)
In Development • Grief Camp • Open to any grieving family with children ages 5-26 • Set up in stations (includes riding) • Participants rotate through stations as a family, with several families per group • 2 day, non-residential camp • Fee based
3rd Activity: Grief Box (Accept Reality of Loss, Process Pain of Grief, Adjust to a World without the Deceased)
Collaboration: Challenges Things to Consider: • What’s the Vision for Our Program? • Finding the Right Equine Therapy Program • Distribution of Responsibilities • Distribution of Costs
Collaboration: Rewards Things to Consider: • Convenience • Expertise • Connections • Cost Effective
4th Activity: Painted Pony (Accept Reality of Loss, Process Pain of Grief, Find an Enduring Connection)
How Did We Develop Grief Activities to Use with Horses? • Used existing EAP/EAL activities specific to grief • Adapted non-grief EAP/EAL activities to grief • Drew on existing New Song activities • Created new activities from scratch
5th Activity: Extended Appendages (Accept Reality of Loss, Adjust to a World without the Deceased) Let’s Go Have Some Fun!
Resources We Found Helpful Websites: • eagala.org (Equine Assisted Growth and Learning Association) • http://www.equine-psychotherapy.com Books: • ‘Introduction to Equine-Assisted Psychotherapy’ by Patti J. Mandrell, M.Ed., LPC Articles: • Horses as healers: Equine facilitated therapy for grieving children. Strom, L., & Wilson, J. (2009, March).Paper based on a program presented at the American Counseling Association Annual Conference and Exposition, Charlotte, NC. • Assorted Articles: http://www.wayofthehorse.org/Articles/index.html
Thank You! Contact Information • New Song Center New Song: 480-951-8985 • Elle Schlagenhaft, MA, EAGALA Email: dschlagenhaft@thenewsongcenter.org Elle’s Cell: 602-330-9205