Veteran finds healing with help of horses | va salem health care | veterans affairs

Va

Veteran finds healing with help of horses | va salem health care | veterans affairs"


Play all audios:

Loading...

For Seyward McKinney, joining the Army was a calling - something she realized she needed to do from the moment she took a school trip to New York City. For Seyward McKinney, joining the Army


was a calling - something she realized she needed to do from the moment she took a school trip to New York City. Growing up locally and going to Glenvar High School, McKinney was active in


school groups and found herself in New York prior to the events of 9-11. She was able to go back after 2001. “I’ve been in both buildings after and there was dirt and stuff on the ground –


but they said it was ashes of people and everything, so it was really hard to see that; and because of that, I wanted to join the Army. As an enlisted surgical technician, Seyward found


herself in Iraq for eight months, working on patients – both American and Iraqi. “It was a great experience and I got to do things I normally wouldn’t get to do,” she said. “We were


preparing to take out someone’s appendix and the doctor was like, ‘are you ready?’ and I said, ‘yeah, here’s the knife’ and he hands it back to me and lets me do the whole surgery while he


assisted.” In addition to working on American servicemembers, she also recalled another patient who was more well-known while working in Baghdad’s Green Zone in 2004. “Saddam Hussein was


working out in his jail cell and pulled some muscles, so we had to do a hernia repair on him.” But McKinney’s story with repairing injuries was only just beginning. Her own injuries began


after returning to the United States when, in 2009 while at Fort Sam Houston, Texas she wasn’t feeling well. “I started getting headaches and they did a CAT scan and found an arteriovenous


malformation.” What the doctors found was a twisted mass of blood vessels connecting McKinney’s arteries and veins that were disrupting normal blood flow. After five surgeries, three related


procedures and two radiation treatments, McKinney hoped she was out of the woods. Nine days later she had a stroke. “My parents had just retired and were on their way for a vacation, so


fortunately they were with me,” she said. “We ended up at Walter Reed.” McKinney spent two years at Walter Reed Army National Military Medical Center and while she was there, she was


introduced to horses. “I got in touch with some rehabilitation people, and they told me about this place at Arlington Cemetery, so I got to go there and ride horses. I’d never ridden horses


before, so I did that and the person in charge there told me about Healing Strides.” Begun in 2011 Healing Strides is a non-profit in Boones Mill, Virginia that offers equestrian therapy for


Veterans and others. The program works with licensed clinical social workers and mental health professionals along with professional trainers to teach Veterans how to ride and to understand


the varied benefits of working with the animals. Ricki McKinney, Seyward’s mother and Regent for the Fort Lewis Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution said, “Seyward travels to


Healing Strides three times a week supported by the Wounded Warrior Independence Program, supplemented by her father or me when needed.” “I think one of the things Veterans get when coming


to Healing Strides is a big relief from PTSD. Just to have a one-on-one with the horses, to be able to talk to them, it relieves a lot of stress. It helps them emotionally, but also


physically as riding builds core strength, leg strength and really helps in your day-to-day living.” For the retired army staff sergeant, being with other Veterans is a helpful experience.


“Hanging out with other Veterans, not only when we’re on the horses, but just when you need someone to talk to, you always have someone who knows your story and who has been there – who has


had that experience. After getting injured you don’t really have as many friends as you want to have – no one really talks to you, so when I’m here I always feel that camaraderie. Everyone


asks me how my day is and makes sure I’m doing ok. It’s a great organization and I’m really glad to be a part of it.” But there is an aspect to working with horses that goes beyond fun or


relief. “I have a friend who was in the Army as well and he went to talk to the horses,” McKinney said. “That night he was going to go home and shoot himself. But because of an experience he


had here, with a horse, he didn’t feel like he needed to do that.” Carol Young, the CEO of Healing Strides smiles as Seyward mentions her friend. In her more than 10 years with the


organization she has plenty of stories to tell of Veterans who have left the program better than when they arrived. “In 2011 we had our first Veteran walk through the doors. He had done six


tours in Afghanistan, and he walked in not knowing what to do. I asked if he could drive a tractor and he said, ‘yes, ma’am.’ So, he mowed our field. He came back every day for six weeks,


from 9 to 5 every day and was constantly helping. He learned how to ride and no matter what I said, his answer was, ‘yes, ma’am.’ “After he learned to ride, he came to me and said, ‘I have a


daughter, she’s 11 years old and she’s afraid of me. Do you think that if she came down here and saw me with the horses, I think she wouldn’t be afraid? Would that be ok?” I said, ‘yes,


sir’.” The Veteran’s daughter did come to visit and the two were able to build trust. “The horses helped heal that relationship,” Young said. “So, when we serve our Veterans, we serve our


Veterans and their families. That’s how the program got started.” For McKinney, horses have opened up a new outlet for her well being and created a goal – to be a Paralympic Equestrian


athlete. The training will take several years, and she’s already been involved in several shows and competitions and said she is working with trainers on a long-term Paralympic plan.


Trending News

Clarkson's farm star issues emotional plea to fans after backlash

Clarkson's Farm new arrival, Harriet Cowan, has reached out to the loyal followers of Jeremy Clarkson's hit ag...

Ukhsa warns easily spread fungus posing 'significant' health risk

Health chiefs have issued an alert about a potentially deadly fungus which poses "significant risks to human health...

'masterpiece' drama series from big little lies author is now free to watch

Fans of HBO's Big Little Lies can't miss a brand new series coming to BBC iPlayer. The twisty series is adapte...

Websites connect surrogate grandparents to families, adults

If you are missing the experience of being a grandparent, whether it's because your grandchildren are far away or y...

WATCH: The referee gets completely taken out during Leinster – Wasps

Rugby NewsWATCH: The referee gets completely taken out during Leinster – Wasps13 October 2018 Steven The referee is take...

Latests News

Veteran finds healing with help of horses | va salem health care | veterans affairs

For Seyward McKinney, joining the Army was a calling - something she realized she needed to do from the moment she took ...

Warning to homeowners over solar lights in garden

SOLAR-POWERED GARDEN LIGHTS ARE A CONVENIENT WAY TO ILLUMINATE YOUR OUTDOOR SPACE WITHOUT INCREASING YOUR ENERGY BILLS, ...

How voting laws will impact 2024 elections

We may all get the chance to vote for president of the United States in November, but how we vote, where we vote and how...

349 effect of intravenous (iv) infusion methods on availa-bility of chloramphenicol (c) and its succinate ester (cs)

ABSTRACT The rate of IV drug delivery is affected by many factors including characteristics of the drug, IV flow rate, a...

Editorial cartoon u. S. Treasury biden covid stimulus

SIGN UP FOR THE WEEK'S FREE NEWSLETTERS From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the be...

Top