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BBC: How are horses helping to heal humans?

NJChoi 2025. 12. 15. 17:57

Have you ever ridden  a horse?

Yes, I have. I can't say that I enjoyed it much. I was a bit scared to be honest. How about you?

I used to ride horses a lot actually. My favorite thing was to ride a hourse through the countryside. I hove horses. They're so majestic and lovely. The relationship between humans and horses has been close throughout history, but recently this has gone beyond riding horses for fun or using them for work. Equine Assisted Services, sometimes called horses therapy, is a health trend where caring and interacting with horses is used to heal physical and mental illness. Here's 
Datshiane Navanayaga, presenter of BBC World Service programme The Conversation. to explain:

Equine Assisted Services is now an umbrella term which encompasses a whole range of treatments, involving activities and interactions with horses to promote better human wellbeing. 

Equine Assisted Services is an unbrella term- a term for a large number of different things which all belong to a singele common category. So, horse therapy includes many activities, from feeling the horse's movement, which can help children with muscle disorders like cerebral palsy, to simply grooming the horse, which can help calm anxiety. Grooming a horse means cleaning and brushing the horse's coat of hair. 

Various animals can be used in therapy, but horses are particularly suitable as they're very sensitive to human emotions. Being in contact with them affects the limbic area of the brain, dealing with stress. In this episode, we'll hear more about the horses helping people work through mental, emotional and physical challenges. And, as usual, we'll learn some useful new vocabulary. 

And remember, you'll find all the words and phrases from this episode on our website, bbclearningenglish.com.

But now I have a question for you, Neil. We've heard some of the speicial qualities horses possess, but which of the following about horses is also true? Is it?

a) horses always sleep standing up

b) horses can make over 100 sounds, or 

c) horses have almost 360-degree vision?

Well, I'm sure I've seen a horse lying down so,,,I don't know about its vision though, so I'm going to say b) a horse can make over 100 sounds. 

OK. Well, we'll find out the answer later in the programme. Horse therapist Claudia Nicholson first felt the healing power of horses as a child. She now runs her own center for Equine Assisted Learning in the south of England, where she spoke with BBC World Service programme The Conversation. 

I would spend hours on end sitting in a stable with my pony. I was going through puberty, my parents had separated, I had a lot of unanswered questions, and I would feel met and safe and held with the connection of the pony.

As a child, Claudia spent hours on end with her pony. Phrases like days or hours on end mean days or hours doing something continuously, without stopping. 

Spending time with her pony helped Claudia through puberty- the stage of life when a child grows into an adult because of changes in their body which allow them to have children. 

It was her teenage experiences that led Claudia to start her own horse therapy center. She works a lot with teenage girls and children in care. A child in care is a child who's being looked after by the local authorities because they cannot be cared for by their parents or family. Here, Claudia talks more about her work with children and horses to BBC World Service's The Conversation:

It will take maybe a few sessions for a relationship of trust to be formed, and it's quite extraordinary to see a child that's experienced a lot of trauma, especially in these children in care. They can be brushing the pony's body. They might want to have a cry which they've been holding on to. The horse regulatges them. 

 

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