'I'm not as bad a person as I thought': Horse therapy helps LGBTQ youth find their safe place - Action News
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'I'm not as bad a person as I thought': Horse therapy helps LGBTQ youth find their safe place

A southern Alberta program that brings LGBTQ youth and horses together is helping struggling teens build self-confidence in a judgment-free environment.

Southern Alberta program giving teens confidence and a place to just be themselves

LGBTQ teens take the reins of coming out with help from horses

7 years ago
Duration 3:56
A southern Alberta program that brings LGBTQ youth and horses together is helping struggling teens build self-confidence in a judgment-free environment.

A southern Alberta program that brings LGBTQ youth and horses together is helping struggling teens build self-confidence in a judgment-free environment.

"Everybody needs a safe space, regardless if you are LGBTQ or not," Rylan Kennedy tells CBC News.

He's a queer teen who came out to his parents about a year ago.

"You need somewhere that you can go and feel safe and good about yourself somewhere where nobody will judge you, or make you feel worse than you already do."

Rylan Kennedy says he thinks everyone deserves a safe space. (Justin Pennell/CBC)

And a program that connects horses with kids like Kennedy is serving just that function.

"Horses offer us a really unique opportunity to learn about ourselves, to gain some personal awareness and insight, to grow and develop on an emotional level," explains Jules Rainforth of Rein Forth Equine, a ranch near Carstairs, about 70 kilometres north of Calgary.

"Animals are easier to trust and we are drawn to them. Horses have a way of making us just feel accepted. People come to find a place to be accepted, where they can be met with no judgment, no preconceived notions, no expectations, just as we are and in the moment."

Rylan Kennedy says he's in a much better place after interacting with horses at a southern Alberta ranch. (Justin Pennell/CBC)

Kennedy, who has lived mostly in smaller communities, says he was terrified at the idea of coming out.

"I struggled with depression for a year and a half because I was suppressing so many of my emotions. When I came out to people, and some people didn't take it well, my mental health suffered from it," he said.

"Anytime somebody would say the word 'gay' or make a homophobic slur, I would have a heart attack because I was so worried that they were on to me. I got so paranoid and depressed and anxious all of the time because I was so worried about it."

Last October, he found the courage.

Jules Rainforth of Rein Forth Equine near Carstairs says horses have a way of making people feel accepted. (Justin Pennell/CBC)

"I wrote my parents a note and I left it on the counter before I went to school and when I came home, my parents were at work, and they had written me back a note and put it on my desk and said that it was totally cool and that they were OK with it and stuff."

Another gay teen, Cheyenne Huggard, came out when she was about 14 years old.

"I was really nervous to tell my family because I didn't know how they were going to react," Huggard said.

"I haven't had as many difficulties as other people have. I have been bullied a little bit but not to an extreme extent."

Cheyenne Huggard says a horse therapy program has been valuable to her mental health. (Justin Pennell/CBC)

Huggard says horse therapy has been incredibly valuable to her.

"I love animals, I love being around kind people who have gone through similar things as I have," she said.

"You have to be calm around them. You can't get upset because they sense that and it makes them freak out or get upset. You do have this certain kind of calmness that just relaxes you and tones you down."

Kennedy says sharing who you are, as a sexual minority, isn't a one-time thing.

Rylan Kennedy says the coming out process is ongoing. (Justin Pennell/CBC)

"You are constantly coming out, you are never done coming out and it's hard," he said.

While he used to be angry a lot, today, he's channeling his energy in more productive ways.

"You've got to find your creative outlets that make you feel good about yourself or make you feel better. For some people it is writing, for some people it is drawing, for some people it is singing."

And Rainforth says working with horsescan be another way to express yourself.

Cheyenne Huggard says she was nervous about coming out to her family, because she didn't know what the reaction would be. (Justin Pennell/CBC)

"Sometimes the therapist's office isn't necessarily the easiest place to go for everyone to spill their guts," Rainforth says.

"We are in the now, we are not thinking about the past and we are not thinking about the future. We are just in the moment and that's where horses live. It takes the pressures off and gives us an opportunity to learn more about ourselves."

And Kennedy has done just that, and he's happy with what he's learned.

"I am just so much happier. I feel so much lighter," he said.

"I feel like I am not carrying the weight of the world on my shoulders any more. I feel like I can express myself in the ways that I want to. I feel way less insecure and way less paranoid all the time. I am so much lighter. Animals don't judge. Animals have no biased opinions or preconceived notions. They are just there to help."

Rylan Kennedy says finding creative outlets, including working with horses, can ease stress. (Justin Pennell/CBC)

Huggard says riding horses, with other people like her, has been therapeutic.

"I was very anxious at first. I wasn't sure if I was going to be comfortable or the horse would be comfortable. It worked out really well. It was a good match," she said.

"Not all people are kind. Animals are a lot simpler. It is just easier to connect. Not everybody has friends. Not everybody likes being in big social groups. So having something, even if it's a horse or a cat or a dog, to just talk to and relax with is nice to have."

Cheyenne Huggard says she came out when she was 14. (Justin Pennell/CBC)

Kennedy says the equine therapy has helped him feel a lot better about himself.

"I am just a much happier person now," he said with a big smile.

"Every time I come here, I feel so much calmer, and I leave feeling good about myself and feeling good about what I accomplished today and feeling closer to those around me."

And he plans to keep that going.

"I'm not as bad a person as I thought I was and I want to keep feeling that way."

After working with horses and exploring other creative outlets, Rylan Kennedy now realizes he's not the 'bad person' he once thought he was. (Justin Pennell/CBC)

With files from CBC's Justin Pennell