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gone24now
Guest
My son is 7 and has autism with apraxia. Anyone not knowing what apraxia is, basically the brain hears the sound but can't get all the right messages to all the right muscles in the jaw, cheek, tongue etc., properly to make the sounds. We just got a new gelding a couple of weeks ago. First day my son had an uncanny sense of safety with our new horse. Used to sit in the car and not come near the horses. First time he saw him, he watched for 5 minutes and then came over to me and wanted my helmet and then pointed, made eye contact and said up. WOW
I was so elated! So he gets up and we do a little walk about. Yesterday I take him for a walk in the pasture and I'm just leading our horse around here and there, and I hear a sound behind me, my son is saying "Whoa". So I stop walking. I stand silent and do the wait, and in a soft voice I hear "Gee up". So I walk on. So awesome!!!! So this goes on for awhile and his voice gets louder and more confident. Then the whisper starts again but with a different word. Sounds like "low".... OH SLOW!!! So we walk slow, then the word "fas" so we do some slow trot. At the end of it all, after realizing he likes to go "fas" a lot and I am wheezing for breathe, he is laughing and using "Gee up", "Whoa", "fas", and "low" on his own independently. From a mother who has desperately wanted to just hear my son's voice, and finally heard "mom" a few months ago, this is leaps and bounds! And all from a horse. When he arrives he goes around to each stall and says "Hi" to each horse saying each horse's name, and baby horse, and when we leave he goes to each horse and says bye to each horse with their name. It is so overwhelming to watch. He is helping to clean stalls, scoop poop and push and dump the wheelbarrow. He gets hay in the haynet and brings in new shavings. He loves everything about it. What are some of your paths to success that your horse or riding buddy or instructor has taken you on??
