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Chantal Sicile-Kira

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The Horse Boy: Looking for Answers to Autism With Horses in Mongolia

Posted: 05/09/10 01:12 PM ET

On Tuesday, May 11, The Horse Boy airs nationally 10pm EDT on the PBS series Independent Lens.

The Horse Boy is a film about a dad (Rupert Isaacson) and a mom (Kristin Neff ) who are trying to do what hundreds of thousands of families in America do every day - search for a way to reach their child with autism. Only, we don't look so good doing it and we usually stay pretty close to home.

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Rupert is a past professional horse trainer, writer and journalist as well as a human rights advocate for tribal peoples. Rupert's wife and Rowan's mother, Kristin, is a tenured professor of psychology, and has been a practicing Buddhist for more than 10 years. She is well known for her researches into the Buddhist concept of self-compassion and its correlation with positive mental health. When Rupert witnessed the amazing way in which their son Rowan, who had autism, connected with their horses in Texas, they started to wonder if there was a place on earth that combined healing and horses. They discovered that the nomadic horse life is still lived by most of the people Mongolia, and it is also the one country where shamanism--healing at its most raw and direct--is the state religion. So off they went.

All right, so maybe we all can't grab our kids with autism and take off for Monglolia and ride horses and experience ritual healings with the reindeer people. I know my area's Regional Center isn't going to pay for it and neither is the school district. However, the point of the movie is best highlighted by Michel Orion Scott (director and cinematographer) of "The Horse Boy" when he is asked what he thinks 'healed' or helped Rowan. His answer:

"I don't know ... but what I do know is that, if there was one thing it could be contributed to, without a doubt, it is that the parents took that extra step to follow their child into the unknown. To allow themselves to trust the love they have for their son and to do whatever it took to find a way into his life."

It's a good reminder, as parents to follow your instincts, observe and listen to your child. Cheesy as it may sound, follow your heart. It's sound advice. Though Rowan, Rupert and Kristin are in Mongolia, they encounter the same trails and tribulations that most parents with autism do. We hear Rupert exclaim,

"Sometimes it is like he (Rowan) is leaping forward and sometimes it is like he is totally regressing."

Who can't relate to that? What parent doesn't feel that anguish every time there is a 'setback'? Your child or teen goes back to some disruptive or unhappy behavior, and you are filled with the double anguish of not being able to figure out how to make him feel better, and the fear that it may not be just a temporary regression.


With all the ups and downs we parents of children with autism have to face, it's nice to see inspirational movies such as this one from time to time. The scenery is beautiful and it's a pleasure to watch a movie about autism that doesn't take place in a classroom. It's also good to know that Rupert and Kristin have used the profits from the book The Horse Boy to found the nonprofit Horse Boy Foundation, which offers the chance to ride and benefit from close contact with horses, other animals, and nature. They welcome families to spend time there.

My favorite line in the movie is when Rupert says:

"We're gonna climb up 12,000 feet to perform 4 hour healing rituals with shamans, isn't that what all families do?"

Rupert was being sarcastic, but the answer is, "Yes." Yes, it is what all of us parents do. We get up and we climb mountains every day, in order to help our children. Sometimes the shamans are helpful, and sometimes they are not, and often it is hard to tell the difference. Watch this film, and you'll be inspired to continue climbing those mountains. You know it's worth every step.


 
 
 

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03:04 PM on 05/12/2010
I stumbled across the end of this show and will definitely check out the whole thing. It looked interesting. Shaman versus typical pediatrician asked to provide care to a child with autism? Hmmmm....let me think about that for a minute...uh-oh this might take a while.
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MomOf3AU
12:57 PM on 05/11/2010
" It's a pleasure to watch a movie about autism that doesn't take place in a classroom." Might I add "or a clinic". I will watch the film tonight (if I can stay awake). I enjoyed the book because of its descriptions of places I've never been. I appreciated the story only as an allegory for my own family's journey through autism's unknown terrain. When does healing come for an individual? What does the healing of a family look like? I will have a cup of coffee tonight in order to find out!
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Chantal Sicile-Kira
Author, Advocate, Founder of AutismCollege.com
11:25 AM on 05/11/2010
Yup Kim and Barbara - I guess we need to become the workhorse that follows our child into the unknown. Now that Jeremy is 21, that's kind of the way it works around here. Adult services appear to be unknown territory full of naysayers. Onward and Outward!
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Kim Stagliano
Author All I Can Handle I'm No Mother Teresa A Lif
10:34 AM on 05/11/2010
Excellent post, Chantal. You also have to BECOME the horse. A workhorse. Put on your blinders, do not pay attention to the naysayers running at your side, and trust that you can carry your child to progress. Oh, and don't eat oats. Gluten. ;)
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Barbara Fischkin
Author of Muddy Cup, Confidential Sources and Exc
09:12 AM on 05/11/2010
Chantal
You make some excellent points about how an off-the-wall-out-of-our-reach therapy (well aren't so many of the good ones like this?) holds lessons for us all. I love the idea of "following" one's child to the unknown. Often -- especially but not exclusively -- as they get older we need to watch them find what helps them. Our kids know what there is out there in the unknown that can specifically help them.