Psychologist Kali Eddy hired some unconventional staff when she started her own practice in rural Saskatchewan. There鈥檚 Jimmy Cookie Dough, a mini donkey, a handful of horses with deep soulful eyes, and a collection of pigs, sheep, and cows.
Eddy spent the last eight years working as a youth psychologist in the Prairie Valley School Division. Now, she鈥檚 embracing her agricultural roots with a new business called where she practices a new breed of therapy.
鈥淭he session could start off in the office. It could be anything from going for a walk in nature to working with the animals,鈥 Eddy told CTV Regina.
All of the animals play a different role. The horses, she says, have a knack for tapping into people鈥檚 emotions, their pen -- a microcosm for the broader world.
鈥淲e use the horse鈥檚 behaviour as a metaphor for the client鈥檚 life,鈥 said Eddy.
Animal assisted therapy is not about teaching people to be farmers. It鈥檚 about confronting behaviours and attitudes in a non-conventional environment.
鈥淓ach species has their own way of being in the world, and so being in the presence of other species, non-human, creates so many opportunities for learning about them and about ourselves,鈥 said University of Regina social work assistant professor Darlene Chalmers.
There are other programs in the province offering so-called equine therapy -- grooming and riding horses while talking to a mental health professional -- but Eddy鈥檚 is the first in the area to use a variety of animals to create an engaging environment that builds confidence, and put anxieties out to pasture.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 really what I wanted to do here at Wild Blue,鈥 she said. 鈥淭o just create a unique environment where people could come here and not have to worry about the stigma, and they can just feel comfortable and relaxed.鈥
With a report from CTV Regina鈥檚 Katherine Hill