Working outdoors and working out problems at Time Out

LIME ROCK — Tucked away on a hillside in Lime Rock are several horses, a like number of large and friendly dogs, and hope for troubled children. 

The Time Out Foundation, founded by physician Corinne Kaiser and headed by Ed Thorney, serves at-risk children with an innovative therapeutic model. Thorney, whose background is in therapeutic wilderness counseling, currently works with four boys in the fourth and fifth grades.

“I spent the afternoon with a fifth-grader, and it wasn’t until the last 15 minutes that we got into what was going on at home,� said Thorney, a rangy man with a big mustache and an affable manner.

“If you let the outdoor model be the vehicle to get people moving, then you can weave the therapeutic part in.�

Thorney said he is able to connect with the young clients as the result of “the trust earned over the last five months, hanging out and doing cool things. Having a male mentor makes a big difference for these kids.�

Time Out programs include equine-assisted therapy and horse care, which gives six physically and/or emotionally challenged children the opportunity to develop caring, loving relationships with the horses —which were rescued from difficult life situations themselves. 

The alternative education intervention currently works with four at-risk boys from Region One elementary schools. Thorney said the boys typically come from families that themselves suffer from drug and alcohol abuse; the boys “are witnessing it, or experiencing it themselves.�

And the foundation is working with young adults — recent high school graduates who find themselves in trouble with drugs and other issues.

Kaiser said the goal of the foundation is to keep the programming flexible. “If someone comes to me with an idea and it feels right, we’ll find a way to do it.�

She added that the foundation has incorporated dance instruction and gardening programs. “Eventually I hope we can become a clearinghouse for ideas.�

The alternative education program provides clients with the opportunity to work with staff in a very intimate setting — often one-on-one — which “isn’t terribly cost-effective by some measures,� said Thorney.

“But the cost of not doing anything for these kids is ultimately much greater.�

Time Out received its nonprofit certification last fall, and is actively soliciting donations and volunteers. 

Ultimately the goal is to create a cadre of former clients who return to the foundation to work with the next group.

“We’ll have lots of hiking, canoeing and building projects, and we’re happy to train people. Right now we need men available for a half-day per week,� in part to help follow up with the current clients.

Thorney says the Northwest Corner is an ideal setting for the work. “We have the resources — we can do four-season education here.�

And Kaiser added, “My dream is to allow anyone’s dream, as long as the at-risk population is served and there is no money barrier.�

As a reporter was leaving the grounds, a van pulled up and discharged a woman — one of Kaiser’s former clients — and two children, who made a beeline for the horse paddock.

“See, it’s already happening,� said Thorney.

For more information, write to the Time Out Foundation, PO Box 1683, Lakeville, CT 06039, or call 860-318-1848.

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