The club offers veterans and first responders free equine therapy to Veterans from as far as Maryland joined in remembering and honoring fallen soldiers
“Remember, whatever happens in the barn stays in the barn,” says Daigle.
The eight-year Army veteran and current Kentucky National guardsman never has to spend the day alone.
Each Memorial Day, the Veteran’s club provides a space for veterans to connect and talk through issues.
“If you let things build and fester over time, it just becomes uncontrollable, and that’s how a lot of soldiers unfortunately do. They take their lives or they turn to drugs, they turn to alcohol, they find things to cope in unhealthy ways,” says Daigle.
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