Animal Assisted Happiness in Sunnyvale provides therapeutic interactions with barnyard animals, helping children with special needs build social skills and emotional connections.
Jonathan Coleman recalls the challenges he faced as a child. Speaking and forming relationships were difficult until he met his three best friends: Froyo, Romeo, and Tyler, miniature goats that were part of a team of barnyard support animals.
“I got involved with Animal Assisted Happiness when I was 9 years old,” said Coleman, now 27. “That was a time when I was struggling a lot socially as someone on the autism spectrum. At the time, I didn’t see it as therapeutic, but it was a therapy to help me with thinking about other people and other living things.”
Founded in 2009 by Vicki Amon-Higa and her husband, Peter Higa, Animal Assisted Happiness has reportedly helped over 150,000 individuals through its free services.
The mission of the nonprofit is to enhance the lives of children with special needs by providing opportunities to interact with a variety of barnyard animals. Located in Baylands Park in Sunnyvale, the farm features vibrant fences, stacks of golden hay, and enthusiastic visitors eager to meet the animals.
At Animal Assisted Happiness, guests enjoy a welcoming environment where they are not judged. “Animals don’t judge. They just let you be,” Amon-Higa said, reflecting on the organization’s ethos.
The idea for the organization originated in 2006 when Amon-Higa began bringing her miniature horse, Lollipop, to visit 14-year-old Riley Church, a brain cancer patient. During these visits, Lollipop would instinctively rest her head on Church’s lap, providing comfort and companionship.
Amon-Higa now witnesses daily connections forming between children and animals, such as the bond between Dakota, a non-verbal boy, and Ginger, an outgoing miniature pig. “I have watched Dakota read to Ginger,” Amon-Higa shared. “When a child who’s nonverbal is speaking with her, it’s just the most beautiful thing to watch.”
Lisa Zuegel, a board member, describes the joy her 26-year-old autistic son, Jeffrey, experiences at the farm. “He loves seeing the horses, walking around with a huge smile on his face, and being in nature,” Zuegel said. The family has been visiting Animal Assisted Happiness since Jeffrey was a child.
“He’s welcome here, and we need more places like this in the Bay Area,” Zuegel emphasized. “Places where people aren’t judged, where they feel safe and genuinely valued for who they are and what they bring to the world, and where they can communicate and connect in ways that feel comfortable for them.”
Another horse enthusiast, 19-year-old Finlay Snell, finds that his visits help him cope with the challenges of autism and motor control. “I like horses because they help me with my balance,” he said.
A regular visitor since elementary school, Snell began volunteering in high school by walking horses and cleaning pens. “By taking care of animals, he learns how to take care of himself, too,” said his mother, Yoko Snell.
Hundreds of youth and adult volunteers dedicate their time to support the nonprofit’s operations. Coleman, now a special education teacher, credits the support he received at Animal Assisted Happiness for his success. “Animal Assisted Happiness helped me join the disabled community and learn how to communicate with others,” he said. “I had the resilience to find that calling of teaching.”
Avani Kumar, a member of the Class of 2028 at Fremont High School in Sunnyvale, contributed to this article.
This content originally appeared in the Mercury News.
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