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Cow Cuddling, Goat Yoga, and Comfort Ducks: The Cure to Loneliness is Connection, not Critters

All of us have times when we want to be pampered. For some, that means a few hours at a day spa or a hike in the great outdoors. But another option is now available, courtesy of a farm in upstate New York: cow cuddling.
Cow Cuddling, Goat Yoga, and Comfort Ducks: The Cure to Loneliness is Connection, not Critters

BreakPoint.org

All of us have times when we want to be pampered. For some, that means a few hours at a day spa or a hike in the great outdoors. But another option is now available, courtesy of a farm in upstate New York: cow cuddling.

Mountain Horse Farm offers visitors a “Horse & Cow Experience.” The “experience” consists of spending quality time petting, brushing, and even cuddling the animals. According to the website Healthy Food House, cow cuddling is “the hottest [wellness] trend of the moment.”

And it isn’t cheap: $300 for a ninety-minute cuddle, but the potential benefits are considerable, we’re told. “Cuddling with animals has shown to reduce stress and help us bond with nature.” The horses and cows at Mountain Horse Farms can, and I quote, “feel your happiness, sadness or anxiety . . . these animals will respond to you without any judgment.”

The results will be “relaxation, healing, awareness, comfort, and mindfulness,” and improved “assertiveness and confidence.”

Cow cuddling is one example of a larger, and still growing, trend. Increasingly, people are looking for emotional support from animals, instead of from each other.

Another example is “goat yoga,” which is exactly what it sounds like: “yoga practiced in the presence of — and in tandem with — live goats.”

The goal of “goat yoga” “isn’t to sweat. It’s to have a baby goat climb on your shoulders during your plank,” a position that resembles the top of a pushup. According to the L.A.Timesall of that bleating cuteness promotes emotional and physical wellness.

And of course, the sheer number of “emotional support animals” joining us in supermarket aisles or crowded airplanes has led to, let’s say, challenges.  United Airlines recently announced it is limiting “emotional support” animals to dogs and cats. That policy change came in response to complaints from passengers and crew members about all of the “emotional support” pigs, turkeys, ducks, and even a peacock or two biting people and soiling the cabin.

Having grown up on a farm with dogs, cats, a pet calf, a few pigs and even a turtle, I love animals. A few years ago at our Wilberforce Weekend event, we featured an incredible ministry that emotionally helps abused women and children by utilizing therapy involving horses. But the goal was to help these people heal, and trust people again. Today, the proliferation of emotional support animals in all forms and places highlights a real and growing problem across Western culture: loneliness and a lack of connection with other people.

We are, as former Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy put it, in the midst of a “loneliness epidemic,” which is causing a “reduction in lifespan similar to that caused by smoking 15 cigarettes a day, and it’s greater than the impact on life span of obesity.”

The cure for loneliness, however, isn’t “company,” it’s connection. As we’ve said before on BreakPoint, many of our greatest ills, such as addiction and depression, can be traced back to a lack of meaningful connection to other people.

Societies like ours, as one of my BreakPoint colleagues put it, “are loneliness-producing machines.” Because of our obsession with individualism and autonomy, the average American has gone from having three close friends, on average, to just one.

Because, as one commentator described, “far too many of us [are] alienated, anxious, despairing, and lost,” we find ourselves paying $300 to cuddle with a cow or carry ducks around for emotional support.

And let’s be clear. Though I have not seen any church-sponsored goat yoga groups– yet– Christians are not immune to the “loneliness-producing machine” that is our culture, or the worldview that fuels it. Still, we of all people should understand the God-given created need for connectedness. And that the church has an opportunity to offer to the world a community of connected people, connected with our Creator and with each other, like no other institution across our society can.

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BreakPoint is a program of the Colson Center for Christian Worldview. BreakPoint commentaries offer incisive content people can't find anywhere else; content that cuts through the fog of relativism and the news cycle with truth and compassion. Founded by Chuck Colson (1931 – 2012) in 1991 as a daily radio broadcast, BreakPoint provides a Christian perspective on today's news and trends. Today, you can get it in written and a variety of audio formats: on the web, the radio, or your favorite podcast app on the go.

John Stonestreet is President of the Colson Center for Christian Worldview, and radio host of BreakPoint, a daily national radio program providing thought-provoking commentaries on current events and life issues from a biblical worldview. John holds degrees from Trinity Evangelical Divinity School (IL) and Bryan College (TN), and is the co-author of Making Sense of Your World: A Biblical Worldview.

Publication date: July 15, 2019

Photo courtesy: Stijn Te Strake/Unsplash

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