The Prague Post - Wyoming cowboys open up about addiction and suicide

EUR -
AED 4.272085
AFN 77.633905
ALL 96.754184
AMD 444.92756
ANG 2.082712
AOA 1066.713615
ARS 1663.148425
AUD 1.762153
AWG 2.09533
AZN 1.980472
BAM 1.955042
BBD 2.342111
BDT 141.625111
BGN 1.953347
BHD 0.438547
BIF 3426.107079
BMD 1.163264
BND 1.5065
BOB 8.035886
BRL 6.206361
BSD 1.162849
BTN 103.140026
BWP 15.481669
BYN 3.952662
BYR 22799.977464
BZD 2.338713
CAD 1.622137
CDF 2803.466718
CHF 0.932127
CLF 0.0282
CLP 1106.276022
CNY 8.281861
CNH 8.297848
COP 4524.22512
CRC 585.227906
CUC 1.163264
CUP 30.8265
CVE 110.222281
CZK 24.368116
DJF 207.071945
DKK 7.466632
DOP 72.80615
DZD 151.608079
EGP 55.335895
ERN 17.448962
ETB 169.053501
FJD 2.627755
FKP 0.865436
GBP 0.868062
GEL 3.163783
GGP 0.865436
GHS 14.362434
GIP 0.865436
GMD 83.75488
GNF 10085.310973
GTQ 8.910547
GYD 243.305703
HKD 9.050754
HNL 30.517811
HRK 7.530044
HTG 152.159256
HUF 391.267967
IDR 19250.62587
ILS 3.790112
IMP 0.865436
INR 103.275348
IQD 1523.457172
IRR 48944.339153
ISK 141.359971
JEP 0.865436
JMD 186.123464
JOD 0.824793
JPY 177.619997
KES 150.29146
KGS 101.727884
KHR 4668.829292
KMF 493.223847
KPW 1046.938078
KRW 1650.637155
KWD 0.356796
KYD 0.969087
KZT 628.272198
LAK 25217.058897
LBP 104132.9848
LKR 351.879423
LRD 212.237743
LSL 19.963647
LTL 3.434816
LVL 0.703646
LYD 6.324005
MAD 10.597593
MDL 19.738823
MGA 5197.538795
MKD 61.563565
MMK 2441.972702
MNT 4184.634921
MOP 9.322466
MRU 46.450404
MUR 52.870617
MVR 17.799368
MWK 2016.353857
MXN 21.323318
MYR 4.901411
MZN 74.274052
NAD 19.96459
NGN 1711.336376
NIO 42.790105
NOK 11.606587
NPR 165.01128
NZD 2.006995
OMR 0.447272
PAB 1.162949
PEN 4.003948
PGK 4.88173
PHP 67.45129
PKR 329.373631
PLN 4.254063
PYG 8120.224613
QAR 4.239857
RON 5.090676
RSD 117.104655
RUB 94.74581
RWF 1687.301008
SAR 4.363346
SBD 9.622238
SCR 17.274038
SDG 699.690404
SEK 10.970645
SGD 1.506026
SHP 0.914143
SLE 27.005221
SLL 24393.071989
SOS 664.591008
SRD 44.381435
STD 24077.219415
STN 24.488614
SVC 10.175663
SYP 15124.542618
SZL 19.953551
THB 37.910935
TJS 10.815308
TMT 4.083057
TND 3.414976
TOP 2.724483
TRY 48.528321
TTD 7.896634
TWD 35.481881
TZS 2860.557349
UAH 48.220173
UGX 3994.451879
USD 1.163264
UYU 46.422008
UZS 13982.580802
VES 219.871844
VND 30652.010519
VUV 141.010148
WST 3.223246
XAF 655.649347
XAG 0.023625
XAU 0.000288
XCD 3.143779
XCG 2.095807
XDR 0.815414
XOF 655.64653
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.020023
ZAR 19.95639
ZMK 10470.796935
ZMW 27.583176
ZWL 374.570584
  • RBGPF

    -1.4100

    75.73

    -1.86%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    15.41

    +0.13%

  • SCS

    -0.0700

    16.79

    -0.42%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    24.33

    -0.29%

  • RELX

    0.4000

    45.84

    +0.87%

  • VOD

    0.0000

    11.27

    0%

  • RIO

    1.4500

    67.7

    +2.14%

  • GSK

    -0.1500

    43.35

    -0.35%

  • CMSC

    -0.0300

    23.71

    -0.13%

  • NGG

    -0.2700

    73.61

    -0.37%

  • BTI

    -0.3800

    51.6

    -0.74%

  • AZN

    -0.4900

    85.38

    -0.57%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    23.23

    -0.26%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    14.12

    +0.35%

  • BCC

    1.9000

    76.42

    +2.49%

  • BP

    -0.4500

    34.52

    -1.3%

Wyoming cowboys open up about addiction and suicide
Wyoming cowboys open up about addiction and suicide / Photo: Patrick T. FALLON - AFP

Wyoming cowboys open up about addiction and suicide

Jonn Beer's ashes rise in a cloud of dust from the saddle of a rodeo horse, the final journey for a young Wyoming cowboy killed by his addiction to opioids.

Text size:

Beer, who was just 29 when he died, was one of millions of Americans dependent on OxyContin, a prescription opiate first given to him after he hurt his knee falling off a horse.

"They continued to prescribe them, until at some point, he had to have them," says his father, Don Beer.

"Eventually it turned into where we are today, in honor of my son because he's gone."

Horses were Jonn's life.

"Some people are drawn to horses because it helps them get through the day with their life challenges," says Don.

"Jonn was one of those that the more he was around horses, the better he felt."

But eventually even they weren't enough, and with every fall, the need for pain relief -- and the drugs that would provide it -- became more intense.

On October 31 last year, Jonn died from fentanyl poisoning after taking the synthetic opioid that is 50 times more powerful than heroin.

He left behind three heartbroken daughters.

- Tragedy -

Wyoming is frontier country. Its half-million-or-so people are spread thinly over tens of thousands of square miles (kilometers) of farmland, prairie and mountain range, where soaring summer temperatures give way to howling winter blizzards.

The landscape's exacting demands have fashioned a proud and ruggedly individual population whose watchword is self-sufficiency.

"Cowboys are supposed to be tough, we're born and raised to be independent and not rely on anyone, and a lot of stuff we do is on our own," says Rand Selle.

"We don't have that communication skill to go elsewhere and talk and share our emotions and I kind of think a lot of us struggle with that."

All too often, this bottling up ends in tragedy.

"We deal a lot with friends and family that are cowboys that have passed away, either by suicide or have an alcohol or drug addiction."

Jonn's death was a wake-up call for Rand, who has now founded "No More Empty Saddles," a group dedicated to giving cowboys the space and the tools to talk about drugs, addiction and their emotions, with the aim of preventing needless deaths.

"We just wanted to make a change," says the cowboy with piercing blue eyes and a red bandana around his neck.

- 'Being human' -

On a recent Saturday in the small town of Bosler, friends, family and fellow cowboys gather for a rodeo to honor the memory of Jonn Beer and to scatter his ashes -- and to do what he loved best.

The air thunders with the sound of hoofbeats as a stallion is released into the sand-filled arena, bucking and kicking at the belt tied around his belly.

A young man on the horse's back holds one hand aloft, reaching to doff his stetson to the whooping crowd, showboating his way through spine-jolting seconds of equine fury.

As for dozens of others who try their luck today, this bronc rider comes crashing to the ground, the hooves of his mount clattering perilously close.

"Yikes, he hit hard. He might need a little assistance," the announcer blares through the loud speaker, as men rush in to tame the horse and pick up the unseated cowboy.

"No More Empty Saddles" is beginning to make a difference to the community it serves, says Sheryl Foland, the group's mental health manager, with several cowboys sharing their stories on the Facebook page.

With events like the rodeo, that's starting to transform into real-life interactions.

"I was here early last night and I had a cowboy stop by," says Foland.

"He'd been following us on Facebook, and he was like 'Hey!'

"He just wanted a place to just talk, and that's what we gave him."

Foland uses these gatherings to give out gun-disabling padlocks -- almost three-quarters of the 189 people in Wyoming who died by suicide last year shot themselves -- as well as lockable boxes for storing powerful drugs.

But most of all, she uses rodeos like this one as a chance to get cowboys to accept the whole range of emotions that they have, and to think about them in a different way.

"As societies, somewhere we learned that we're supposed to be happy 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year, and don't learn how to be comfortable with uncomfortable thoughts and feelings," she says.

"Negative feelings occur, that's part of being human; that's what makes us different than a horse."

V.Sedlak--TPP