The 8 ways in which a walk in the woods could do you the world of good

  • The Japanese art of forest bathing is proven to reduce stress and fatigue 
  • Exercising outside can be more fun and more motivating than going to a gym
  • Past research has shown that people in hospital heal faster with a view of trees

Police sirens, traffic lights and mobile phone alerts – city folk are accustomed to hearing and seeing these city sights and sounds.

Sarah Ivens, whose new book Forest Therapy hits the shelves today, tells Healthista how escaping oppressive city life and taking a walk in the woods can benefit our health:

When I was a child, trying to understand my parents’ divorce or forget about bullies in the school playground, I found solace in the green spaces around my London home.

I’d naturally seek peace and quiet, and use free time to explore and create in the nearby forest or by a pond I frequented with my grandmother.

Then as an adult, I shut myself into grey offices, Underground tunnels and smoky bars, staring at my phone. 

My green spirit turned into a dull charcoal and I let stress and lethargy get the better of me.

The powerful and of-the-moment movement of shinrin-yoku, or forest bathing as we call it in the UK, began in the 1980s in Japan. 

Researchers have found that children are twice as active when they’re outdoors, and Sarah Ivens suggests that exercising outside can be more fun and the fresh air invigorating

Their government spent time and money on research into the multitude of benefits of spending time in nature, and more specifically the forest. 

They set up a public health initiative to get people outside when they realised just how significant the benefits were.

It was in Japan, when I was 34 years old, that a knowledgeable guide saw my tired, morose self and told me about the idea. 

I realised what I knew all along – I needed to get back into the great outdoors, wiggle my toes in the grass and breathe fresh air deeply again. I’ve never looked back.

But it turns out, shinrin-yoku, forest bathing, or friluftsliv (as this fresh-air-life philosophy is called in Norway), doesn’t just feel good in the short-term, it has long term medical, mental and physical benefits too. 

Here are eight ways I’ve witnessed the wonder of an al fresco life lived well…

1. Reduced mental fatigue 

We all seem to be obsessed with the ‘mental overload’ of modern living but we don’t know how to reduce it. 

We’re saying yes too often, taking on too much, then thinking about everything too deeply. We are sweating the small stuff and it’s exhausting.

The good news is that research published in the Journal of Environmental Psychology shows that being exposed to restorative environments such as a forest, lake or beach, restores mental energy, and that natural beauty inspires feelings of awe, which gives a secondary brain boost. 

Short-term memory also improves after a break in the great outdoors.

In a study set up by the University of Michigan, participants were given a memory test then split into two groups and sent for a walk. 

On returning to re-sit the exam, the group who were sent for a walk around an arboretum did 20% better second time round, while the participants who walked a city street showed no improvement. Nature for the win!

2. Increased creativity 

Fresh ideas and new perspectives come quicker to me in the open air and now I have a few clues as to why. 

Environmental psychologists at the University of Michigan discovered that looking at these soft, natural wonders allowed the brain to recuperate, recover and rest after coping with the man-made assaults of modern living, then gave it a fresh approach to problems.

How to walk mindfully 

The practice of shinrin-yoku is based on walking through the forest at a gentle pace for two hours or more. 

Keeping your phone switched off allows time to soak up the environment around you and come into the here and now. 

The phrase shikan shouyou means ‘nothing but wandering along’, something we rarely get a chance to do, but which is very beneficial.

Feel your feet touching the ground. The movement of your muscles.  The constant balancing and rebalancing of the body. 

Pay attention to any areas of stiffness or pain in the body and consciously relax them.

Become aware of your present mental and emotional states. Notice your state of mind. Is it calm or busy, cloudy or focused? Where is your mind?

Be aware of your location in space, the sounds around you and the air temperature.

Pay attention to the experience of walking and keep your awareness engaged in this experience.

Be aware of the beginning, the middle and the end of your stepping.

Walk as silently as possible.

Allow your awareness to move up through every part of your body, noticing the sensations as you walk.

Gradually scan all parts of your body as you bring your attention to the ankles, skin, calves, knees, thighs, hips, pelvis, back, chest, shoulders, arms, neck and head. 

The brain in nature is more open to reflect, daydream and wander, which boosts creativity. 

The psychologists noted that the benefits of spending time in nature even lasted for a while after heading back indoors. 

So, a stroll in a park before an important brainstorming meeting could be something to think about.

Another study published in the Public Library of Science journal, discovered that people immersed in nature for four days boosted their results in a creative problem-solving test by 50%.

This suggests a positive correlation between the great outdoors and creativity, yet they also cited a decrease in exposure to technology over those four days as a possible benefit in the test result.

3. Upgraded happiness 

I remember the release I felt when I blew away cobwebs of my self-obsessed brain and stepped into something greater than my own worries and insecurities as an angst-ridden teen. 

A chat with a friend during a walk in the forest that backed onto my childhood home or a solo stroll along the briny sand dunes of Norfolk on our annual family holiday, allowed me time to process problems, sending my doldrums up to the sky and out to the North Sea.

This is a practice we should continue throughout our lives, research shows. 

A study in Environmental Science and Technology found a link between decreased anxiety and bad moods with walks in the woods, while another reported that taking a walk outdoors should be prescribed by doctors as a supplement to existing treatments for depressive disorders.

The Journal of Affective Disorders released analysis that declared how every green, natural environment (not just forests) improved mood and self-esteem, a crucial element for personal happiness. 

Additionally, the presence of water – a lake, a river, the ocean – made the positive effects on happiness even more noticeable.

4. Boosted immunity 

An international conglomerate of scientists asked 31,000 Toronto residents to fill out a questionnaire about their health.

They found those living on tree-lined city blocks had a boost in heart and metabolic health compared with those who lived on a more bare and brutal block.

Being in a whirl of phytoncides, with the cellular activity it promotes, can also provide a general boost to the immune system, helping to fight off flus, coughs and colds, claims a paper in the journal of Environmental Health and Preventative Medicine.

Although more research is needed into the relationship between the trees and us.

A study has also revealed how patients heal faster from surgery if they’re given a green, natural view from their hospital bed. 

University of Pittsburgh researchers reported that spinal surgery patients exposed to natural light felt less stress, pain and took fewer pain medications than those patients who weren’t. 

This feeds into an earlier study that showed faster recovery times for those in a hospital room with a view of trees rather than a brick wall.

5. Expanded exercise and heart health 

Studies show that although you don’t need to be outside to be active, walking on a treadmill for three miles will burn the same number of calories as walking a forest trail for three miles.

Your body and brain reports extra boosts from moving your workout from a man-made gym to a natural one.

British researchers studied 1,000 British children using accelerators and positioning devices and found that children were twice as active outdoors than indoors.

Nature puts an extra spring in our step. 

The best thing about exercising outdoors is of course that it often doesn’t feel like exercise, which makes it more sustainable as a way of life rather than just a passing fad in a bid to lose weight.

A power walk around a local park with a friend, checking out the changing seasons as you march under canopies of trees, fresh air pumping up your tired skin, is more invigorating, social and interesting than solo time, watching the clock obsessively as air conditioning blows in your face.

6. Diminished stress 

And breathe… nature is a wondrous soother. 

Many studies show both exercising in forests – or even just sitting in one – reduces blood pressure and decreases the stress-related hormones cortisol and adrenaline, which helps us to calm down.

A study from the Scandinavian Journal of Forest Research found that students who were sent into a forest to camp for two days returned with significantly lower levels of cortisol in their system than those who had stayed in the city.

Researchers at Environmental Health and Preventative Medicine had similar results, noting that both cortisol levels and heart rate decreased for people spending time away from a city environment and in a place of forest therapy.

7. Sharper vision 

Regularly tearing your eyes away from computer and phone screens is important for relaxation, and children who spend more time outdoors are less likely to be short-sighted

Carrots aren’t the only natural thing to help your vision, studies show. 

Common sense tells us it’s good to get away from the glare of a computer screen but there could be more to it than that.

An Australian study looked at 2,000 children over a period of two years and found those who spent more time outdoors had a reduced risk of developing nearsightedness (myopia). 

In Taiwan researchers looked at two neighbouring schools with comparable levels of myopia. Over the period of a year, one school was encouraged to play outside more.

The results? Testing the children after 12 months, the data revealed the outdoor kids had a rate of myopia of 8.41%, compared to 17.65% in the indoor kids. 

Both of these studies were published in the Ophthalmology journal and although focusing on children, they do show a link between the protective effect of outdoor activity on eyesight. 

Whose eyes haven’t felt rested when they’re taken off a blinking screen for a few minutes?

8. Increased ability to cope with pain 

A report by the King’s Fund, commissioned by the National Garden’s Scheme, has revealed how being outdoors, and gardening specifically, offers the ill and unwell a myriad of physical and psychological benefits as well as natural pain relief.

Horticultural Therapy really is a thing. 

Evidence from clinical trials show how it can help those with arthritis. For example, the rhythmic turning and twisting of weeding, alleviates discomfort and stiffness.

Thrive, a British charity that encourages gardening to help people living with illness or disabilities, offers programs of Horticultural Therapy to people dealing with a variety of health issues.

This includes activities for people with dementia designed to help with positive reminiscence, reconnecting with others and gentle exercise.

Sarah Ivens’ latest book Forest Therapy is out today, May 17, published by Piatkus.

This article was originally published by Healthista and has been reproduced with their permission. 

 

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