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Forest Bathing Breathing Techniques: 4 Ways!

4 Forest Bathing breathing techniques

 

Forest bathing is all about mindfulness, settling into nature’s patterns with a focus on noticing.

It’s an opportunity to break from frenzied daily life and take a breather.

That’s what this post is all about…taking a literal breather.

It only seems natural to incorporate breathing exercises into your forest bathing practice.

So, let’s go over a few breathing exercises to try the next time you go forest bathing and transform your experience.

But first, in case you’re wondering, why even bother?

 

Benefits of Breathing Exercises

Breathing is an involuntary process, so what’s the point of forcing it? Well, your breathing is closely linked to how stressed or calm you feel. You can literally force your body into a more relaxed, present state by taking control of your breath.

Breathing exercises have many other benefits for your body and mental state:

  • Clinically proven to reduce stress, swapping the sympathetic (fight-or-flight) for the parasympathetic (chillaxed) nervous system.
  • Builds oxygen levels in your blood
  • Lowers heart rate and blood pressure
  • Expands your lungs and opens them up to more phytoncides
  • Helps you get centered and grounded
  • Calibrates you to the pulse of the forest

Breathing exercises are the perfect companion to forest bathing because they deepen your sense of relaxation and focus. They help you flip on the “awareness” switch. Cultivating an awareness of your breath anchors you and carries over into your shinrin-yoku practice.

If you feel closely, you can sense your breath and pulse integrate into the rhythms of the forest.

 

Now that we’ve underscored the advantages of breathing exercises, lets learn a few core techniques.

 

4 Forest Bathing Breathing Techniques

  1. Belly breathing:
    To begin, close your eyes, place one hand on your belly and one on your chest, and take a deep breath in. Feel your belly fill and push against your hand while the ribs remain unmoving.
    Then, slowly let our your breath, feeling your belly deflate.
    Continue this process for 10 breaths, focusing solely on your breathing. If your mind wanders, gently guide it back to your breathing.
    On your last breath, open your eyes and bring your awareness back to the forest.

    When to use: when you want to relax and gently transition into your forest bathing. It’s also great when you feel like you’ve been subsisting on shallow breaths all day.

  2. Alt nostril breathing:
    Place the index and middle finger of one hand on either side of your nose. Block the left nostril and breathe in through your right. Then, block the right nostril and breathe out through the left. Perform this same breath pattern five times.
    Then, perform five breaths blocking the right nostril in the inhale and the left nostril on the exhale then alternate the pattern.

    When to use: when you want to come into a balance of feeling energized yet calm.

  3. Loud lion:
    Inhale deeply through your nose, then open your mouth as wide as you can, stick out your tongue, and breathe out with a forceful hhhhhhhh noise.
    Continue this breath pattern for 5 full breaths.
    The forest is a great place to practice this exercise without being seen.

    When to use: you feel tension in your mouth and jaw, especially after talking all day. It’s also great if you need to blow off some steam.

  4. 4-7-8 breathing:
    Breath in for a slow count of 4, hold your breath for 7 counts, and breathe out for 8 counts. Continue as long as you need to.

    When to use: this technique is the most relaxing exercise among the others. Use it to calm your nervous system, especially if you’ve had a rather stressful day.

Breathing exercises are a great to to use to help you transition from your harried everyday life into your forest bathing practice. Use them the next time you go out into nature and take a moment to notice how different you feel afterward.

Breathing exercises are also effective anytime you feel overwhelmed or stressed, such as before giving a presentation or when you’re in an argument. I also like to use breathing exercises to help me fall asleep at night. It’s an effective tool to have at your disposal!

{Ready to try forest bathing? Grab our free starter guide with 3 guided forest bathing invitations}

 

I’d love to hear your observations about how these breathing techniques improved your shinrin-yoku practice. Leave a comment below!

A Winter Forest Bathing Exercise

forest bathing in winter

What does winter remind you of?

Quick, right off the top of your head, you’re likely to come up with words like:

Hibernation.

Cold.

Snow.

Grayness.

Cold!

 

Many negative adjectives get attributed to winter such as dead, gray, cold, arctic, chilly, and barren.

As a Wisconsin native, I have my own aversions to winter. Being so far removed from the vibrating nature of summer makes me feel sad and closed off. I cringe in the late summer and fall, thinking about the oncoming weather changes.

I dread winter.

The outside world slows down and makes its way inside.

However, this year, I’ve tried to make a mental shift from the dread of winter to the opportunity in the season instead.

Of course, the life of trees holds the perfect metaphor for this.

 

Dormancy allows for maximum yield.

 

What happens to trees in winter?

It’s easy to think of the trees as “dead” in the winter. In fact, that’s often how we talk about them. But they’re far from dead!

The grueling conditions teach them how to thrive instead of die.

During their dormancy period, trees go through a slowing, self-preservation stage in order to proliferate come warmer weather.

An apple tree can’t produce a very good harvest unless they go through an adequate dormancy period.

Dormancy allows for maximum yield!

And even while the upper portions of trees stop growing in winter, their roots are very much alive and extending.

 

The metaphor is so perfect, it makes me a little giddy!

 

How to Human in the winter

The winter is the perfect time for humans to go inside too. Warm homes where we gather are where are roots also extend.

We need the period of rest and preservation to come alive in the summer.

We need the extremes of hot and cold to appreciate the full spectrum of temperature and season.

 

I mean, I think about the sheer work summer brings with it: the constant proliferation of weeds, the steady growth of lawn, the infiltration of bugs, the watering, and the number of activities I feel obligated to do outside while I can.

In winter, we can take a break from all those responsibilities and obligations. Let them lie in retreat under sheaths of snow.

We can focus on the activities that took a backseat in the summer, such as the waiting sewing projects, the interior repairs, the shelves of books that went unread.

That go-go-go energy of summer needs a balance of winter energy, just like the yin and yang, the masculine and feminine. Balance.

Winter is a slowing down and rooting, not a long, cold death.

The grueling conditions can teach us how to thrive instead of wither as well.

We don’t die slow deaths in the winter, like it feels like sometimes, we shed the layers that don’t serve us anymore and pay attention to what keeps us alive, not just physically but mentally too.

 

So, today, I offer you a winter forest bathing exercise to go along with this sentiment of rest and balance.

 

Winter Forest Bathing Exercise

  1. Head to your favorite nature space outside. Make sure you’re bundled up enough to stay warm and comfortable.
  2. Lean up against a tree or other natural structure and take a few large breaths, finding a deeper sense of relaxation with each breath. You may feel natural closing your eyes.
  3. Take a moment to identify with the tree or object holding you up. The intense process its undertaking at this very moment.
  4. Allow yourself to become drawn into the same process as you rest back-to-back. The turning inward. The slowing. The releasing of all the superfluous layers and stripping down to your true source of lifeblood. (The forest bathing version of the KonMarie method, haha).
  5. Find the relaxation, the turning inward, the permission inside the slowness.
  6. Next, bring your awareness to the outer layers of your body. The ones closest to the surface, exposed to the air. Next, bring your attention to the layer under that and the layer under that until you get to the core of your body.
  7. Take a moment to appreciate how the outer layers of your body protect the deep warmth of your beating heart. Your body shivers and contracts and does all it can to preserve your inner body temperature. A gift. Appreciate these signs of self-preservation.
  8. Now, slowly open your eyes to the life all around you. Smoke from chimneys, tweets from the hardy winter birds, deciduous greenery, tracks in the snow from romping rabbits. Make note of all the signs of life all around you.
  9. Then, slowly make your way inside, taking the new insights this winter forest bathing practice gave with you.

Journaling challenge: use one page in your journal to doodle the signs of life you noticed. On another page, draw or describe the layers of meaning you noticed in the lively dormancy of winter.

Bonus kid-friendly challenge: gather little remnants of nature in your pockets. Bring them inside and set them up in a nice little nature display. Set out a magnifying glass for further inspection.

 

forest nature display

 

 

{If you enjoyed this exercise, check out our free forest bathing starter guide with three more in-depth forest bathing invitations.}

 

I’d love to hear your thoughts or see your journals. Come on back here and drop a comment about your winter forest bathing experience or drop them in the Forest Bathing Central Facebook Group.

Forest Bathing Haiku to Help You Re-Imagine Your Connection to Nature

forest bathing haiku

 

Haiku is the perfect complement to forest bathing.

Dontcha think?

The meticulous form of poetry is all about putting tiny moments into quick words.

The words make meaning out of seemingly trivial moments.

Most classic haiku is based on nature too.

The noticing takes practice in mindfulness.

You have to pay attention first, to be able to put those moments into words.

So, haiku gives you an objective and outlet to pay attention to small details.

If you go looking for those moments, to be able to put them into words, you’ll suddenly notice them everywhere.

 

So, just like you do when you go forest bathing, you go into nature…

Take in all the sights, sounds, smells, feelings…

And put them into words.

Carefully crafted, meaningful words.

Haiku is a tool you can use to really capture your forest bathing experience.

 

If that right there makes your stomach leap a little, like it does to mine, then keep reading…

 

Since forest bathing and haiku seem to originate from the same realm, I thought it would be fun to combine the two here. Let’s take a look at what haiku is all about.

 

forest bathing haiku tear sheet

 

How to write forest bathing haiku

Let’s talk about how to write forest bathing haiku so you can try it for yourself.

  1. First, pay attention to any tiny little instance or detail you notice in nature. A fake-looking mushroom, a cobweb spindle running across your forehead, the sound of fingers rubbing on bark. Perhaps you may wish to write them down in your nature journal.
  2. Then, try to put those details into words. Each haiku poem is about just one of those minuscule details, not a bunch. You don’t need to explain the meaning of life in 17 syllables, just one simple element at a time. Takes some of the pressure off.
  3. The traditional haiku uses 5 syllables in the first line, 7 syllables in the second line, and 5 syllables in the third line. Try to arrange your words thusly.
  4. Marvel at the significance those simple moments carry. How interesting they are. How much haiku enriches your forest bathing practice.

By practicing haiku, you get better and better at noticing those slight moments.

If you were really dedicated, you would challenge yourself to write three haiku poems after every forest bathing trip.

 

Forest bathing haiku examples

Here are a few of my favorite examples of forest bathing haiku. Notice how the writer notices, how the senses are at play:

 

The smell of some tree
I don’t recognize causes
Me pause on my walk

~Calvin Olsen

 

Moon surprises me
With its fullness: it all but
Drowns out dead branches

~Calvin Olsen

 

Break in the weather
I lean on a tree, the tree
In gusts leans on me

~Calvin Olsen

 

Over the wintry
forest, winds howl in rage
with no leaves to blow

~Natsume Soseki

 

An aging willow–
its image unsteady
in the flowing stream

~Robert Spiess

 

When you go looking
for the secrets of the woods
you miss them happen

~Jessica Collins (that’s me)

 

We scare each other
The deer running from its bed
And me standing still

~Jessica Collins

 

Forest haiku

 

And this one’s just for tongue-in-cheek fun…

You don’t get famous
Writing haiku, you could earn
fame by living it

~Jessica Collins

 

 

The Forest Bathing Haiku Challenge

The next time you go forest bathing, bring your journal along. Don’t force the haiku or the noticing, but let the little images of the forest come to you and jot them down.

Let the magic happen in front of you, don’t force a search party to find it. You get me?

When you get home, try putting those moments into poetry.

I’d love for you to share what you come up with in the comments below or the Forest Bathing Central Facebook group.

Imprinting Method: How to Take Forest Bathing Snapshots

Intro to the Imprinting Method

 

Forest Bathing Imprinting Method

 

Do you ever wish you could take a full “snapshot” of precious moments in your life?

Like, not just the image, but also the sensory details attached to that image.

~The smells and glimmer from inside the wedding hall.

~The brief first smile of a newborn with that new baby smell and tender skin.

~The cool wind brushing against three generations holding hands, a tiny child in the middle, as they walk across a breaker to a lighthouse.

Those kinds of moments.

 

That’s what imprinting is all about:

Taking a “snapshot” in your mind of all the sensory details of memorable occasions.

 

I wrote about ropes course experience when I was on a youth group retreat in high school.

There, I was introduced to this process I call imprinting I use to this very day.

My camp counselor had me tune in to the forest around me, to smell it, to feel it, to taste it.

I remember the experience in vivid detail to this day because of the focused time we spent on each detail of it.

 

How to imprint an occasion in your mind

  1. Take a moment to capture the visual image in your mind. Take a 3D “picture” in your mind’s eye of everything around you.
  2. Then, close your eyes and take in all the sounds…the voices…the cacophony of footsteps, swishing fabric, sniffles, background music, etc.
  3. Try to give those sounds quick descriptions like I just did above.
  4. Then, switch to the smells. Again, try to give them quick descriptions.
  5. Finally, switch to your sense of touch. The feelings in your body. The feeling of the air against your skin. Your contact with external objects.
  6. Give ample time to each sense, and use quick descriptions to make them come alive even more.
  7. Now, take in the full mental picture and laser imprint it into your mind.
  8. Try not to force yourself to remember all this in fine detail. Just ask your consciousness to hang onto them.

 

A few notes…

I love using the quick two-word descriptions for smells and sounds because they “give words” to what you’re experiencing. They should help you remember the occasion even better. Feeling into the moment is crucial, and those descriptions add fuller context to the experience, they help you process it more fully.

You can repeat this process when you’re in the woods to capture an epic fall landscape, a turtle burying its eggs, the look inside a deer’s eyes.

After all, you probably go to the woods to unplug, not take an epic Instagram pic.

So, use your brain’s own Instagram filters to capture the moment in its fullness just for yourself.

 

 

Here’s a Livestream I filmed in the forest bathing Facebook group about this process:

Tell me, have you ever imprinted memories in your mind, on purpose or not? What details do you remember.

Forest Bathing and Green Color Psychology

Shinrin yoku and the psychology of the color green

 

I am drawn to the color green.

Like any good little nature lover.

I just looked over and not only am I wearing green, but my purse and laptop bags are green. Green is woven through my house in various decorations. My branding for this site and my freelance/fitness site have green in them, naturally.

Green, green, everywhere!

I was thinking about why I’m so drawn to the color and it led me to research about color therapy and green psychology.

 

Forest Bathing and Green Psychology

Green is associated with livelihood.

Perhaps that goes without saying because green = photosynthesis = life.

We are also encouraged to eat our greens in unlimited supply. Edible greens are both alive and life sustaining.

In fact, the chlorophyll that gives plants their green color converts sunlight into energy.

By ingesting greens, we get to partake of sunbeams and life energies.

That’s some glittery magic unicorn wands, if you think about it.

Makes a bowl of spinach sound much more exciting now too, doesn’t it?

 

Green signifies growth.

It also symbolizes wealth.

Green makes me think of a rich, pulsing spring forest brimming with life! That’s exactly what the color represents internally as well as externally.

Green is at the center of our planet and our hearts.

Jades and olives also elicits a charged yet calm and balanced energy.

Is that the epitome of forest bathing, or what?

That’s pretty much the goal of forest bathing for me and many others.

To feel energized yet grounded. To restore equilibrium.

 

Therapists use green in chromatic color therapy to deactivate nervous energy, stimulate depleted energy, and calm the soul.

Um, yes please!

Interior designers use natural shades of green and plant life to create a clean, relaxing home sanctuary.

Yes, and more!

Hospitals have long incorporated green into their color schemes. As William Ludlow put it “Our eyes were made to find rest and contentment in soft greens.”

Yes, yes, yes!

 

On the other hand…

A deficiency of green can cause irritability, fatigue, an unhealthy turning inward. 

So, go immerse yourself in green to treat your deficiency.

Here’s how:

Green Forest Bathing Exercise

Here’s a quick exercise to calm anxious energy and ground your wily thoughts.

forest bathing exercise using green color psychology

 

{If you enjoy forest bathing exercises like this, grab your free forest bathing starter guide.}

 


I hope you enjoyed this exploration of green psychology.

The next time you’re in the forest, pay attention to how alive the green makes the woods feel.

Such a friendly and inviting color.

 

 

From my green roots to yours,

~Jess

 

I’d love to hear about your experience in the comments below!