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The Message in Forest Bathing: You Need to Get Out More

Forest Bathing Message

Today’s forest bathing message:

 

You need to get out more.

It’s the message that’s been pressing on me for a few weeks now.

Now, I say this completely tongue in cheek because I should be the one to talk! I really don’t get out much at all. Haha.

I work from home and love being at home, so I don’t have a whole lot of reason to leave most days.

Except when it comes to nature exposure. (And pee-wee football practice;)

 

We spend a staggering 90 percent of our human lives indoors!

I mean, think about it…

You get in your car to drive to work and maybe spend 3 minutes outside on your way from the car to the building.

You maybe get outside for a quick 15-30 minute walk on your lunch break, if you force yourself.

You get 3 more minutes outside on your way back to your car.

You spend maybe an hour outside with the kids or doing yard work after work.

Even on weekends, you maybe spend up to 3 hours outdoors.

Then, in the winter, in colder climates, you may spend mere minutes outside.

 

{Source}

 

That statistic makes me want to run away to Ferngully!

Seriously, so alarming, especially when we consider how much we love being outside.

Being outside obviously doesn’t come natural to most of us.

It’s a habit we need to cultivate and learn to appreciate.

In order to free yourself from that statistic, you need to make a point to get out more!

 

So, this week, I tried that.

I was able to get outside for a run, rather than the treadmill, because my husband happened to be home for the kids.

And on my run, I noticed a few really cool things that really roused an emotional response in me:

  1. The doe and fawn that I startled from sleep, bounding off. Mom took graceful bounding leaps while baby humorously tried to keep up with her, three steps to mom’s one. It made me laugh.
  2. The myriad of monarchs in my neighborhood, including two that swooped down so close to my ear, I could hear their wings. The sound of monarch wings, you guys! Do you know what they sound like?
  3. The field of yellow wildflowers at the top of the hill I had never noticed before in all the times I’ve jogged that hill.
  4. The cicada making its electric buzzing noise across the pavement.

One measly half-hour gave me all these gifts!

 

And it made me think of all the crazy rare things I’ve seen out in the country since we started living here. Things I never saw in the city and never would’ve happened upon if I weren’t “getting out there.”

  1. The bald eagle that grabbed a fish right out of the water and took off with it. Seriously, I hadn’t seen an eagle in probably 10 years before moving out here. Now we see them regularly.
  2. The two bucks we saw, standing on their hind legs, fighting each other out in a field.
  3. The hawk hunting blackbirds in our backyard.
  4. The entire life cycle of a monarch from tiny white egg to breathtaking butterfly.
  5. The hilarious view, over the four-foot growth in the field, of just the mom, dad, and fuzzy baby sandhill crane’s heads. Another laugh-out-loud moment.

I could go on and on…

 

But I think you get the point.

The more you get out, the more you get to see. The more life you get to experience!

It just makes me think about all the beauty that’s out here for the taking. Right now!

It’s all around us.

But we can’t see it unless we open the curtains, swing open the door, and step outside.

Will you do that today?

 

Your invitation: get outside today one extra time and find a comfortable spot to observe. Just look around and notice what blessings you would’ve missed if you were inside.

 

forest bathing quote

 

 

I recorded a video with more of my thoughts on this, if you’d like to have a listen….

 

 

{If you’d like three free forest bathing invitations and a forest bathing starter guide to help you make more of your time in nature, click here to grab the PDFs}

 

Please share the lovely blessings you got to see while being outside today in the comments. I’d love to hear!

50 Ways to Uplevel Your Forest Bathing Experience

forest bathing tips

 

If you’re one of the many people that can appreciate the subtle nuances that make forest bathing so satisfying, you’ll enjoy these strategies to take your practice a step further.

Or, you can use each one of these as a starting point if you’re just beginning to forest bathe.

 

These strategies help you mine the cracks of your forest bathing practice for gold.

 

Try these 50 ways to uplevel your shinrin-yoku experience:

 

  1. Bring a magnifying glass. Check out nature in even more up-close detail.
  2. Bring your journal.
  3. Bare your feet
  4. Use a walking stick. Make it a game to find the best one.
  5. Use your imagination to build a fantasy story about your surroundings in your head a la Bridge to Terabithia or Where the Wild Things Are.
  6. Bring your child with you and ask them general questions about the forest to see what they say.
  7. Bring along a local field guide.
  8. Go forest bathing at sunrise.
  9. Leave your technology behind completely.
  10. Pray.
  11. Do a handstand and observe the trees from a new perspective.
  12. Touch interesting textures with something other than your hands: your knees, toes, or nose.
  13. Dig a hole.
  14. Bury a burden in the hole you dug.
  15. Carry parts of the forest with you as you walk, such as a pinch bouquet.
  16. Leave a gift, something of yourself, for the forest (without littering). A kiss. A lock of hair. A prayer written in the soil.
  17. Go forest bathing at sunset.
  18. Read a nature poem before you go to set the tone.
  19. Leave your worries at the forest entrance.
  20. Smile.
  21. Skip.
  22. Do some stretches with the support of a tree.
  23. Burn a mental snapshot.
  24. Sing.
  25. Set an intention for your walk before you go.
  26. Lean in.
  27. Look around and locate more things to be grateful for.
  28. Bring your dog. See the forest through the eyes of your pet.
  29. Try to scope out secret hiding spots like you would as a kid.
  30. Look inside hollow trees.
  31. Perform a one-word walking mantra meditation.
  32. Take a moment to actually read the informational signs.
  33. Follow the length of an entire vine with your hands.
  34. Veer off the trail a tad.
  35. Walk backwards for a short distance.
  36. Try to decipher the answers to life’s biggest questions in the forest.
  37. Stare intently at something interesting.
  38. Take in the view of the forest on your back.
  39. Follow the trail of an ant.
  40. Find a high spot to look out over the horizon on.
  41. Give back to the forest: pick up a piece of trash or send a mental blessing.
  42. Put your feet in the water.
  43. Write a message in the soil.
  44. Leave a message in a hollow tree for someone to find.
  45. Sway or do some Tai Chi moves.
  46. Let the little kid inside of you dance when you feel compelled.
  47. Listen for rhythms.
  48. Make note of natural symmetries and patterns.
  49. Learn one thing about how to survive in nature.
  50. Take a moment to appreciate how tiny you are inside the forest from the Google-eye view.

 

Here’s a pinnable version to pin for later!

 

forest bathing experience

 

I hope this brainstorm helps you get more out of your next forest bathing experience. Let me know how it goes in the comments below!

A Christmas Tree Forest Bathing Experience

Christmas tree forest bathing

 

One of the best opportunities to go forest bathing? When you’re looking for your Christmas tree. Christmas tree forest bathing.

Even the sign at the front of our local tree farm educated us about the purified air around us.

But that pine smell…

You know what I’m talking about.

That pine smell that clears and refreshes your lungs…

That represents stability and reassurance…

That instantly smells like Christmas…

That maintains the residue of life in a winter forest void of leaves…

And when you bring that sweet tradition into your home, how your home presents that same refreshing comfort…

 

Can you feel it just by reading it?

 

The weekend after Thanksgiving, our little family went to find our Christmas tree.

We visited a new tree farm this year because of logistics, so it gave the experience a newness.

Since we were looking for the perfect tree, we were very in tune with the sights, sounds, and smells of the place.

 

 

We took our time, allowing for exploration…

…for our three-year-old to talk to the quail wandering around the property.

…for her to notice a hawk feather.

…for her and our nine-year-old to peer into a few animals’ dens and wonder at its inhabitants.

…for us to wander down a path on the property and look around.

…for the four of us to stop on the bridge and appreciate the trickle of water that ran through the farm.

…to appreciate all the pinecones underneath one of the trees, and find the biggest one to take home.

 

 

And I realized…we were forest bathing. Christmas tree forest bathing.

 

And we got to bring a remnant of that experience into our home, to smell the purified air every morning when we get up, to signify a season of new birth and warm spirits.

We get to do our own form of indoor forest bathing when we sit under the tree to read Christmas stories and sip hot chocolate.

Remember, forest bathing is a simple exercise in mindfulness and sensory exploration…

All it takes is a stand of trees and a little time to wander and wonder.

Shopping for your Christmas tree is the perfect time to try forest bathing.

***Here’s a great way to preserve some of that festive charm for months after Christmas. Use the needles from your pine tree to make this DIY Pine Needle Body Oil.

 

Do you cut down your own tree for Christmas? Have you ever stopped to “take in” all the pine-y wonder around you? Do you plan to go Christmas tree forest bathing this year?