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Winter Forest Bathing

forest bathing winter

 

I’ve written about How to Forest Bathe in the Winter before, but I think the topic of winter forest bathing is worth revisiting again.

And again.

Every year.

And also in article form. Heh.

 

After several more winters after the first writing, I’ve come to appreciate winter forest bathing even more. And I wanted to share some new insights with you.

 

[For further reading, check out How to Forest Bathe in the Winter and A Winter Forest Bathing Exercise]

 

If you’d rather listen/watch, check out the video version here.

 

 

First, let’s talk about the setting…

 

Choosing a setting for your winter forest bathing experience

I love to visit all my normal stomping grounds for winter forest bathing. In the video above, I visit a tract of land owned by a local school that I travel quite often. I recommend choosing a setting that’s familiar to you as well, so you can see the differences among the seasons (and you don’t get lost on ungroomed trails).

The cool thing about the winter forest is that it’s barren and “see-through.” You can see clear through the forest when all the leaves and greens are gone. The stark contrast is visually stimulating and allows you to get to know your area better, through all of its phases.

Not all trees are barren though. You should be able to find a stand of evergreen trees, such as pines or cedars, that still hold their green color. Forest bathing under the pine trees is a great place to experience the living influences of the forest, even in winter.

 

forest bathing quote

 

Nature Scratch and Sniff

I’ll touch on this more in its own dedicated post, but nature Scratch and Sniff is one really potent way to use your sense of smell in the forest.

Next time your standing under the pine trees, grab a needle and dent it with your fingernail. Then, bring it up to your nose.

You get a really strong whiff of pine as the needle releases its essential oils.

I like to try this with other materials too, like bark and herbs. Try the scratch and sniff method next time you’re out forest bathing.

 

[Bottle some of that evergreen goodness for daily use with DIY pine needle body oil]

 

Now that you’ve found a place to practice shinrin-yoku, let’s talk about what that practice might look like.

 

Forest Bathing Exercises for Winter

I like to follow the following general formula when I head to the forest in the winter:

  1. Threshold exercise: transition from your daily life into the forest. Enter the forest with intention, take a stretch, and find a sit spot. Try the breath work described in the next section.
  2. Grounding: try to gain your bearings. Close your eyes and feel yourself in space, your weight, your positioning, the ground under your feet.
  3. Checking in with all five senses: concentrate on the smells, sounds, air temperature, and visuals around you.
  4. Complete a forest bathing exercise or two (see below).
  5. Exit exercise: transition from the forest back into daily life. You might take one last deep breath at the edge of the forest, step forward and exhale back into your routine.

 

Here are a few example exercises to try:

 

cencentric circle forest bathing exercise

 

Concentric Circle Exercise:

  • Use all five senses to experience your own body at its core.
  • Then, move your senses out to your immediate surroundings.
  • Then, move out a little further to 15 feet around you.
  • Then, move out again and again as far as you can see and hear.

 

 

reverse senses forest bathing exercise

Reverse Senses

After you take in the sights, sounds, smells, taste, and touch of your immediate environment, reverse your focus and try to imagine what it feels like for the forest to see, smell, hear, taste, and touch you.

For example, you may reach out and touch a tree and feel its solidity, temperature, and texture against your palm. Then, think about how your warm, smooth hand feels against the tree.

Or think about how the birds you hear experience the sounds you make. Imagine how your own warm body heats up the air around you.

Reverse Senses is a great exercise to nurture a reciprocal relationship with nature.

 

 

Breath work in the winter

I love the taste of breathing in the winter. When you inhale, you can feel the chill, minty air as it reaches the bottom of your lungs. The winter air is different, and you can literally feel it, in a visceral sense. That’s one major benefit to take advantage of in the winter.

In fact, aside from an oxygen chamber, breathing deeply in the fresh cool air is one of the best ways to oxygenate your blood. Oxygenated blood has many benefits, such as improving your immune system, helping your body self-repair, reducing stress, and improving brain function because every cell in your body needs the molecule.

 

shinrin-yoku quote

 

How to incorporate breath work into your forest bathing practice

  1. Always begin your practice with a session of deep breathing. I like to take a series of 10 breaths with my eyes closed.
  2. Use the Wring-Out Technique to warm up. Gently twist your body side to side as you loosen up your spine. Follow the movement with your breath, literally wringing out air as you twist into an exhale.
  3. Return to your breath as you practice mindfulness in the forest. Deep, full belly breaths are a foundational practice in forest bathing.
  4. Try one of these Four Forest Bathing Breathing Techniques.

 

Overcoming barriers to winter forest bathing

By far the 2 most common reasons for avoiding forest bathing in the winter are:

  1. I hate winter. It’s too cold.
  2. I don’t have the time.

To that, I say, you have a choice. ‘

You can either choose to try to enjoy winter forest bathing and make space for it or not. That’s up to you, not any external factor.

If you’re too cold, wear more layers.

I know that sounds really trite, but honestly, it’s the hard truth. The only reason why you’d be cold is if you weren’t adequately dressed. Simply add more layers.

Another trick you can use is to warm up before you start your practice. You might even choose to go forest bathing after you work out. The colder environment will feel good after a good sweat. Otherwise, you can do a few blood-pumping exercises (i.e. jumping jacks, walking lunges, etc) before you head to your sit spot to warm up.

If you say you don’t have the time, replace your words with “it’s not a priority.”

You’ve heard that saying before, right? Instead of saying you don’t have time to exercise, what you’re really saying is exercise isn’t a priority for you. Same with forest bathing. And that’s okay if it’s really not a priority for you.

While shinrin-yoku might not be for everybody, it has undeniable benefits–check out the stacks of studies–which we still need in the winter.

There really aren’t any barriers to nature bathing. Heck, you don’t even need the trees. So, if you really appreciate the break and all the psychological and physical benefits–or you just love nature, then you can make it happen.

 

Final thoughts

I really hope these new insights inspire you to give winter forest bathing a shot. The forest can give such a welcome reprieve in the winter, just as it does in the summer. And we still need that exposure to phytoncides, sunlight, and nature in general in the winter.

Would you do me a favor?

Would you get out there today, and then post a picture of your excursion in the Forest Bathing Central Facebook group? I’d love to see what winter forest bathing looks like for you.

 

From my roots to yours,

~Jess

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.

Guest Post on Association of Nature & Forest Bathing

Hey kindred friends,

One of my guest posts containing a forest bathing sit spot meditation was published over on the Association of Nature & Forest Therapy blog.

Go check it out!

It’s a free forest bathing invitation for your favorite sit spot, focusing on the Earth Elements: earth, air, water, and fire.

I even included a bonus nature journaling exercise at the end for you to try.

Have a look!

Forest Bathing Sit Spot Meditation on the Earth Elements

I’d love to see your journal pages from this invitation or pictures of your sit spot. Tag @ForestBathingCentral on Instagram so I can see;)

Want more forest bathing sit spot meditations? If so, leave me a comment about what you enjoy the most.