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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

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!

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.

9 Minute Nature Meditation with Cypress Essential Oil

cypress essential oil guided meditation

*This post contains affiliate links which affords me a small commission at no additional cost to you.

 

Cypress essential oil.

One sniff and you can understand why people use it to clear their airways.

One drop to the skin and you can understand why people use it to relax muscle cramps.

It feels icy.

That minty cooling effect feels good on the skin and in your lungs.

Some quick research points to some of the benefits of cypress essential oil.

 

Cypress essential oil packages up some of the magic of the forest in a bottle.

Dr. Qing Li used Hinoki cypress essential oil when he performed some of his forest bathing medical research. If you haven’t met him yet, Dr. Qing Li is THE leading researcher on shinrin-yoku in the world. If there’s a forest bathing study, Dr. Li was probably involved.

So, as you can imagine, there’s something to cypress, or the forest in general.

 

Benefits of cypress essential oil:

  • Respiratory support
  • Promotes calm energy
  • Antibacterial and antiseptic
  • Immune support

 

Respiratory support

If you’ve ever breathed cypress essential oil in, you’ve experienced the invigorating effect it has on your lungs. You can feel it floating around in your lungs.

It’s great for breaking up coughs and congestion when you have a cold.

It also helps you take big, deep, cleansing breaths. You almost feel like you can take deeper breaths when you inhale it. It feels like it cools and expands your lungs.

 

Energized calm

Cypress oil is also calming and energizing at the same time, so it’s perfect for mental clarity. It’s both invigorating and relaxing. If you’re working on a big project at your job, for example, take a quick breathing break to breathe the oils in and notice how it helps you transition from a distracted frenzy to a calm focus.

 

Antibacterial and antiseptic

With its antibacterial and deodorizing properties, cypress essential oil is perfect for freshening up your feet and armpits when diluted with a carrier oil. It helps heal wounds and prevent infections elsewhere on your skin too.

 

Immune support

Cypress essential oils contain phytoncides. Phytoncides are the oils that the trees disperse into the air in the forest. Dr. Qing Li’s research uncovered that it’s these phytoncides that provide a major boost to the immune system. They also lower your stress response. Winning!

 

I got some cypress essential oil with June’s forest bathing Go Love Yourself Box, which btw I contributed to (the workbook features snippets from our Forest Bathing Immersion Library), so I thought I’d put it to good use with a mindfulness meditation.

If you’re wondering what to do with cypress essential oil, this is a good place to start.

And I’m sharing it here so you can try it too!

 

indoor forest bathing

 

Cypress oil mindfulness meditation

Since cypress has a pine-y, earthy smell and comes directly from the forest, it’s perfect for a forest bathing meditation, no?

It’s even a great way to practice forest bathing when you can’t make it to the actual forest. Since the essential oil contains the same phytoncides you find in the forest, it proves effective too!

Finally, this meditation is the perfect “Threshold Exercise,” or a practice to help you transition from your normal everyday routine into your forest bathing practice. It slows and deepens your breathing, it refocuses your attention on the present moment, and it changes your mood.

You never want to go straight from the office into the forest without leaving your baggage and distractions at the entrance. 

BTW, if you don’t have cypress essential oil, you could use a pine, spruce, peppermint, or another minty oil. I suppose you could even use peppermint tea if you have no oils available;)

 

Without further ado, here’s your Cypress Essential Oil Mindfulness Meditation.

 

Take a moment afterward to gauge how the meditation made you feel. Then, come back here and share in the comments.

A Forest Bathing Reflection on the Forest Floor

forest bathing forest floor

{Pin Me}

 

Recently, I made a comment in the Forest Bathing Central Facebook group reflecting about how perfect the forest floor is, and I thought it actually warranted a thorough post.

Then, I went into the woods with my kids this past weekend and thought about it a lot more.

 

Have you ever noticed how perfect the forest floor is?

 

 

It’s got almost a wabi-sabi type essence to it. Perfect in its imperfect-ness.

The leaves seem to scatter in regular intervals.

The knobby tree roots poke out in the neatest patterns.

The patterns and the pattern-less parts.

The crooks and holes and dips and rises.

The twigs laid out in perfectly random scatters.

The strategic places plants and fungus pop out.

The paradoxical tidy-ness of the dirt.

The permanence of the forest, the impermanence of the biome.

 

Yes, perfection!

 

nature bathing exercise

Perfect coloring. Perfect scattering. Live and dead, whole and disintegrated…

 

After contemplating about this for awhile, I decided to do a Google search on a whim for “forest floor poems.” I came across a neatly descriptive poem called The Forest Floor by Mariella Rossi. It got me to thinking more about the descriptive phrases you could use to explain the forest floor. Here are some of the most intense descriptions pulled from her poem:

 

A place alive with secrets and knowing

A place intent on living

Poly-rhythmic sway

Lichen-rough rocks

Soften pricked dendrites of moss cushion my knee

Find my place within its creeping, writhing breath

 

shinrin-yoku exercise

A perfect work of art. A spot that would “cushion your knee”

 

I love these word visuals (and visual visuals) to help you gauge what I’m talking about.

 

 

forest floor shinrin-yoku

A little leaf cup accumulating water.

nature's artwork

All decked out in moss, crinkly leaves, and pine needle confetti

magic in the forest bathing

This almost doesn’t even look real! Such true art!

Nature bathing experience

Perfect symmetry in an imperfect asymmetrical mess. Green life and brown passing.

shinrin-yoku forest floor exercise

Couldn’t be more perfect! Live among death. Beauty among fallen trees.

 

Next time you’re out on a forest bathing adventure, take a few moments–or heck, an entire hour or longer–to marvel at the perfection of the forest floor. Really, this could be an entire forest bathing exercise to try: a meditation on the forest floor. Try it!

Take a tiny four by four inch segment or parts of the floor you can see for hundreds of feet. Step back and take it all in at once. Then, slowly narrow in on the details. Alternate between the nearsighted and the farsighted, marveling at the details and the full picture. Listen to its chatter under your feet. Make note of the cushion-y feel under your feet. Bend down and touch it. Run your fingers over it. Take it in like a piece of fine art (there is no finer!)!

Take time to appreciate the forest floor.

 

Over to you…

Come on over and share your pics in the Facebook group if you take any great images of the forest floor.