Why A Connection With Nature Is Essential
Over half of the world’s human population lives in cities. While society deems this a normality, it’s almost against our natural ways to be so disconnected from the natural environments that surround us.
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Physical Benefits
The basic and bare necessities we require to simply survive all come from nature. We retrieve food from the Earth, water from the streams, and oxygen from the trees. Without these three vital components, life would not exist. Nature curates the trifecta of survival.
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Source: Georgia Carter, Mindful Meanderer
Venturing into nature, whether on an extended hike, taking a day trip to the park, or simply rooting your feet into your garden ground, is vital in creating a healthier lifestyle. In young children, nature is another parent. It teaches without words, revives and encourages curiosity, and embraces each and every unique quality found within oneself. Children who spend time in nature tend to experience healthier development, physically, emotionally, intellectually, and mentally.
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In terms of the chemical impacts nature has on our bodies, the benefits are paramount. Nature improves all five senses, reduces blood pressure, eases the pains of long-term illnesses, and improves one’s memory span. A connection to the Earth and spending time outdoors vastly improves one’s quality of life, provides cleaner air, reduces obesity, and alleviates mental fatigue.
Mental Benefits
While physical health allows us to flourish in the physical realm, mental health is just as important in helping us shine throughout our human experience. And, of course, nature bolsters our mental health in a number of ways too. Wandering in a forest or taking a leisurely stroll on the beach reduces stress levels and invites peace, calm, clarity, and tranquility. Nature acts as a vehicle of inspiration, further influencing our actions, behaviour, and cognitive pathways for the better.
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Spiritual Benefits
Belonging – that is what a connection with nature is all about. We are all from the Earth, we all call this planet our sole home and life-giver. We are actually just the universe experiencing itself. And since we are all one, all connected on the most basic of levels and existence, we feel right at home when we’re in the welcoming grasp of nature. A connection with nature is a reconnection with our core. When immersing ourselves in a natural environment, we invite the intention of not only going within but zooming out. We’re able to reflect on our lives and life as a whole, just like peering into a river and seeing not only our reflections but what lies beneath the surface – a powerful force of something unknown but innate.
We as humans are constantly searching for the answers to questions we might not even be able to formulate. What are we doing here? What is reality? What is my purpose? While we don’t have these answers, and while we may never retrieve them, nature is the unspoken truth, the starting and ending point, the cycle of life incarnate.
However, nature is free and we, therefore, overexploit it. It gives to us because we are nature’s children – an extension of itself. It’s time we learned to appreciate it and help it thrive alongside our human evolution and progress.
Source: Source: Georgia Carter, Mindful Meanderer
Why is nature so important for humans? The basics of ecosystem services
https://www.callawaygardens.com/blog/why-human-interaction-with-nature-is-important/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3709294/