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Healing the Split From Nature: Accepting Earth’s Guidance

May 30, 2025 ● By Marlaina Donato
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Gardeners have long understood that getting their hands in the earth makes them feel better, and scientific research supports this belief. Studies of the soil-dwelling bacterium Mycobacterium vaccae have linked the practice to improved mood, as well as reduced stress and anxiety, because it can trigger the release of serotonin. Other reported benefits include , relief from skin allergies and reduced lung cancer-related nausea and pain.

Data researchers at Statista report that a mere 8 percent of our lives is spent outdoors, leading to what author Richard Louv calls nature-deficit disorder, a phenomenon that compromises the well-being of both children and adults. According to Pam Montgomery, author of Co-Creating with Nature: Healing the Wound of Separation, “We are a part of nature, and yet, we have fallen into this deep amnesia where we have forgotten that we are kin to the tree, the river, the mountain and all of life. Being separated from the source of one’s sustenance creates a deep chronic level of stress, which affects us on all levels.”

Whether we nurture houseplants, capture seasonal outdoor photographs, doodle in a nature journal, plant patio flowers or simply stroll a local park, reconnecting with living organisms can bolster our immune system, enhance cognitive function and improve mental well-being.

 

Green Allies

A 2020 review published in Frontiers in Psychology shows that as little as 10 to 20 minutes of time spent in nature can improved the mental health of college-aged adults. Notably, being outdoors in urbanized settings did not yield comparable benefits. Furthermore, a 2019 study published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health revealed improved attention and focus among 23 students aged 11 to 13 years that studied with plants in the classroom.

“Our bodies evolved in the natural world, and, for many basic functions, we took our cues from the natural world—light levels, day length, plentifulness of resources. However, we now spend over 90 percent of our time in climate-controlled buildings with artificial light, so we are cut off from these cues,” says Cynthia McPherson Frantz, chair of the department of psychology at Oberlin College, in Ohio.

Montgomery concurs, noting, “Because we are constantly surrounded by artificial electro-magnetic fields (EMFs) like those of cell phones, computers and alternating current, instead of the natural EMFs of the forest, streams, Earth, ocean, birdsong, et cetera, our energy bodies become full of static, and we lose the ability to hear the messages and receive the ‘touches’ from nature.” For Montgomery, who maintains a shamanic partnership with the natural world, plants are conscious beings, and the Earth is calling us back into relationship, reciprocity and reverence.

 

Forest Frequencies

Communing with nature among the redwoods was medicine for Ellen Dee Davidson, author of Sacred Forest Bathing: The Healing Power of Ancient Trees and Wild Places. “The main difference between forest bathing and an ordinary walk, hike or camping trip is the quality of attention we bring to the environment,” she explains. “By using our senses to focus on what we see, hear, smell, taste or touch, we become more present to our surroundings.”

Davidson attributes her recovery from fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue, anxiety and insomnia to the therapeutic effects of spending time in the trees. “Part of why immersing ourselves in nature is so healing is that we can be alone but not alone. We are part of the entangled weave of life,” she shares.

In a society where sensitivity is often seen as a liability, time spent with trees has taught Davidson how to protect her sensitive nature, giving herself permission to assert healthy boundaries and exercise self-compassion. She also advocates for mindful breathing exercises, noting, “We’re always connected to nature through our breath.”

Montgomery elaborates on the concept of reciprocal breathing, explaining, “We breathe in oxygen from the plants, trees and sea vegetables and breathe out carbon dioxide, which the plants absorb. So, the practice is to bring into your awareness a favorite plant or tree that you engage in reciprocal breathing with, becoming aware that you are the breath of another being.”

Frantz suggests that tapping into nature’s vitality can be as simple as finding a corner of nature to study and check in with every day. “This pocket of nature doesn’t have to be big,” she says. “It could be the squirrel that lives in the tree outside your window, or the tree itself.”

 

Forest Bathing Benefits

In Japan, shinrin-yoku, or “taking in the forest atmosphere,” emphasizes spending time among trees and was officially incorporated into a national health program by the government in 1982. A 2022 study published in BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies indicates that forest bathing reduced blood pressure and stress hormone levels among participants compared to other environments.


Marlaina Donato is an author and multimedia expressionist. Connect at WildflowersAndWoodSmoke.com.


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