You might ask, “What’s that thing you’re holding? Is it a fuzzy squirrel? Is this your sick, deranged way of reconnecting with nature?” No, it’s just my dead cat. Err...sorry, I mean my deadcat. The fuzzy exterior shields the microphone from the wind. Normally I’d try to keep the mic out of frame, but since I was filming solo out in the field, that was the lightest and easiest way to roll. Did that bug you? Let me know! I’m genuinely interested.
It’s funny, I seem to be sensitive to certain noise environments. If sound reverberates, I find it really bothersome. Others seem to not be much of an issue. But I’ll take a quiet desert any day of the week. 😊
You never see angry hippies. Having moved from a city to the coast I can 100% confirm that being out and about in nature has a calming effect on your state of mind. I'm not saying city industry should be demonised, but we need to find more ways of introducing plants into comcrete urban environments. Lets have plants growing up buildings and grass on roofs. Basically, plants and trees should be everywhere. Even in our homes.
We are natural beings. We wear clothes, learn behaviours, try to be civilized. But underneath on a very primal level we are Still animals. Animals should not cage themselves. We are clever animals, perhaps at times to clever for our own good. Plants heal. We are all natural beings, some just have a habit of forgetting!
I love nature because it scares me and excited me and humbles me which is really important because we need to remember as humans that we are not the sole important component of our planet and nature deserves our respect
I agree with this 100%. I live in a small city and work downtown, but grew up in a beautiful countryside. There is not a single secluded park close by. The tiny parks we have are always filled with families with screaming children and their dogs sh**ting everywhere. The only way to get to a "real" park is to drive through stressful highways for an hour. I noticed my whole life has changed since living in the city - My anxiety worsened, I now have depression, and chronic stress. The only way I can escape is to watch nature videos online... 😔
I walk on average 50 miles a week. I live in Fl. There are many parks and nature preserves near me. Even though I visit the same parks often the trails offer something new each time. Walking in nature engages all my senses while freeing my mind free solve problems or at least explore my options. It is difficult to list all the benefits.
Think about a city. Tall or short buildings, wide or narrow streets. All have sharp, crisp 90 degree corners - it's a human thing. The corners show off our efficiency and precision. The buildings stand fixed, not swaying in the breeze (hopefully). Lastly, most cityscapes are predominantly grey. Now think about a forest, stream, desert - any natural setting. Hardly any crisp straight lines or 90 degree angles. Nature works with other nature, like a tree arching over a meandering brook, or boulders bushing up through the slope of a hilltop. Grey is a desert color, almost a warning. We are the result of countless generations of humans living in a natural world. Sharp straight lines certainly occur in nature, like fractured rock formations, but they're the exception. I believe that deep inside, we are unnerved by cityscapes and crave the satisfaction of wavy tree limbs, ridge-lines, and the shores of a lake.
Read somewhere about an experiment on astronauts where they were isolated on Earth for a long time together just to see how their brain behaves in such environment. So they got depressed and all that. But the the thing is, when they were introduced to gardening their health and relationships very much improved. Someone should find that study ... :)
"Gardening for Therapeutic People-Plant Interactions during Long-Duration Space Missions" Thanks. Now I've got an idea for my 1st science fiction novel.
I just love the vibe of this video, so calming and southing, he speaks slowly and clearly, without any background music, it makes me feel safe and relax... This is such a great video.
I fantasize about being with nature. Having a good bond with it, stalking and hunting animals, and exploring every path. When I do that my mood goes up for days
I love our mother - the Nature, and I respect her laws. So in nature I always walk barefoot 👣. Only in this way can I be in direct contact with her ... and feel her sweet bioenergy ... and tell her that I love her ... and thank her ~ Namaste 🙏 !
One thing I absolutely recommend is buying a clean paint roller tray (the ones with a ramp/slope) and fill it with cold water and put it on top of a shed roof of somewhere high they can reach, they LOVE bathing in it when it's hot, i always see a small family of birds coming to it, make sure to clean and refill the tray, though!
Cool video. People like new and diverse things and nature like in the forest is all different and not uniform like buildings in the city. Nature is also less dense with humans versus a city, so people don’t have to track or interact as much which takes energy. An interesting sidenote my wife and I were in New York during the blizzard last year when they close the city down. We walked around in the middle of sixth Avenue, made snow angles, there was hardly anybody out it was really beautiful walking around looking at the different buildings and open areas. It became nature. Anyway. Thx cool video
Such a wonderful narrative, and the overall flow of the video. Thanks for creating this video and it will be helpful for my current research in ecotherapy.
One of the core principals of The Trailhead Homestead, a therapy farm in Alaska. One of their mandatory activities with the kids in their program is a nature walk.
..strange, i live in a small country town in Australia and born on a farm in Wales but lately i go swimming alone in the lake or walking and it makes me feel stressed, lonely depressed and lost. i rush home hopefully to feeling normal ..
Does the research suggesting spending time in nature control for SES? Like if you have time to spend in nature, that implies you have time to spend on things other than earning income to support one's self and one's family. If there is a lack of stress due to not having to worry about putting food on the table, then of course there will be lower incidence of mental illness.
Where I live, there is lots and lots of trees everywhere, it look like a forest, but it's not, I like going to the neighborhood block behind my house, it's very pretty, so many trees everywhere.
Actually, research has shown that the mere act of touching soil increases the amount of neurons firing in your brain. This supports the theory of biophilia. I researched this for a scholarship project in my Experiential learning Initiatives class.
I have a theory that one of the reasons it feels good to be outside is because it feels safer. Not because of the explanation in this video, but because open spaces spaces mean there's escape routes everywhere, and maybe you could see danger coming. Inside you don't know what's coming, and you're kind of trapped in way. Of course not that relevant in the modern world, but it could be a remnant of evolution.
Thank you for this researched commentary. You come across as a nature sceptic though, or was it just the quality of evidence that you are sceptical about? Do you know of any evidence comparing life quality of urban vs rural dwellers?
Most of this seems entirely fanciful. Cities just contain stressors that nature doesn't. Most notably pulmonary, because cities are dense with carbon dioxide, and doubly so inside. Then incessant, inexplicable ambient noise. And a host of light issues from melatonin production to night pollution to focus distances. And all of these therapies seem to boil down to me time, away from stressors. Barring the effects of modest physical activity, I don't see their edge over, say, crocheting or any other hobby / vacation. The bootcamps seem an exception to this, but they are agressively removing the social context that encouraged the undesirable behaviour, and I think it's fair to credit the removal over the redbud.
Hey Diametheus! Thanks for your comment. Let me go through it and address your concerns. I think your points about the stressors of city life actually give credence to the Attention Restoration Theory! You're essentially saying that city life has unique stressors that are not present in nature. If that is your preferred theory for why nature is beneficial, then it makes sense that you'd see that as the beneficial part of ecotherapy. As for their "edge" over other hobbies, I don't understand why it has to be a competition. I certainly don't want it to come across that way. Although I dare you to try to find a meta-analysis on the mental benefits of crocheting! Lol. Hobbies are good for our mental health, too. But if just *being* in nature makes you feel better, and research backs it up, then...it works. I recommend you take a look at the research if you're still not convinced. There are a bunch of sources in the description. In any case, I'm not sure most of this is fanciful at all! (Side note, I tried to look up the saying "X over the redbud" because I thought it sounded like a fun adage, but could not find anything. Is this a common saying or did you create it?)
@@neurotransmissions I can maybe grant you that, say, a 22dB hum consumes directed attention, but it feels a stretch to apply that to breathing too much CO2 in your unventilated bedroom or walking under streetlights. And how ART seems to have the same structure as ego depletion makes me squeamish. Whether nature makes people happy seems an issue of dosage: before the romantics, nature mostly conjured dread of hunger, exposure, predation, infection, drowning, and just having an accident alone. Urbanites do feel better visiting, but it sure'd be nice to know what the edge is, if any. Both because as a treatment it's rather expensive due to transport and opportunity costs so functional alternatives matter, and because any answer would have city planning or environmental implications. Despite the criminal dearth of crocheting research, a lot of the questions in your linked measures seem rephraseable to "do you enjoy not working?" and "Is exercise good?" due to sample specifics. I would like to see whether results hold with populations of urban outdoor workers like builders and mailmen, and with rural workers like tobacco pickers and beekeepers before I feel it's universal enough to be commonly prescribed or even encouraged via public policy. Redbud was just the most assonant tree I could come up with, which may explain why my rapping career never took off.
I don't like this use of the word "nature". It's similar to asking for food "without chemicals" (which would actually mean, no food at all). Humans are part of nature, and so by extension everything human-made is too. I am not sure what better word to use here... Maybe "outdoors", "wilderness"... or rephrasing and using an activity to describe it, "hiking" perhaps?
Hmmm, I can see your point, and I think that’s fair. When I think of nature, I think of everything that is not built/human-made. I would also then lump in certain human-made things like parks which are meant to resemble the natural world, incorporate natural resources, and welcome various life forms to use it as well.
You might ask, “What’s that thing you’re holding? Is it a fuzzy squirrel? Is this your sick, deranged way of reconnecting with nature?” No, it’s just my dead cat. Err...sorry, I mean my deadcat. The fuzzy exterior shields the microphone from the wind. Normally I’d try to keep the mic out of frame, but since I was filming solo out in the field, that was the lightest and easiest way to roll. Did that bug you? Let me know! I’m genuinely interested.
not at all
I've seen those mics many times, it did not bother me. I thought oh interesting, that is the kind of mic he is using.
It would have been cooler if it was fluorescent pink.
1¹0
🥰🥰🥰🥰
I'm glad you brought up the silence. I don't think most of us realize how noise pollution negatively affects our health.
It’s funny, I seem to be sensitive to certain noise environments. If sound reverberates, I find it really bothersome. Others seem to not be much of an issue. But I’ll take a quiet desert any day of the week. 😊
complete silence is also bad
@@neurotransmissions you should know complete silence is bad for normies like yourself also.. look up the most quiet place in the world
Oh no, someone being pedantic and calling me a normie? We got a badass here!
It's actually quite annoying to hear planes and cars driving by even though I am in a massive park closer to the country side than the city
You never see angry hippies. Having moved from a city to the coast I can 100% confirm that being out and about in nature has a calming effect on your state of mind. I'm not saying city industry should be demonised, but we need to find more ways of introducing plants into comcrete urban environments. Lets have plants growing up buildings and grass on roofs. Basically, plants and trees should be everywhere. Even in our homes.
The most significant change to me is the scent landscape when I'm in nature. Nature smells alive, and that makes me feel more alive, too
Nature is absolutely unique, and it is a great medication for stress.
"Nature is absolutely unique". Just lol...
And it's visually stimulating to look at.
We are natural beings. We wear clothes, learn behaviours, try to be civilized. But underneath on a very primal level we are Still animals. Animals should not cage themselves. We are clever animals, perhaps at times to clever for our own good. Plants heal. We are all natural beings, some just have a habit of forgetting!
i camped out in the woods for 3 months.
Best time of my life and the best decision i ever made.
The forest creatures were very kind.
I love nature because it scares me and excited me and humbles me which is really important because we need to remember as humans that we are not the sole important component of our planet and nature deserves our respect
I agree with this 100%. I live in a small city and work downtown, but grew up in a beautiful countryside. There is not a single secluded park close by. The tiny parks we have are always filled with families with screaming children and their dogs sh**ting everywhere. The only way to get to a "real" park is to drive through stressful highways for an hour. I noticed my whole life has changed since living in the city - My anxiety worsened, I now have depression, and chronic stress. The only way I can escape is to watch nature videos online... 😔
Yeah I think too but go to the forest is good
I agree with you
I walk on average 50 miles a week. I live in Fl. There are many parks and nature preserves near me. Even though I visit the same parks often the trails offer something new each time. Walking in nature engages all my senses while freeing my mind free solve problems or at least explore my options. It is difficult to list all the benefits.
I can personally attest to managing depression with hiking
Think about a city. Tall or short buildings, wide or narrow streets. All have sharp, crisp 90 degree corners - it's a human thing. The corners show off our efficiency and precision. The buildings stand fixed, not swaying in the breeze (hopefully). Lastly, most cityscapes are predominantly grey.
Now think about a forest, stream, desert - any natural setting. Hardly any crisp straight lines or 90 degree angles. Nature works with other nature, like a tree arching over a meandering brook, or boulders bushing up through the slope of a hilltop. Grey is a desert color, almost a warning.
We are the result of countless generations of humans living in a natural world. Sharp straight lines certainly occur in nature, like fractured rock formations, but they're the exception. I believe that deep inside, we are unnerved by cityscapes and crave the satisfaction of wavy tree limbs, ridge-lines, and the shores of a lake.
Read somewhere about an experiment on astronauts where they were isolated on Earth for a long time together just to see how their brain behaves in such environment. So they got depressed and all that. But the the thing is, when they were introduced to gardening their health and relationships very much improved. Someone should find that study ... :)
You find it asshole. Youre the one who mentioned it
"Gardening for Therapeutic People-Plant Interactions during Long-Duration Space Missions"
Thanks. Now I've got an idea for my 1st science fiction novel.
I just love the vibe of this video, so calming and southing, he speaks slowly and clearly, without any background music, it makes me feel safe and relax... This is such a great video.
Agree
I fantasize about being with nature. Having a good bond with it, stalking and hunting animals, and exploring every path. When I do that my mood goes up for days
Hunting animals? You fantasize about killing living beings? I just don’t get it.
@@meauxx9863 I don’t remember writing that. Hunting is only to eat not for fun
Explains why I am out on a trial hiking or running every chance I get! Thanks😊
I love our mother - the Nature, and I respect her laws. So in nature I always walk barefoot 👣. Only in this way can I be in direct contact with her ... and feel her sweet bioenergy ... and tell her that I love her ... and thank her ~ Namaste 🙏 !
One thing I absolutely recommend is buying a clean paint roller tray (the ones with a ramp/slope) and fill it with cold water and put it on top of a shed roof of somewhere high they can reach, they LOVE bathing in it when it's hot, i always see a small family of birds coming to it, make sure to clean and refill the tray, though!
Well, I guess now I know what I'm doing, now that the weather's nice here in Portland.
Portland is gorgeous! We went hiking in the Columbia River Gorge and I could stay there forever. I wanna go back!
Cool video. People like new and diverse things and nature like in the forest is all different and not uniform like buildings in the city. Nature is also less dense with humans versus a city, so people don’t have to track or interact as much which takes energy. An interesting sidenote my wife and I were in New York during the blizzard last year when they close the city down. We walked around in the middle of sixth Avenue, made snow angles, there was hardly anybody out it was really beautiful walking around looking at the different buildings and open areas. It became nature. Anyway. Thx cool video
Shinrin-Yoku! Lowers cortisol levels! ART and SRT go hand in hand.
Such a wonderful narrative, and the overall flow of the video. Thanks for creating this video and it will be helpful for my current research in ecotherapy.
Lovely vid, found it soothing to watch. And a great reminder to find some green.
One of the core principals of The Trailhead Homestead, a therapy farm in Alaska. One of their mandatory activities with the kids in their program is a nature walk.
I sure hope he came back for that mic. That's some expensive stuff he just left on the ground.
No one knows what happened to the mic. Some say it’s still lying on the ground to this day.
@@neurotransmissions zzzzzzzzzzzzz
Hi hun I don't know you can you tell me your name
@@stacyannmatthews2423 No
..strange, i live in a small country town in Australia and born on a farm in Wales but lately i go swimming alone in the lake or walking and it makes me feel stressed, lonely depressed and lost. i rush home hopefully to feeling normal ..
Singapore has Trees in their cities which is why the locals are happy.😊
I thought the microphone was a dusting brush for a solid two seconds in the first shot
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
what prevents you from doing outdoor activities in nature, in the mountains or parks ?
Fear of going out. Sometimes it's feeling undeserving too.
@@DeePeeZee I understand.
Maybe time, maybe money, maybe anxiety, etc. It can be a host of things.
Does the research suggesting spending time in nature control for SES? Like if you have time to spend in nature, that implies you have time to spend on things other than earning income to support one's self and one's family. If there is a lack of stress due to not having to worry about putting food on the table, then of course there will be lower incidence of mental illness.
*It's in our geeeeneeees*
Trueeee
Where I live, there is lots and lots of trees everywhere, it look like a forest, but it's not, I like going to the neighborhood block behind my house, it's very pretty, so many trees everywhere.
My dear brother thank you very much for your video
I find mountain Areas or Grasslands with some forest Relaxing especially large mountains Like in Canada or Switzerland
Actually, research has shown that the mere act of touching soil increases the amount of neurons firing in your brain. This supports the theory of biophilia. I researched this for a scholarship project in my Experiential learning Initiatives class.
This is so interesting! I gotta do some research too with this
Keep preaching this. I was happy when I was in the village. I am happy when i see green 💚 ☺️.
Perfect place to go with friends, i love nature
nature is great
It’s great to learn about all the theories and data that back and explains the positive experience most of us have in nature.
B'coz We need Nature but Nature don't need us!
Thank you for making and sharing this video
nature is good and help people to refresh mental health
one of the most beautiful video i have ever watched
I'm a get me a job in nature and live and work outdoors
Come to NZ most of our cities is filled with nature
nazi state
I have a theory that one of the reasons it feels good to be outside is because it feels safer. Not because of the explanation in this video, but because open spaces spaces mean there's escape routes everywhere, and maybe you could see danger coming. Inside you don't know what's coming, and you're kind of trapped in way. Of course not that relevant in the modern world, but it could be a remnant of evolution.
Nature def doesn’t feel safer you are vulnerable in nature not in a room
You look the type of guy who is very friendly and likes to go out in nature
Thank you so much! Shared on @OpenMediaOne Telegram channel.
Beautiful!!! Thanku for this video!!!
What a great video. I just subscribed to your channel. I'm going to use this in my Leisure Class I teach. Thank you!!!
i like nature
🥰
I love nature! Nice video!
Thanks for the video. 👍 ❤ God bless you always. Amen
I love it nice place and history
Too bad I get absolutely murdered by bugs whenever I go outside :|
I wish I had nature trails around me or lived somewhere like Oregon
2020: RIP mental health
Hiking trails a few times a week is far more effective for me than Lexapro on a good day.
Mysing so beautiful place thik you.
Nice video & the info as well :)
Brain predominantly on natural resources that feels heart that better as the nature.
Awesome job fellow triton
In this busy world getting back to nature keeps me sane and feeling myself
Cool video 😎
Healing
The whole reason I set, as a long term goal, having a tourism business
“I AM Mother Nature!”💙🙏🏽👸🏽⏰💦🦋
I agree 100%!!!!
Sharing
Thank you for this researched commentary. You come across as a nature sceptic though, or was it just the quality of evidence that you are sceptical about? Do you know of any evidence comparing life quality of urban vs rural dwellers?
Thanks for the great introduction to the topic. Please may you point the two meta-analysis mentioned in the video. thanks in advance!
Hey there! Check out the description for all the sources cited for the video. Hope that helps!
@@neurotransmissions Is sczophernia cureable from nature?
@@neurotransmissionsand
Lovely.
Yep!
I am from India, chennai
Nature is our natural habitat! Not concrete buildings...
Thank You
Nature always reminds of God.
Question. Does the brain create DMT when the pineal gland is dying?
There is no evidence it does. This remains pure speculation at this point in time.
I don't know, I've always felt like there were too many parks...
You will be the end of me!!!
Love nature!❤❤❤❤❤
YES!!!
Thanks youtube
Cùng nhau lâu day nhé mình đã ghé thăm nhà bạn cảm thấy rất thú vị quá đi
I am actually Forrest bathing right now 😉
Outside good. Inside bad.
Most of this seems entirely fanciful. Cities just contain stressors that nature doesn't. Most notably pulmonary, because cities are dense with carbon dioxide, and doubly so inside. Then incessant, inexplicable ambient noise. And a host of light issues from melatonin production to night pollution to focus distances. And all of these therapies seem to boil down to me time, away from stressors. Barring the effects of modest physical activity, I don't see their edge over, say, crocheting or any other hobby / vacation. The bootcamps seem an exception to this, but they are agressively removing the social context that encouraged the undesirable behaviour, and I think it's fair to credit the removal over the redbud.
Hey Diametheus! Thanks for your comment. Let me go through it and address your concerns. I think your points about the stressors of city life actually give credence to the Attention Restoration Theory! You're essentially saying that city life has unique stressors that are not present in nature. If that is your preferred theory for why nature is beneficial, then it makes sense that you'd see that as the beneficial part of ecotherapy. As for their "edge" over other hobbies, I don't understand why it has to be a competition. I certainly don't want it to come across that way. Although I dare you to try to find a meta-analysis on the mental benefits of crocheting! Lol. Hobbies are good for our mental health, too. But if just *being* in nature makes you feel better, and research backs it up, then...it works. I recommend you take a look at the research if you're still not convinced. There are a bunch of sources in the description. In any case, I'm not sure most of this is fanciful at all!
(Side note, I tried to look up the saying "X over the redbud" because I thought it sounded like a fun adage, but could not find anything. Is this a common saying or did you create it?)
@@neurotransmissions I can maybe grant you that, say, a 22dB hum consumes directed attention, but it feels a stretch to apply that to breathing too much CO2 in your unventilated bedroom or walking under streetlights. And how ART seems to have the same structure as ego depletion makes me squeamish.
Whether nature makes people happy seems an issue of dosage: before the romantics, nature mostly conjured dread of hunger, exposure, predation, infection, drowning, and just having an accident alone. Urbanites do feel better visiting, but it sure'd be nice to know what the edge is, if any. Both because as a treatment it's rather expensive due to transport and opportunity costs so functional alternatives matter, and because any answer would have city planning or environmental implications. Despite the criminal dearth of crocheting research, a lot of the questions in your linked measures seem rephraseable to "do you enjoy not working?" and "Is exercise good?" due to sample specifics. I would like to see whether results hold with populations of urban outdoor workers like builders and mailmen, and with rural workers like tobacco pickers and beekeepers before I feel it's universal enough to be commonly prescribed or even encouraged via public policy.
Redbud was just the most assonant tree I could come up with, which may explain why my rapping career never took off.
Nice walk up 😅
Next video: Why LSD on nature is good for your mental health.
I mean...maybe
Hello sir
God created nature
HI I'm also join in this moment
Hi
😀😀👍
the only thing i feel when in a park is boringness and disgust.
I don't like this use of the word "nature".
It's similar to asking for food "without chemicals" (which would actually mean, no food at all).
Humans are part of nature, and so by extension everything human-made is too.
I am not sure what better word to use here...
Maybe "outdoors", "wilderness"... or rephrasing and using an activity to describe it, "hiking" perhaps?
Hmmm, I can see your point, and I think that’s fair. When I think of nature, I think of everything that is not built/human-made. I would also then lump in certain human-made things like parks which are meant to resemble the natural world, incorporate natural resources, and welcome various life forms to use it as well.
Escaping human influence
Mampirr dari indo
Ded cat
It took 3 minutes and 28 seconds to get to the point of this video 😒
You cant bring the natural experience in a video