Back in the 1980s, the Japanese were stressed out. The cities were booming, the economy was flourishing, and competition was stiff. If you wanted to get ahead, or even keep your head above water, you had to work harder than the next 25,000 guys.
You'd go to work, grind all day and into the night, sleep in the office for four hours, and start again before sunrise. It was expected and even considered dishonorable not to do so.
Not surprisingly, a new word soon entered the lexicon: "karoshi." It means death by overwork. Luckily, not long after, an old word resurfaced: "shinrin-yoku" – forest bathing.
Forest bathing is simply spending time in the woods, with a few rules. It's a type of nature therapy and hugely popular in modern-day Japan. Science has even started to take a closer look at the practice.
To "take a bath" in the forest, you just find yourself some nature, leave your phone in the car, and go wandering. Dr. Qing Lim, says:
"This is not exercise, or hiking, or jogging. It's simply being in nature, connecting with it through our senses of sight, hearing, taste, smell, and touch... It doesn't matter if you do not get anywhere. You are not going anywhere."
The idea is to "let the forest in." Take deep breaths, listen, touch trees, explore, or just sit quietly. And the weather doesn't matter. Different seasons stimulate the senses in new ways. Dr. Lim recommends two-hour "baths" whenever you get the chance.
There's a lot of crunchy-granola language in this field of study, but don't let that throw you off. Practitioners claim that the sense of calming relaxation reduces stress and allows you to connect with nature and "cross the bridge to happiness."
But multiple scientific studies seem to support the practice too. Here's a summary:
And although not mentioned in the studies, it's easy to make the deductive leap and say that impulsive decision making doesn't exactly bode well with making good nutrition choices.
When it comes to fitness, we know that excess stress slams the brakes on everything from muscle gain to fat loss. A certain workout and diet plan can work great if you're not stressed, but the very same plan won't work at all if you're under crushing stress. As T Nation contributor Dr. Jade Teta says, "The metabolism is nothing but one big stress barometer." (See: How to Train Your Metabolism.)
According to the EPA, Americans spend 93 percent of their time indoors. Back in the day, not many people needed to make time to purposefully exercise because their daily life WAS exercise. Today, not so much. So we go to the gym to make up for the lack of physical labor.
Should we adopt that same approach when it comes to nature? Does a bear shit in the woods? (Go find out.)
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