Category: Nature & The Great Outdoors

  • Destress for Your Health: Get Outside in Green Spaces and Other Ways to Calm the Heck Down

    Destress for Your Health: Get Outside in Green Spaces and Other Ways to Calm the Heck Down

    Hiking Fort Delaware

     

    I felt my lungs inflate with the onrush of scenery—
    air, mountains, trees, people.

    I thought, “This is what it is to be happy.”

    ― Sylvia Plath, The Bell Jar

     

    April is National Stress Awareness Month. I think most of us are pretty aware of stress already, but perhaps less armed with ways to fight it. Or, maybe like me, you’re aware of that too; just really pretty awful about taking that knowledge and applying it to your own daily life.

    Do as I say, not as I usually do.

     

    off-with-her-head

     

    We know that chronic stress is hurting us mentally and emotionally, but it affects us physically too. Studies suggest that living in a constant state of heightened stress can:

    • have adverse effects on our hearts, increasing heart attack risk;
    • dampen our immune system;
    • age our cells faster;
    • make us more likely to develop diabetes;
    • even shrink the brain.

    The hormone cortisol is released during that “fight or flight” reaction (and chronic stress means you’re always on the verge of fight or flight), and too much of it leads to all kinds of bad stuff: insulin imbalances, raised blood pressure, inflammatory response, impaired cognition. You need to relax and rejuvenate after releasing cortisol, or you’re going to wind up gaining weight or unable to lose it, more susceptible to illness, with a fuzzy brain and bad memory.

    And it’s not just you, folks. Stress is contagious.

    And it’s not just now. Your stress levels today (and how you cope with them) are an indicator of your health TEN YEARS FROM NOW.

    So:

    for your mental, emotional and physical health…

    for the stress levels of those around you…

    and for the state of your health a decade from now…

    you (and I) really need to get a grip.

     

    What can we do to fight chronic stress?

    Luckily the time of year is conducive to one way of lifting anxiety: getting outdoors and into green spaces. You know you wanna anyway, just do it! Recent research supports what we knew at heart already about the health benefits of nature: a walk in the park decreases frustration. Brain waves actually resemble those in a meditative state.

    That’s a good thing, since meditation— the mental act of disengaging from your worries and instead focusing on the present moment— has been correlated with lowered levels of cortisol.

     

    Can’t get outside? Some other quick destressing ideas:

    Spend some time with a furry friend: they’ve been shown to lower stress responses.

    Or maybe a Downward Dog: it’s commonly believed that yoga relieves stress; I like this neuroscientist’s argument that it’s because yoga retrains the way we react to stressful situations.

    A little night (or day) music: relaxing music can be as effective as medication for reducing cortisol and anxiety.

    Hug it out: I’ve heard it takes 6 seconds for a hug to bring on the endorphins; maybe go a little bit longer to be on the safe side. But there are more methods to harvest the power of therapeutic touch— holding hands, massage, and a bit of hanky panky also goes a long way towards stress relief.

    Fake it until you make it: the act of smiling has physical benefits beyond carving handsome laugh lines. Smile the stress away.

     

    Frankly, it’s all about creating a little white space in your life to gain perspective. When we go-go-go, everything seems stressful. The problem is that most of us go-go-go 24/7 and we’ve forgotten how to stop-stop-stop. Heck, I even read the other day that impulse purchases in checkout lines have gone down because we can’t stop checking our smartphones during that “downtime.”

     

     

    How’re your stress levels? How do you decompress?

     

     

     

    *Photo taken hiking at Fort Delaware. They were all out of Union caps & flags, don’t judge.*

     

     

  • Two Walks in the Woods

    Two Walks in the Woods

    hiking with kids

    Into the woods, each time you go,
    There’s more to learn of what you know.

    -Stephen Sondheim, Into the Woods

     

    We live on the border of a nature preserve— we have trails starting right off our property that connect with state park bike trails and foot paths that sprawl all over Delaware and Pennsylvania.

    We’re extremely lucky, but we really haven’t ever taken full advantage of these resources that are literally right in our backyard. So, the first weekend of March we ponied up for a Delaware parks license (good for all the DE state parks) and hit the trail.

     

    hiking with dogs

     

    Indulging in my favorite— tossing pebbles in the creek.

    This was Karma’s first walk in the woods and I’m pretty sure she loved it. Everyone we passed was taken by the sight of a Saint Bernard trotting along the trail.

     

    white clay creek

     

    There’s all sorts of cool things to see in White Clay Creek State Park; here we were looking at the remains of an old bridge. Jimmy seemed upset that he couldn’t see what we were looking at (Karma, of course, is just as tall as the kids when she’s up on her hind legs), so Jake gave him a lift.

     

    tree sign

     

    I love stuff like this— flowers growing from cracks in sidewalk, birds nesting in the crooks and crannies of building facades— visions of nature reclaiming its territory.

     

    arc corner monument

     

    The next weekend we hiked out to the Arc Corner Monument, where Delaware meets Pennsylvania at the end of the curve; an area called the Wedge. (Picture shows either side of the monument. I didn’t take a photo of the top as it was covered with bird poop.) It is, I think, one of the boundaries of the Mason-Dixon line.

    This video goes into how the Mason-Dixon wasn’t a line so much as 3 line segments or a curve, and attempts to illustrate where the Mason-Dixon hits in this area. I say attempts because I watched it twice and I’m still not sure I’ve completely got it.

     

     

    Interesting fact from the video that I didn’t know even though I grew up in Delaware: since DE never seceded from the Union and was considered a “Northern” state, the slaves held there weren’t freed when Lincoln emancipated the South. When I read a bit more about it, I found that DE seemed progressive on the slavery issue— it was early to ban slave imports and slaves sold out-of-state were automatically freed— but that was more to keep in-state slave trade profitable. Delaware had the largest (proportionally speaking) free black population of any state, but also had really horrid attitudes and codes of conduct towards them. Perhaps unsurprisingly, not something they really emphasized in history class.

    Anywho, our next hike will be to the Tri-Corner, where Delaware, Pennsylvania and Maryland all meet. When I explain where I live, I like to say “within hiking distance of the DE-PA-MD tricorner;” even locally, this is a geographically confusing idea to a lot of people. Anyway, you can probably throw a rock or a carefully-banked paper airplane into DE from our backyard.

     

    400px-Delaware-wedge

    Fun with maps!

     

    Unlike the week before, which was pretty windy and bitter, this second hike was warm and filled with sunshine; I stripped down to my tank top and was still sweaty. It’s funny how 50 degrees in March can feel like heaven, but 65 during the summer means long sleeves and sweatpants.

     

    hike

     Nature-made clubhouse?

     

    rock climbing kids

    Rock formations = nature’s junge gyms

     

    hike3

     

    “I bet there’s good eatin’ on that fresh grass,” Jeff said. “Yeah?!” I replied, thinking of ramps and garlic scapes and a possible delicious, albeit illegal, bounty.

    “For, like, deer,” he finished. Oh. Right.

    The first greens of spring are amazing, they don’t even seem real. So bright and electric and full of vibrant life.

    We set out into the woods for a bit of exercise, a bit of history. But for me the best part was seeing the signs of spring, keeping me going through those last few wet, cold and dreary days of winter.

     

    Image (8)
     

    “Into the woods, each time you go
    There’s more to learn of what you know.”

     

    It’s true. It doesn’t matter how many times you go into the wood, you always take something new away.

    Even if it’s just a renewed hope that you can get through this— whatever “this” means to you right now.

     

    It’s the first day of spring, one of the most joyous days of the year for me.

    I can’t wait to get outside.

     

     

  • Wordless Wednesday: Crocuses

    Wordless Wednesday: Crocuses

    crocuses

     

    It takes courage to be crocus minded.

    God, I would rather wait till June, like wise roses,
    when the hazards of winter are safely behind, and I am expected
    and everything is ready for roses.

    But crocuses? Highly irregular.
    Knifing through hard-frozen ground and snow, sticking their necks out,
    because they believe in Spring
    and have something personal and emphatic to say about it.

    ―Jo Sorley

     

    Not sure how I’ve never seen this quote before, but I love it very much.

    May we all be brave like crocuses.