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Back to sanity: the power of nature

(Super Consciousness | Steve Taylor) In recent years, researchers have become aware of a powerful new kind of therapy, which is just as effective against depression as traditional psychotherapy or medication. And you don’t have to pay $100 a session for this therapy. It’s completely free, and is completely accessible, to anyone at anytime. It’s not even a new therapy either; in fact, it’s even older than the human race.

Back to sanity

This is ecotherapy — contact with nature. A few years ago researchers at the University of Essex in 2007 found that, of a group of people suffering from depression, ninety percent felt a higher level of self-esteem after a walk through a country park, and almost three-quarters felt less depressed. Another survey by the same research team found that ninety-four percent of people with mental illnesses believed that contact with nature put them in a more positive mood. Since then, in the UK contact with nature has been increasingly used as a therapy by mental health professionals.

Awakening experiences

But as well as helping us to heal our minds, contact with nature can transform our state of being. For several years, I have done research into higher states of consciousness, or “awakening experiences.” These are moments when the vision of our surroundings becomes more intense, so that they become more beautiful and meaningful than normal and we feel a sense of connectedness to them and towards other people, the world may somehow seem harmonious and meaningful, and a sense of well-being fills us. These are sometimes called spiritual experiences, but I prefer “awakening experiences” because the term “spiritual” has so many different meanings to people. And my research consistently shows that contact with nature is one of the most frequent triggers of awakening experiences, in fact, around twenty percent of them.

The power of Ecotherapy

This is certainly true for me. I have what you could call “low intensity awakening experiences” very frequently when I’m amongst nature. If I go walking in the countryside on my own — it doesn’t happen so often with other people — there usually comes a point when a feeling of well-being begins to well up inside me, and when the trees and the fields and the sky around me seem to be more alive and beautiful, and to be shining with a new radiance. The clouds above me seem to be moving with a dramatic beauty, and I have a sense that all is well.

Of course, countless poets have written of the states of awe and ecstasy they’ve experienced whilst alone with nature, too. This is what William Wordsworth’s poetry is most famous for, his sense that nature is pervaded with what he called “a motion and a spirit which rolls through all,” a benign unifying presence, which he called “a spirit which rolls through all thinking things, and all objects of thought” and the joy and serenity he describes while contemplating it. Other poets like Walt Whitman, D.H. Lawrence, Emerson, William Blake and W.B. Yeats have also left us many descriptions of the sense of meaning, harmony and inner joy they experienced while contemplating natural scenes.

Why does nature have this effect on us?

It’s not surprising that it is therapeutic when you consider that the human race — and all our evolutionary forebearers — have been closely bonded with nature for all our existence. It’s only in recent times that many of us have been confined to man-made environments, so for us contact with green spaces is like going back home, and fills us with the same sense of safety and belonging.

But the main reason why nature can heal and transform us, I believe, is because of its calming and mind-quietening effect. In nature, our minds process a lot less information than normal, and they aren’t busy wearing themselves out by concentrating. And most importantly, the beauty and majesty of nature acts a little like a mantra in meditation, slowing down the normal thought chatter which runs chaotically through our minds. As a result, an inner stillness and energy fills us, generating a glow of being and intensifying our perceptions. (See Waking From Sleep for a fuller discussion of this.)

So the next time you feel depressed or frustrated, don’t plump for retail therapy or mood-altering medication — put on your walking boots and try ecotherapy instead. You may not just get a boost of well-being, but an awakening experience as well.

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About the Author:
Steve Taylor is the author of several books on psychology and spirituality, including Waking From Sleep, The Fall, Out of the Darkness and his new book, Back to Sanity. His work has been described by Eckhart Tolle as “an important contribution to the shift in consciousness which is happening on our planet at present.” He is also a lecturer in psychology at Leeds Metropolitan University.The aim of Steve’s work is to support and encourage a shift in human consciousness. His articles and essays have appeared in many academic journals, magazines and newspapers, including The Journal of Humanistic Psychology, The Journal of Consciousness Studies, The Journal of Transpersonal Psychology, Psychologies and Natural Health. Steve’s website is www.stevenmtaylor.co.u

Source: Super Consciousness


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