Bushcraft as Therapy, But Don't Commoditize Nature
There is a large body of research that indicates contact with nature is good for your mental health. I have direct experience, witnessing how conservation activities directly impacted patients in several acute psychiatric wards. A patient who had been struggling with acute anxiety disorder, and who was nearly catatonic became animated when digging, and after 20 minutes said that for the 1st time in his life, his anxiety was gone! Now called Eco-therapy, more formalised approaches to leveraging the special qualities of nature, forest bathing, or as it was first coined in Japanese, shinrin yoku , have started to grow in momentum in the American and British cultural zeitgeist as a passive consumer product . The practice is to surround oneself in nature, mindful of sight, sound, and smell. It is a passive activity requiring zero interaction with the environment. Climate Anxiety Climate anxiety may become one of the major drivers of anxiety disorders and depression, and is full...