Wednesday, September 11, 2024

Day 4399: Can Trees Heal? and The Morton Arboretum

     

"Separation": junk mail collage.

 




  

Want music?


    

Click : Lionel Richie, You Are.

 


  

 

 
2GN2S


Can Trees Heal You?



Since I was young, I have always felt that there is  direct correlation between trees and people. It made sense to me that being raised among concrete with few if any trees, made the person hard. 


Now the article, Sonja Sudimac grew up immersed in nature. Belgrade, Serbia, where she is from, is packed with lush forested parks and bordered by the mighty Danube and Sava Rivers. But when Sudimac traveled in Europe and the United States as an adult, she realized many cities lacked the trees and waters of her childhood. Now an environmental neuroscience researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in Berlin, Sudimac was curious how exposure to nature shapes the brain. 
Over the past decade, scientists have published a substantive body of research that suggests nature enhances working memory, regulates our emotions, increases self-reliance, and fosters creativity. Yet most of these studies rely on participants’ subjective reports about their feelings after exposure. Sudimac and fellow researchers Simone Kühn and Vera Scale wanted to see if there was a causal connection between nature and well-being. “You can’t fake the results you get from the brain,” says Sudimac.


In 2022, the trio of researchers published the results of an experiment they ran in Berlin, looking at how a walk alone in the woods versus a stroll in the city affects activity in the amygdala. The part of the brain linked to fear, anxiety, and other emotions, the amygdala is typically monitored with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) machines. A previous study had shown that the amygdala is more activated during a stressful task among city residents than among country residents, but no study had examined the brain before and after a person took a walk in a natural versus urban environment. The article continues, here.


Nature could help “restore individuals from stress.”







The Morton Arboretum




The Morton Arboretum is located in Illinois, in the United States.
It is a public garden, and an outdoor museum with a library, a herbarium, and a program in tree research including the Center for Tree Science! It is has trails to take through, it is 16 miles, and takes 25 minutes to drive through. What beautiful art and a beautiful place to visit in the United States of America.








https://mortonarb.org/




 

  
 
A 2  minute video, Inseprable,  here
 
 
 

  
 
Just because ...
  
Black-headed Grosbeak

 
  


 

Monday's Smiles ...  




 



  

 





 
 



   


   


   

 
 
 






1 comment:

elenor said...

Of course I followed your link, Jacki, to read about the results Sonja Sudimac achieved in her studies. As we often take walks in nature I only can agree with the positive results she got. Nature helps and heals.