Forest bathing

Lately I’ve been spending as much time as I can outdoors. I’ve found that after a hike or even a short walk on the beach with Kona, I’m a little lighter and my mind is less crowded. 

My most favorite are the longer hikes through the quiet woods. I feel safe, mainly because of Kona, but also the peace that lives among the trees. I imagine the ancient wisdom that lives in the trees and how with each falling leaf, they pass on their magic to the growing plants below. 


In Japan, doctors actually recommend some patients to visit the woods in what has become Shinrin-yoku or, “forest bathing”. The concept, talked about here, speaks of restorative benefits to body and mind. 

After my time outdoors, I feel myself having shaken free the tough encrusted layers of the days and weeks before, like a snake that shed the skin that feels too small. 

I’m ready to let myself feel all the emotions that will come, and that I’m better prepared to handle them. I know the anxiety and depression will return from it’s waiting place on my horizon…but I know a place to come back to that can help. 


I’ve breathed in, and saved some of the peace I’ve found to carry with me. 

I hope others can find a way here to shed some of their weight…and let the wind through the trees carry it away. 

Gray Matter

Occasionally I’ll visit medical websites and read up on new studies and advances in the area of mental health. 

I’m so happy with the many studies being done with a serious approach to depression, anxiety and other illnesses. 

One in particular I read just this morning involves developing new techniques for studying changes in the brain of patients with mood disorders.

 Researchers believe that depression and anxiety disorders may cause structural and functional changes in the brain

To me this is such good news. 

If we can better understand how mood disorders work, we can better treat these patients. 

Yay for science 🙂