The Therapeutic Benefits of Nature

The Therapeutic Benefits of Nature

Whether it’s simply walking in a park, gardening, biking, kayaking, wildlife watching, or even just sitting with a view of greenspace, nature is good for what ails us.

Our physical, mental and emotional health is surprisingly co-dependent on interactions with our natural environment. Regular exposure delivers restorative benefits; a lack of it brings detrimental consequences.

In his book Last Child in the Woods, author Richard Louv describes the effects of what he called “nature-deficit disorder”: a distressing bundle of physical and emotional afflictions from the lack of personal interaction with nature—like low self-esteem, social anxieties, obesity, and cardiovascular diseases.

And he’s not a lone prophet crying in the wilderness: a growing body of worldwide research backs him up.????????

For children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), research shows that engagement with nature provides motor-sensory, emotional and social benefits. However, related issues—like sensory challenges, phobias, inappropriate behaviors, and safety concerns—may make the adventure a bit harder than just your average walk in the park. Of course, each child’s strengths and needs vary, but psychologists say nature exposure can be an effective intervention strategy.?

Beyond its calming attributes for children with ASD, nature can also be an exciting place to focus their exceptional powers of observation. The same single-mindedness that can master a narrow, arcane topic may also find fascination in the feel of a breeze, the ripples in a puddle, the rhythm of a katydid, the colors in a rainbow, the fragrance of a rose, or the textures and patterns in a pinecone.

Interacting with animals is another encouraging ASD-nature connection. Equine therapy uses horses and trained instructors to help the children calm, focus, think, talk, behave, and learn. Family pets can be a ready-at-any-time, home-based therapy. Studies have shown that children with autism who had a pet from a young age tended to have greater social skills. Other research verifies how social behaviors in children with ASD temporarily improve after even a short play period with a live animal.

Our family experience bears this all out. From the time our son was 5, we lived in the country, with nature literally out the door, and he often played and explored outside contentedly for long stretches. For a time, we had a knuckleheaded dog named Toby, which he loved and treated very well, as he did a series of multicolored cats. One year, he incubated bobwhite quail eggs and raised the chicks until they matured and we released them into our back field. Another year, he raised chickens. In all his animal interactions, he brought enthusiasm and a pleasant demeanor to his interest, and grew in his responsibilities for caring for them.

The American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry adds that caring for a pet can also help children develop nonverbal communication, compassion, empathy and trusting relationships. Along with their connection to nature, pets can also bring comfort contact for unmet physical and emotional needs.

Some simple, starting steps to introduce children with ASD to nature:

?????? Unstructured Play. Allow them to enjoy unstructured play in a natural area in their own way. Do not feel you must direct them; self-directed nature play builds creativity and problem solving. Let them stare at a leaf, if that’s what they like. Getting dirty is ok.

?????? Nearby Nature. Your natural area need not be a park or preserve set aside for such purposes. It can be a flower bed, a backyard tree or even some sticks and leaves. Start from where you and your child are both comfortable, and plan for incremental steps.

??????? Observe. Look for different kinds of wildlife or plants, even if it is through a window. Set up a birdfeeder or watch for squirrels. Let them count the number of butterflies, or how many different kinds of weeds they can find growing in the crack of the sidewalk. Nature is all around, even in urban areas, there to be noticed.

??????? Get Out and Do. Add small excursions as comfort and interest grows. Go on a nature scavenger hunt. Plan a trip to pick apples, strawberries or pumpkins. Try to identify constellations in the nighttime sky. Go out in a rainstorm. Make bark rubbings of trees. Order a chrysalis and watch the butterfly emerge. Create a windowsill garden. Plant a tree. Build a snowman. Erect a small tent or hut as a safe outdoor play retreat, where they can simply sit and be silent if they want. Collect differently colored leaves, etc.

Simple interactions with nature can bring both immediate and long-range therapeutic benefits for children with ASD. All they need is someone to introduce them in ways they can appreciate; nature provides the rest.

Learn more about our story of raising our son with ASD: www.timandcarolherd.com

A gentle breeze through branches high, A truth whispered, beneath the sky. Of children's hearts, both pure and deep, Where nature's secrets softly sleep. A touch of green, a sunbeam's kiss, Can waken joy, and bring sweet bliss. Where shadows linger, and words grow dim, Nature's embrace, a healing hymn. Like wildflowers bloom, in colors bold, Their spirits blossom, stories unfold. Not in chambers closed, and lights so stark, But where earth's soft whispers leave their mark. Let them wander, where wild things play, And nature's rhythm lights their way. For in that stillness, a soul takes flight, And finds its own truth, bathed in love's light. So let them feel the earth's warm hand, And walk barefoot upon the land. For in that wildness, a heart will mend, A connection deep, that knows no end.

Patricia Kleban

Associate Teaching Professor at Penn State University

8 个月

Thanks for sharing this story and your personal experience. Very powerful!!

Jeff Williams

Retired Park and Recreation Professional

8 个月

Upper Allen Township dedicates its Sensory Garden tomorrow. It will be a great opportunity for kids on the spectrum and all others to experience a condensed nature experience hopefully as an introduction to a larger adventure in one of our larger parks.

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