Love Your Health? Hug a Tree

You just need to stand by one for your body to be better

Sabriga Turgon
Age of Awareness

--

Photo by Casey Horner on Unsplash

By Sabriga Turgon

Yikes, the weather is hot — quick, go stand in the shade of a tree!

Shade, climbing, and tree houses are what many people think of as the best benefits of nearby trees. What we don’t realize is that some of the relaxation we feel is because trees affect our mood, our sense of the future, our cognitive function, and help with many chronic diseases.

Maybe it’s because trees and green plants emit an energy humans need to feel whole, and maybe it’s because trees and shrubs planted close together near a noise source help block and reduce its noise pollution.

Assistant professor Peter James in Harvard’s T.H. Chan School of Public Heath, Department of Environmental Health says trees are essential to long-term changes in depression and anxiety, cognitive health and decline, and incidences of chronic diseases like cardiovascular disease and cancer.

Need more proof? Researchers found that being in nature or just having green space near you improves cognitive function, brain activity, blood pressure, mental health, physical activity, and sleep.

Oh, those trees — they’re good for just about everything.

--

--

Sabriga Turgon
Age of Awareness

People lover & realistic optimist who encourages goodness in all things. Ghostwriter Global—let’s get that book out of your head & onto paper.