Saturday, June 06, 2026

The surprising science-backed reason being in nature makes you feel good

 The surprising science-backed reason being in nature makes you feel goodA new study suggests spending time in nature may boost body appreciation, self-compassion and overall life satisfaction.


Decades of research have revealed the many positive mental and physical health effects of spending time outdoors. (iStock)
By  
Spending time outside isn’t just a hobby for 28-year-old Tori Murphy. It’s a healing experience. Like many people, Murphy sometimes isn’t that happy with her body and can have self-critical thoughts — she especially dislikes the stretch marks on her thighs. But being in nature, whether that means taking walks with her children, going on hikes alone or just looking out her car window, provides much-needed perspective about her appearance.
“No one says, ‘That tree’s ugly because it fell and the other ones are standing up,’” said Murphy, a content creator based in Juneau, Alaska. “Just because it isn’t perfect, doesn’t mean it’s not beautiful.” 
Decades of research suggests there are many positive mental and physical health effects of spending time outdoors, from boosting mood to improving blood pressure. Now, a new study published in Environment International found a potential new benefit: Contact with the natural world seems to be linked to higher levels of life satisfaction, in part because it helps people develop a more positive body image. 

The link between nature and body image 

Spending time in or near nature has many potential benefits. A 2021 review found that being in nature (especially while engaging in physical activity) is linked to improved cardiovascular health, lower blood pressure and reduced risk factors for chronic diseases like Type 2 diabetes.
A growing body of research suggests nature is associated with reduced feelings of stress, anxiety and sadness, plus an increased sense of purpose and overall well-being, according to Gregory Bratman, an associate professor of environmental and forest sciences at the University of Washington. (But exactly why is “still an open question,” Bratman said.)
“A lot of progress has been made recently in potential mechanisms that help explain those outcomes,” Bratman said. 
In the new study, the researchers looked at survey data from 50,363 participants in 58 countries around the world and found nature contact to be associated with greater body appreciation via two potential pathways: increases in self-compassion and perceived restoration. 
“Spending more time in nature benefits body image and in turn promotes greater life satisfaction. That wasn’t surprising,” said study co-author Viren Swami, a professor of psychology at Anglia Ruskin University in Cambridge, England. “What was a little surprising was how stable that relationship was across all the 58 countries represented in our survey.”
The online survey included questions about everyday nature exposure while also assessing participants’ feelings of connectedness to nature. Participants also completed surveys that measured their levels of self-compassion and how restorative experiences in nature felt to them. Along with questions on overall life satisfaction, the 10-question body appreciation section measured how participants “accept, hold favorable opinions toward, and respect the body, while also rejecting media-promoted appearance ideals as the only form of human beauty.”
The survey results found nature contact to be associated with increased self-compassion and perceived restoration in nature, which led to more positive body image and greater life satisfaction. There are many reasons nature may contribute to these positive changes, including “cognitive quiet,” or nature’s ability to promote a calmer mental state, which may in turn quiet negative or distressing thoughts. 
Nature can also offer a break from the constant onslaught of beauty-focused messaging in the media, which Swami calls “body-image threats.” 
“When you’re in nature, you’re not being judged,” said Holli-Anne Passmore, an associate professor of psychology at Concordia University of Edmonton and director of the Nature-Meaning in Life Research Lab. “It doesn’t care if your hair is a mess or how much you weigh.”
Nature can also help you feel connected to something greater than yourself. “Your perspective changes. You’re suddenly realizing you’re connected to this huge system of life,” Passmore said. “But at the same time, you realize your problems really aren’t that big of a deal at this moment.”
(iStock)

5 ways to get more out of time outdoors

A few simple, expert-backed interventions can help you feel more connected to nature — and potentially boost your overall well-being and body image along the way. 
Put away your phone 
You’re more likely to benefit from nature if you’re actually paying attention to it. “If you spend time on your phone in nature, the benefits are canceled out, or the same as spending time indoors,” Swami said. “Studies show this.” If you can, skip the outdoor screentime so you can enjoy — and get the most out of — your natural surroundings. 
Focus on quality, not quantity
If you’re busy, don’t stress about planning hours-long hikes in the forest or venturing out of town to go to the beach. In her research, Passmore said, people who feel more connected to nature benefit more from it — not necessarily people who spend more time outside. Instead, just try to be present, whether you’re walking your children to school or gardening in your backyard.
Practice mindfulness when outdoors 
One way to boost your nature-connectedness is practicing mindfulness, or simply paying attention to your surroundings. Next time you go outside, Passmore recommends noticing three good things about nature — say, beautifully colored leaves, calming bird sounds or the sensation of grass on your bare feet. 
Observe how nature makes you feel 
Another one of Passmore’s studies focused on noticing nature and how it makes people feel. When you’re outdoors, pause to consider this. Do you feel peaceful? Refreshed? Grateful? If you can, take a picture of what you noticed and write down your thoughts and feelings to help you remember them. 
Find common ground
Murphy’s go-to exercise is reflecting on connections between her own body and what she sees in nature. “Every time I start to go down a rabbit hole with negative thoughts about my body, nature gives me a comparison,” she said. 
Identifying commonalities, Passmore said, can help you feel more connected to it. Think about your own character strengths, and then reflect on how nature exhibits them, too. For example, if your favorite thing about yourself is persistence, ask yourself how nature also exhibits that trait (maybe it’s “Squirrels are persistent at getting into bird feeders.”) “It helps you connect a part of yourself to that part of nature,” Passmore said. 
No matter where you live or what you can reasonably do outside on a regular basis, know you don’t have to make huge changes to your routine to see real benefit. “Look out your window. Look at plants in your house. If you’re going to work, look at the tree at the bus stop,” Passmore said. “It’s all so incredibly helpful.”

Everything and Nothing: 24 Years of Blogging, Linking, Sharing Life

"I cannot say with certainty which of my motives are the strongest, but I know which of them deserve to be followed." 
~  George Orwell: Why I Write - Why I Blog

"I am a Jedi, like my father before me." 

Terrible. 20 years ago, the internet was full of hobbyist blogs and forums. over time, these have been replaced by paywalled substacks and private discord channels, each a walled garden. google's decision to prioritize AI just makes it less likely people will create free, public info

AI will become smarter than people by making people dumber.

I lived through the death of the typewriter and the birth of the internet, yet nothing beat the time AI took my jokes on Teams about being a spy seriously …

bluesky




Why do I do this?

Why write 25,000 blog posts? Why make a video every single day? In this video, I explain what drives my work, why I have spent
Read the full article…




Human beings ache to be in each other’s company’: Why sharing stories matters
 
First I did a book and a blog to see if I could. 
Now I blog to try to make things a little better.


Twenty four (24) ago this week, I wrote and published
 my first observation  I was in luck as I chose blogger.com in 2002 as it is a site that continues to support our MEdia Dragon in 2026… in late 1990s Steve Jobs in various forums predicted that posting stories on the web will prevail … I was lucky to exchange few emails and share my article on Velvet Revolution  with Steve - However, I did not write the poem. Our different kind of crazy escape across the Iron Curtain inspired it …

Sold out “Cold River” also turns 24 this year. In getting to its exalted place on deepblog, the book had to navigate a tricky set of rapids. Though it sailed through them, a question lingers twenty years later: Would a story like this, with its communist setting and its tragic escape focus, face different challenges in today’s publishing world?

There is this sense of inescapability of the past — no matter what the present and future hold: “I am haunted by waters.”

Over those twenty four years, I’ve written well over 17,000 imperfect posts, some brief, some long, some silly, some serious, some came to attention of fraud and prevention area as allegedly I linked to articles critical of colourful mandarins. 

Even if trivial topics are covered, blogger’s unique voice, experiences, and combinations of information offer fresh value. This explains why MEdia Dragon 🐉 scored over eight (8) million views…

Amediadragon.blogspot.com receives approximately 493 visitors and 493 page impressions per day


A ripple of excitement pulsed through the crowd. Paul Ford is blogging regularly again.

Blogging has gone up and down in popularity through the years, and it seems to be on the rise again. For me it is about sharing pot pouri of stories I tend to find insightful or thoughtful or joyful.


When I think of who I was back in 2002, how much I’ve changed, how much my life has changed, how much the world has changed, how I moved from a crown employee to a biblical intel officer, I even transformed my life to Kafkaesque sanctity of two marriages, it’s all extremely surreal. 


When I wrote my first blog post, Kindles, iPhones and Bsky platform didn’t exist. 


Back in 2006 I met Malchkin and in the same year the Internet pioneer “Deep Blog” asked me to share my views on blogging:

Why I blog: Hundreds of pages could be filled or just a sentence might capture some of the depth behind blogging. Blogging is interactive and in many ways inclusive. Anyone anywhere can shed a light on this strange cosmos of ours.

The cure for boredom is curiosity. There is no cure for curiosity. - Dorothy Parker

Why do I blog?

Short Answer: To be heard. Sole survivors might often be thought of as anonymous, but we never want to be voiceless.

Life is too brief and the world is too small not to blog. Is it a way to let off steam and give your two cents? Does it satisfy a desire to climb the mountains or cross the rivers? Or is it an outlet for your various interests? Let me count the ways blogging can record anything delightful, surprising, or informative.

Blogging is part of who I am ... First of all, I blog to keep up my spirit; to stir the spirit of others; to stir my blood, my brain, and my beliefs.

I blog to meet curious people like Dan Gillmor, Jay Rosen, Shel Israel, Robert Scoble, Michael Schaefer, MJ Rose, Tim Dunhill, David Tiley and many others.

Herman Melville put it best when he said, "We cannot live for ourselves alone. Our lives are connected by a thousand invisible threads, and along these sympathetic fibers, our actions run as causes and return to us as results."

Before I was a blogger, I was a reader of samizdat magazines and a brother who recorded how his sister Aga died at the communist chemical factory and how another sister, Gitka, was sacked for going to church. As bloggers, we share the deepest emotions on a regular basis and today I read a touching story by Lenn Pryor on the death of his sister "Lori Ann Pryor April 27, 1976 - Febuary 22, 2005."

For me, jotting down facts and ideas as well as reading has always been an addiction. In the past, I used to post or email stories I thought might be of interest to friends and acquaintances. However, when the blog came along everything changed... it allowed me to cut down on the number of emails I sent. I still view blogging as emailing to everybody.

Blogging regularly brings new ideas up, ideas I would never have thought of if I hadn't read other blogs and magazines on a similar subject. The more I blog the more I get addicted to reading other bloggers. Blogging inspires me to read more because reading introduces new ideas or forces me to rethink old ideas.

If I learn something from my experiences, I hope it might be valuable to someone besides me. I have learned much about myself from reading others poems and stories; I hope that others can also learn something from my experiences and my writing. Deep down in the recesses of probably every blogger's heart is a realisation that we use each other for inspiration and motivation on our journey of self-discovery.

I like to think of blogging as something more than just expressing ideas or sharing trends. I like to think I'm part of a wide selfless community. Blogs not only help to reveal who we are; they help us to transcend who we were.

What I like about Blogging is that it is rather organic. There are no boundaries to ideas, interaction and optimism. Blogging can be as deep and wide as you make it to be ...

In many ways, a blog is a playground dreamed up by a powerless voice just like the prophetic story of 1984 was dreamed up in 1948 by a powerless voice of George Orwell (Orwell - Why I Write).George Orwell saw writing not only as a powerful tool for conveying ideas, but also as a demanding and enthralling art with a moral imperative to search for truth. In an autobiographical note sixty years ago, Orwell said, "Good prose is like a window pane." Like Orwell, Vaclav Havel trusted his audience to share his values and understanding of the world, but he also sought to increase their political awareness. Blogging helps us to think for ourselves. Blogs allow us to speak our mind and it helps us to link to concrete realities.

An individual blogger, like Winston Smith, sits down alone with courage and an optimistic belief in his own ideas to communicate his most secret thoughts to an unknown reader. Second, his dedication to truth, the product of independent thought, has the power to improve society. In our time, we desperately need Orwell's clear language, his commitment to aesthetic as well as moral responsibility.

My purpose in this blog is to shed more hope and sunlight on complex and moral issues as where there is sunlight there is less likelihood for slime and mold to grow. What you see is what you get!

To me a link like this one which I received this week from Shel and Robert is priceless: 
http://redcouch.typepad.com/weblog/2005/02/thank_you_jozef.html

Warmly,

Jozef

Jozef's Blog: Media Dragon: Top 100 Cultural and Political Blog in 2004 AD
Bloggers are like the little first amendment engine that could
Book: Cold River, by Jozef Imrich


"Isn't it the moment of most profound doubt that gives birth to new certainties? 
Perhaps hopelessness is the very soil that nourishes human hope; perhaps one could never find sense in life without first experiencing its absurdity." 
Vaclav Havel -l


KDO: 28 Years Later…

It’s getting a little ridiculous, isn’t it? 28 years of kottke.org, as of today. Older than Google. Older than The Matrix. Older than Christopher Nolan’s feature film career. Older than Elle Fanning. Older than Kurt Cobain when he died. 47,300 posts since March 14, 1998. It might outlast American democracy.

KDO retains its old school vibe but with some new tricks. Friends and readers have remarked recently that I seem to be having fun with the site again and that’s true. Still excited by the possibilities of what the site could become. I hope you’ve been enjoying it.

I’d like to once again thank KDO members for supporting the site — I never get tired of the member thanking. They each pay a few dollars a month to keep the site free to read for everyone, regardless of income, something I feel very strongly about in this era of paywalled media. As Hamilton Nolanhas noted — his site operates on the same principle — sites/newsletters like these have progressive funding structures, where people’s contributions are based on their ability to pay to help keep the site available to all. If you’d like to help support the site in this mission, you can check out your membership options here. ✌️

P.S. I hope you enjoy the birthday logo and fireworks — they’ll be around until Monday.


This is kind of amazing: World Monitor is a real-time global intelligence dashboard. Includes military activity, climate anomalies, live webcam feeds in warzones, internet outages, active fires, and even the Pentagon Pizza Index.


I am always trying to convey something that can’t be conveyed, to explain something which is inexplicable, to tell about something I have in my bones, something which can be expressed only in the bones.

~ Franz Kafka, Letters to Milena


Two trending quotes:

"Revenge, like Okroshka, is a dish best served cold."


The invisible hand of the legislative and taxing executives strikes again



Positive Love from Mark Hamill on Bsky



Just like Mark, I NEVER miss a movie that has "GROGU" in the title ...

It has been 24 years since I started blogging so to receive today “love symbols”  ❤️ from Mark Hamill on Bluesky one minute and more ❤️ symbols from him the next  … it is considered as platform priceless memory and Resistance Fortune 🗽🦋🙏🏻


Dozey Don went to the trouble of actually creating a chart to compare the length of the Reflecting Pool to the height of 3 various skyscrapers, for some reason known only to him.

Mark on Dozey Don today









It took me 24 years blogging to get 8 million views, Mark tends to get 8 million views a day so it is a huge honour as Mark and Luke are my heroes



One thing certain in MMXXVI - 2026, it is stressful being a member of the Rebel Alliance


Trying to see through younger eyes

 

  • "I have no words for you; you leave me completely speechless. Every moment spent with you feels like a dream, where time stands still and the world around us fades away."
  • "You reached into my soul and rearranged the position of my bones. You have left me speechless."
  • "Where words leave off, gesture begins. Don't we speak of a person being speechless with rage, dancing with impatience... The final motions of the soul are speechless, animal, grotesque, or of an incomparable beauty."— Charlie Chaplin [1]
  • Friday, June 05, 2026

    Finding Meaning in Suffering

     

    Finding Meaning in Suffering

    Dispatch Faith:  The World Needs to Recover True Lament. Christianity Can Teach It., by Kelly M. Kapic (Covenant College), M. Elizabeth Lewis Hall (Biola University) & Jason McMartin (Biola University) (Co-Authors, When the Journey Hurts: Finding Meaning in Suffering for Heart, Mind, and Soul(2026)):

    Benjamin Franklin famously declared that only death and taxes are certain. But he forgot one thing: Suffering is the third universal—as inescapable as mortality, as indifferent as the IRS.

    Every major religion or philosophical system in human history has addressed the problem of suffering. Buddhism teaches acceptance and detachment—the goal is to loosen the grip of craving and desire that amplify pain, ultimately freeing the self from suffering’s hold. Secular modernity largely hands suffering to experts: therapists, physicians, pharmaceuticals, and self-optimization regimens. Suffering becomes a problem to be solved, a malfunction to be corrected. Stoicism, of the ancient and current life hack varieties, encourages cultivating indifference and yielding to fate. 

    But Judaism and Christianity, at their best and growing out of their shared biblical tradition, offer something none of these does: a structured, communal practice for bringing honest anguish into relationship with a God who, the psalms insist, neither despises nor ignores the cry of the afflicted.

    That practice is called lament. In the psalms, lament is a structured form of prayer that follows a discernible pattern: crying out to God, complaining, requesting, remembering God’s works, and—perhaps most surprisingly—often ending in praise of God. And for much of contemporary American Christianity, which we know best and have been studying for years, it has quietly disappeared. But research we’ve been conducting suggests the costs are both deeper and wider than most churches recognize.

    The current season of Lent is a time for honest reckoning—40 days of sitting with mortality, limitation, and the long ache of a world not yet whole. It is, at least in theory, the one time of year when Christianity makes room for suffering rather than rushing past it. And yet for many people, Lent passes without ever touching what is actually hardest in their lives. 

    That gap between what the church’s calendar invites and what its culture permits is where our research—compiled for our forthcoming book, When the Journey Hurts—begins.

    When one of our research participants was asked what lament had done for her, she said something we’ve heard in different forms from many people we’ve interviewed: “I never gave myself permission to be honest with God. I think for a long time I really felt like I needed to put up a face for him because I wanted to give him what he wanted. But I had a wrong idea of what he wanted. He wants honesty from us.” …

     

    Bloomberg: “Biofuel Groups Push IRS for New Model to Calculate Tax Credit”

    Erin Schilling (Bloomberg): Biofuel Groups Push IRS for New Model to Calculate Tax Credit:


    Saez and Zucman: The Case for California’s Billionaire Wealth Tax

    Emmanuel Saez (Berkeley-Economics) and Gabriel Zucman (Paris School of Economics) have published a guest essay in the New York Times: “The Case for California’s Billionaire Wealth Tax.” From the article:

    On taxes and much else, California has often led the country. In 1978 the state’s voters approved Proposition 13, which strongly limited tax increases. Prop 13 was the opening salvo in Ronald Reagan’s antitax revolution, which swept the United States two years later.

    This year California’s voters could spearhead a shift in the opposite direction. A large labor union representing health care workers and advised by academic experts — including the two of us — got the 2026 Billionaire Tax Act on this November’s ballot. The proposed tax would be a one-time levy of 5 percent on billionaire wealth, spread over five years. If the measure passes, it would be the first tax targeted at the combined personal and business wealth of billionaires enacted anywhere in the world.

    California is an ideal place to test this idea. The state needs money to fill a budget hole that the Trump administration created when it cut, among other things, Medicaid, a state-federal partnership that provides health coverage to low-income people. Without more state tax revenue to fill the loss in federal funding, the fraction of uninsured Californians will increase substantially, reversing part of the progress made since Obamacare.

    More TaxProf Blog coverage on California’s billionaire wealth tax: