Shinrin-Yoku and The Forest-Spirit Way
Reflections on Forest Medicine, Wayfaring, and Beyond | Frank Inzan Owen, Editor-at-Large
INTRODUCTION
Shinrin-yoku is a Japanese term first coined in 1982 by Tomohide Akiyama, the then Director General of the Japanese Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries. The Japanese characters, or kanji, that form the word shinrin-yoku (森林浴) literally mean “forest bath”. The term does not mean to take a literal bath in a forest. Instead, shinrin-yoku is a modern, poetic way of referring to a practice developed in contemporary times of immersing oneself, fully, in the atmosphere of the forest for purposes of mental and physical well-being. This sense of “bathing in the forest atmosphere” is a signature phrase of the shinrin-yoku and forest medicine movement. With a few notable exceptions,“forest bathing” (as a contemporary evolution) involves a brief experience in the forest, with an emphasis on the five senses and the various health benefits to the participant (e.g. stress-reduction).
In this essay, I want to briefly discuss shinrin-yoku and some of the scientific findings of forest medicine research. Then, I want to pivot to another consideration, namely, approaching the forest through an even wider aperture than the physical dimension alone.
Spending extended time in forests and mountains was a facet of my own studies and experiences with my late teacher, Darion Kuma Gracen (1949-2007), a wilderness guide, counselor-mentor, educator, amateur naturalist, and a Wayfarer of a unique, syncretic spiritual path. Her path wove together meditation practices from the Far East, methods of “dreaming-while-awake”, a psychodynamic understanding of the soul (influenced by Jungian thought and Dreambody work developed by Arnold Mindell), and an animistic, experiential approach to Nature-connection (resonant with aspects of Japanese Shinto spirituality) that fosters a sense of the numinous (derived from the Latin: numen, arousing spiritual or religious emotion; mysterious or awe-inspiring stirrings; classically speaking, numen: spirit presiding over a thing or space, i.e. that which is perceived and experienced through means beyond the five senses). By including this numinous dimension to the experience of “immersing oneself, fully, in the atmosphere of the forest”, we step into what Kuma-sensei called The Forest-Spirit Way. In the second part of this essay, I would like to explore some of these aspects.
“FOREST BATHING” AND FOREST MEDICINE: THE SCIENCE
Though the concept “forest bathing” may brush across the ear of some as merely a quaint notion, or may even strike some techno-addicted, Nature-avoidant city-dwellers as a downright odd-sounding pastime, the contemporary creation of shinrin-yoku – and the establishment of forest medicine research in general – initially arose as a direct response to two points of concern that Akiyama perceived as being dynamically interrelated; namely, a need to protect Japan’s declining forests, and a way to address the increasing negative health effects he observed in urban Japanese people resulting from both work-stress and an obvious chronic disconnection from natural settings.
Though it will probably sound quite commonsensical to most readers of Wayfarer Magazine in the year 2023, back in the early 80s Akiyama’s logic was visionary and culturally transformative:
If people can experience the health benefits of the forest
they are much more likely to protect the forest.
This led to a robust campaign, with full backing of the Japanese government, funding a number of medical studies into the mental and physical health benefits of “taking in the forest atmosphere”. Two of the primary individuals of note in the “shinrin-yoku lineage”, who have been deeply involved in heading up this body of medical and psychological research, are Dr. Qing Li, author of Forest Bathing: The Japanese Art and Science of Shinrin-Yoku (subtitle: “How Trees Can Help You Find Health and Happiness”) and Dr. Yoshifumi Miyazaki, author of Shinrin Yoku: The Japanese Art of Forest Bathing.
The medical and psychological studies that have been done on the various features of shinrin-yoku, naturally, are expressed in the parlance of science. Here are but a few examples from the dozens of studies that have been completed in the arena of forest medicine research:
“Physiological Benefits of Viewing Nature: A Systematic Review of Indoor Experiments”,
H Jo, C Song, Y Miyazaki, International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 2019
“Physiological and Psychological Effects of Forest and Urban Sounds Using High-Resolution Sound Sources”, H Jo, C Song, H Ikei, S Enomoto, H Kobayashi, Y Miyazaki
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 2019
“Sustained Effects of a Forest Therapy Program on the Blood Pressure of Office Workers”,
C Song, H Ikei, Y Miyazaki, Journal of Urban Forestry & Urban Greening, 2017
“Physiological Effects of Nature Therapy: A Review of the Research in Japan”, C Song, H Ikei, Y Miyazaki, International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 2016
“Effect of Forest Walking on Autonomic Nervous System Activity in Middle-Aged Hypertensive Individuals: A Pilot Study”, C Song, H Ikei, M Kobayashi, T Miura, M Taue, T Kagawa, Q Li,
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 2015
“Physiological Effect of Olfactory Stimulation by Hinoki Cypress (Chamaecyparis obtusa) Leaf Oil”, H Ikei, C Song, Y Miyazaki, Journal of Physiological Anthropology, 2015
“The Physiological Effects of Shinrin-yoku (taking in the forest atmosphere or forest bathing): Evidence From Field Experiments in 24 Forests Across Japan”, BJ Park, Y Tsunetsugu, T Kasetani, T Kagawa, Y Miyazaki, Journal of Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine, 2010
“An Experimental Study on Physiological and Psychological Effects of Pine Scent”, HJ Jo, E Fujii, TD Cho, Journal of the Korean Institute of Landscape Architecture, 2010
“Phytoncides (wood essential oils) Induce Human Natural Killer Cell Activity”, Q Li, A Nakadai, H Matsushima, Y Miyazaki, AM Krensky, T Kawada, Journal of Immunopharmacology and Immunotoxicology, 2006
Suddenly I am hearing my father’s voice say: “Break it down for me, son. What did they find?”
Drs. Li, Miyazaki, Ikei, Jo, and others on their teams, have validated, resoundingly, what many of us already know intuitively:
The forest is vital to human emotional/mental health
and physical health. The forest is, in fact,
a source of preventative medicine, holistically.
Taking into account the primary foci of their research (including the multi-leveled effect of Nature imagery and Nature sounds on stress regulation — even when indoors, and the effect of what are called “terpenes” in the form of phytoncides, or essential oils of cedar, hinoki cypress, and pine) a few of the highlights from their collective findings is that a two-hour session of forest bathing once-per-month:
significantly boosts the immune system (including cancer-fighting NK cells)
improves concentration and memory (including with dementia)
lowers cortisol (the stress hormone that leads to weight gain and heart disease)
boosts serotonin and decreases both anxiety and depression
reduces blood pressure
drastically improves sleep
lowers inflammation (resulting from breathing in terpenes and negative ions)
The strong evidence of the mental and physical health benefits of shinrin-yoku ultimately led the Japanese government to designate natural areas (and whole forests) for the purpose of the study and practice of forest medicine. As of the writing of this article, there are over 10 dedicated “certified forest medicine bases” or “forest therapy centers” throughout Japan; and, the wide variance of forest bathing research being conducted isn’t showing any signs of slowing down. So, the modern shinrin-yoku movement is alive, well, and spreading (like the roots of its original inspiration) to parts of Canada, Chile, Europe, Finland, and the U.S., where one major urban hospital in Atlanta launched a pilot program in forest bathing for cancer patients in collaboration with a local nature center.[1]
Forest medicine has also influenced South Korea and Sweden (where forest bathing is called samlim-yog and skogsbad, respectively) to prioritize similar standards in research and investments in their citizenry and local ecology as has been done in Japan. According to Dr. Qing Li, Chairman of the Japanese Society for Forest Medicine, and Secretary-General of the International Society for Nature and Forest Medicine: “The South Korean government has spent more than $14 million on a National Forest Therapy Centre, has developed thirty-seven state-run recreational forests, and is training five hundred forest-healing instructors.”[2]
From influencing university studies, and how some psychotherapists work, to the creation of a whole new category of eco-tourism (where a guided forest bathing session can be booked from the comfort of your hotel room or bungalow), the shinrin-yoku movement has branched outward from its initial seed-concept in Japan into a diversity of applications, approaches, books, international training programs, and applied forms of what is now called “forest therapy”. (see Resources below)
Certainly, I am a celebrant of most of this. I’ve personally benefited from the forest medicine research that has taken place and support the research that continues. I am thoroughly convinced that – in the years to come – medical science (through the efforts of forest medicine research) will so clearly prove and convey the vital necessity for humans to be consciously bonded to healthy, thriving landscapes that it will have even deeper impacts, globally, on government priorities, including boosting the discipline of Nature-centric city planning.[3]
That said, as I reflect on my own experiences of connecting deeply with forests, I have to acknowledge that something equally vital is being left out in the overtly scientific approach; something equally as important, equally as present as the invisible forest phytoncides that are of such benefit to our immune systems. I would like to attempt to talk about these features by returning to the signature phrase of the forest medicine movement itself: immersing oneself, fully, in the atmosphere of the forest.
DREAMING WITH THE FOREST: THE FOREST-SPIRIT WAY
“The Universe is our greatest teacher, our
greatest friend. It is always teaching us the
Art of Peace. Study how the water flows in a
valley stream, smoothly and freely between
the rocks. Everything – mountains, rivers, plants,
and trees – should be your teacher.”
– O Sensei, Morihei Ueshiba (1883-1969),
Founder of Aikidō
When I think of my own relationship to forests, it often presents itself in the form of memories — memories stored in cells. Memories connected to bare footfalls through sandy creek beds and boot-laced feet moving over rocks and through underbrush. Memories of trails and switchbacks. Memories of bucks stomping ground, coyotes howling, hawks and crows calling from above. Memories of napping in hollows filled with such a cushion of pine needles,…to this day I have yet to sleep as deeply (or been able to find a mattress that approaches the same level of comfort). The earliest memories involve childhood. Time for a poem.
“Little Cowboy, Stumbling”
jumping into mounds of leaves
napping like a deer in pine hollows
breathing deep of the incense
of butterscotch pines
discovering abandoned shells
of cicadas left clinging to a Loblolly
hours observing tadpoles in a woodland pool
sheer delight from “forest-stumbling” —
stumbling upon a hawk feather
stumbling upon a deer skull
stumbling upon a coiled kingsnake
sunrise
pine-wind
sunset
moonrise
tree frogs
cricket-song
how could I have known, back then,
that this would become my religion?
Later on in time, I would encounter one of the deep teachers of my path: Kuma-sensei (to me), “doña Río” (to some) — a rascally ol’ “tumbleweed” with ancestors like mine – back to Scandinavia, rural England, and Scotland. When I think of her now, a strange, dreamy, archetypal image arises in my awareness: a cross between a cloaked völva (Norse wisewoman), or perhaps a Druid priestess, and a female yamabushi[4] (Japanese mountain-priest ascetic). With a penchant for laughter, word-play, tawny port wine, and New Mexican green chiles, my predominant memory of her is of long stretches of piñon-wind zazen (meditation) under the moon.
Though I spent many an hour wandering through forests as a young man (even skipping high school graduation to consciously mark that “rite of passage” by sitting on “my rock” deep in a North Carolina wood), it wasn’t until I crossed paths with Kuma-sensei that I realized much more fully that Nature is my religion.
“I believe in God, only
I spell it Nature.”
— Frank Lloyd Wright,
Nature-inspired architect
This declaration isn’t an overlay, an add-on, or something lifted from some other place. It’s home-grown, cultivated from the heart-mind and soul, but it is cross-cultural. If we go back far enough in any of our ancestral lines, it is universal: Nature-as-sacred presence. All of us hail from people who originally experienced Nature as a numinous reality. Wayfarers in every culture have spoken of mountains as teachers, the forest as a healer. Nature was the original spirituality. Yet, this quality of consciousness and reverence isn’t a level of perception, engagement, or experience that is usually passed on consciously from generation to generation in our modern context. It is an attribute that must be cultivated from within and it is an attribute greatly needed in the here and now.
In the words of Motohisa Yamakage, a 79th-generation Shinto priest, author of The Essence of Shinto:
“Shinto teaches to revere Great Nature. Nature is the transformation
and creation of Kami, therefore the sacredness of Kami dwells within it…
The Japanese people have loved and revered Nature as a gift from Kami
since ancient times. We have felt that plants and animals, as well as
mountains and rivers, have lived with us and have been deeply
connected to us. This love and reverence toward Nature is a quality
that should be reinstalled in our hearts, if we want humankind and earth
to survive the ecological crisis that has resulted from excessive materialism.”
Great Nature (大自然, Daishizen in Japanese)[5] wasn’t initially a focus of the dialogue with my teacher. It was an ever-present backdrop, but it wasn’t something articulated until later. Over time, however, it became clear that everything I was studying with her — different forms of meditation, methods of dreaming-while-awake, sacred inquiry, contemplative poetics, time spent in forests (and even caves for brief “dark retreats”) — all existed to facilitate a dual process; a gradual purification, on the one hand, and greater alignment on the other. The purification was a purification of perception; from the inherited Western-enculturated, conditioned-masculine, and the burdened, encumbered “lower-self”. The alignment was one of coming into deeper and deeper levels of connection to Great Nature.
Kuma-sensei’s thoughts on Great Nature can best be summed up with a few key phrases:
Great Nature is a power we can never fully comprehend
We can live in or out of essential alignment with Great Nature; meditation, time in Nature, methods of dreaming or purification methods (like a sauna or misogi, a mental-physical-spiritual purification practice undertaken beneath an ice-cold waterfall) can restore our connection through the somatic doorway of the body
Great Nature is sentient, intelligent, and wise in terms of dynamic energy, sustaining power, and prevalent patterns (symbolized in the dynamic movement in both the ancient symbol known as the mitsudomoe used in Shinto and the Tai Ji /yin-yang in Taoism)
There is a numinous, spiritual dimension to Great Nature that can be transformative for humans
The numinous dimension of Great Nature is restorative to the soul (just as forest medicine can be healing to body and mind through phytoncides, Nature imagery, Nature sounds, and slower rhythms)
We can connect with this numinous dimension of Great Nature because we, too, are part of Great Nature (Shinto tradition says we are children of Kami, thus children of Great Nature; in the Nature writings of C.G. Jung, he speaks of our own psyche being comprised of the same numinous essence as Nature)
We can connect with Great Nature via the five senses but we can also commune, connect, and communicate with Great Nature in ways that are beyond the five senses (and the intellect) through experiences that involve different forms of attention, intuitive perception, and dreaming (an interesting side note: one word in Japanese for dream-visioning is musō (夢想), part of which is constructed of a kanji that combines the radicals for ‘heart-mind and spirit’ (心), ‘eye’ (目), and ‘tree’ (木); it offers something of a practice-hint: to connect with the deeper dream (夢), we can go into the trees (木) to look(目) with our heart-mind-spirit (心)
Additional concepts from Shinto tradition can assist us in comprehending the Japanese understanding of a numinous approach to Nature. These concepts are tama (魂 “soul” or “spirit” 霊) and kokoro (心). Tama isn’t just a word but is something that is experienced, viscerally and intuitively. Tama is felt, known, and perceived. It is an early Shinto term for spiritual power; a specific type of vital power that is awe-inspiring and leads to a profound sense of connectedness.
Running like an underground river beneath and through all of Japanese spirituality is kokoro (“heart-mind”; or, in the words of Thomas Kasulis, author of SHINTO: The Way Home, another teacher of mine in all things Shinto, kokoro means a “mindful-heart”). This term derives from the term makoto no kokoro – a pure heart of sincerity. Rather than heart-as-object or heart-as-noun (as in the physical heart beating in our chest), kokoro is heart-as-verb, heart-as-energy field that connects with the world in an engaged and responsive way.
Shinto spiritual praxis, in part, consists of connecting with Great Nature at sites known to be kami-filled and tama-charged. A person brings their kokoro (their mindful-heart) into alignment with the spirit of place and this produces a shift in consciousness. The Japanese landscape is filled with markers[6] (such as torii gates, special walkways, and forest shrines) that remind people of the presence of kami and act as holographic entry points for people to experience a reconnection to the numinous. In the words of T.P. Kasulis, “Kokoro is cognition with affect, affect with cognition…To experience the extraordinary, one has to be open to being affectively touched by the phenomenon and its tama.”
Part and parcel of my experiences with Kuma was approaching the realm of Great Nature (usually forests and mountains but also, at times, deserts and arroyos) by employing such expanded senses, what Zurich-trained Jungian analyst Arnold Mindell calls “the dreambody”, and what I have grown to think of as the faculty of soft-attention (a loose, flowing, receptive quality of multi-sensory awareness rather than the hyper-focused concentration emphasized by modernity).
In Mindell’s own words:
“The dreambody is a multi-channeled information sender
asking you to receive its message in many ways and noticing
how its information appears over and over again…The dreambody
is your wise signaller, giving you messages in many different
dimensions. When it signals to you in the body, we call it a
symptom or sensation. When it signals to you through a dream,
we call it a symbol.”
With these multidimensional senses “along for the ride”, so to speak, sometimes Kuma and I explored the visual contours of mountains and rolling forested landscapes as flute-songs (offerings of spontaneous tunes to Nature on different kinds of flutes, matching the notes to the rise and fall of the horizon line). We frequently explored day-long sessions of hillwalking and forest-walking as an unfurling process of poem-making, sometimes “stalking poems” like a hunter or birdwatcher, or — once we had connected energetically with the spirit of place — expressing what emerged for us (or what was made known to us) by communing with a certain locale.
Eventually, like sunlight filtering down through pine tassels and juniper bows, Kuma began more consciously connecting some dots for me, making me aware that all we had been doing — which she called Wayfaring at times, and The Forest-Spirit Way at other times — hadn’t been sourced wholly with her but rather was an approach resonant with and influenced by more ancient ways-within-the-Way (such as Shinto, Daoism, Shugendō, the Way of Tea, and the mountains-and-forests Zen of so many Wayfarers and hermit-poets).
We didn’t speak of phytoncides or “forest bathing”. The results of the medical research studies cited previously weren’t known at the time. Yet, the deep psychospiritual, soul-transforming benefits of time in the forest was intimately known. In the presence of the Forest-Spirit, wounds were healed. In the embrace of Great Nature, old traumas were transmuted. We spoke of kami, the spirit of certain mountains and forests, and of poets who had a deep love affair with forests like Rengetsu (1791-1875) and Saigyō (1118-1190), Bashō (1644-1694) and Santōka (1882-1940), Oliver (1935-2019), Snyder (1930- ), and Berry (1957- ); and, like other hermit-poets – who would sometimes wander into the mountains and forests, or who would sit for days in silence, gazing at mountains from their solitary hut – this became our practice-focus as well.
At the end of her life, she said I would have to find my own way of Wayfaring, my own way of walking the Forest-Spirit Way. “It won’t be my way exactly. It won’t be someone else’s way. If it’s someone else’s way, it won’t be your way. Great Nature is the teacher.” Time for another poem.
“Amerikua Shinrinbushi”[7]
slow rhythm
silence
the soul unfurls
the poet’s dreamingbody
stretches out
to the horizon
realizes itself inseparable
from the dreambody
of Great Nature’s light
the instructions come
from the Forest-Spirit Way:
sit like a mountain
breathe like a forest
flow like a river[8]
BEING HELD BY EARTH: FOREST HEALING AFTER CANCER
When I think of healing and connecting with sacred forests, I can’t help but think of my own mother, Dale. Diagnosed with breast cancer nearly a decade ago, she retired from her role as a trainer of chaplains due to the gradual impact of her treatments. For the first year, after her single mastectomy and radiation, she could hardly move due to fatigue. From the outside looking in, it seemed as if she had entered a deep sleep that hovered in the borderlands of choice. Would her spirit stay, or would her spirit go?
Then, one day, she arose from the couch and for the next year spent hours upon hours among the many trees and foliage that make up the wooded half-acre behind her home. It is a serene place filled with Japanese lanterns, quiet sitting places, and a multitude of trees, both old-growth poplars and grandmother pines as well as new arrivals — dogwoods, sakura, Japanese maples, azaleas and fern, Gold Dust (Aucuba japonica) and Heavenly Bamboo (Nandina domestica).
Of that time, she speaks of taking up the task of “working with the trees”, apprenticing to them, getting her hands into the soil, asking the trees what they wanted. Their collaboration was a co-tending.
She states:
I began noticing all of the life — the birds, the chipmunks, the squirrels; all the little creatures going on about their business, doing their little chores. Then I started noticing all of the plants and the trees. I realized I needed to get closer. I wanted to know all of these presences more intimately. So, I began to work in the yard, a little bit at a time. There’s a big hill that drops down like a terrace and it was all covered over with debris, so I started clearing some of that away, over time, and revealing what was underneath. Huge rocks, plants, trees that couldn’t reach the sunlight.
It felt as if I was stroking the face of the Earth, and there were things underneath all of that debris that needed to have things taken out of their face. They were under a foot of leaves. Some leaves are fine but this was choking the life out of everything, so I started inching my way across this hill, and I felt like I was in a dance with the forest. It was very moving.
In time, I felt like I could just let go. I could curl up and be held by the land and be healed. I stayed out there for a year doing that. Nobody told me to go out and lay down on the hill. I just knew I needed to do it. It was a very natural, intuitive process that — as a creature, along with all the other creatures — I instinctively knew what I needed to do. It wasn’t a mental thing. It was a heart thing. It was a gut thing. It was a visceral feeling. I needed to be close to the Earth. I needed to embrace the plants. If I could have held every creature, I would have had them all over me, and allowed them to teach me their lessons.
I’ve learned some of those lessons, from afar, as I’ve watched them dig for food and bury their acorns for the Fall. They’re just like us. We’re just like they are. There is no true separation. If you can understand that, you will never treat the Earth poorly, and you will help heal Her.”
I’m reminded of the words of Tim Ryosen Bunting, a New Zealander now living in Japan, who was initiated into the Dewa Sanzan tradition of Shugendō - the Way of Yamabushidō. In a recent dialogue, he said:
Forests are part of Nature. For yamabushi, Nature is the womb.
Nature is all-knowing and it is where we absorb the lessons of life.
Undoubtedly, Great Nature has been a womb of rebirth for my mother. I have seen it with my own eyes. The same can be true for any of us, whether we approach Nature as a forest bathing exercise, or as a multidimensional spiritual practice. Immersing oneself, fully, in the forest atmosphere isn’t something new. It forms the bedrock of the most ancient form of spirituality for the Japanese people (and continues to influence consciousness despite modernization). Likewise, the Wayfarers of old (along with all our ancestors) knew that Nature heals, imparts teachings, and has the capacity to initiate us into greater levels of awareness.
As much as I appreciate the modern shinrin-yoku movement, and the general scientific inquiry of forest medicine as an arena of research, it feels equally important to me to consider the numinous dimensions and implications of connecting with Great Nature. It seems a good thing to ask from time to time when immersing oneself, fully, in the forest atmosphere: What exactly do we mean by “immersing…fully”? Are we aware of all that inhabits the “forest atmosphere”? What exactly do we mean by “oneself”?
May the Forest Be With You
Frank Inzan Owen is a Wayfarer of a Nature-oriented spiritual path shaped by the seasons, mountains-and-forests meditation, methods of dreaming-while-awake, and “practice-hints” found in the lives and verses of various Wayfarers of the Far East. The author of three books of poetry on Homebound Publications, The School of Soft-Attention, The Temple of Warm Harmony, and Stirrup of the Sun & Moon, when not tending an organic vegetable garden or hillwalking, he facilitates a form of inner work he calls contemplative soulwork through his organization, The School of Soft-Attention (schoolofsoftattention.com), and curates the The Poet’s Dreamingbody podcast and Substack (thepoetsdreamingbody.com).
RESOURCES
Apps
> One of the interesting findings of not only the forest medicine research group in Japan but also the Acoustical Society of America (“Natural Sounds Improve Mood and Productivity”, from a 2015 study) is that even sitting indoors listening to the sounds of Nature (such as while working) assists with lowering stress, increasing focus, and elevating positive feelings. A few of the apps (available on both Android and in the Apple Store) that have sounds of water, rain, waves, crickets, cicadas, wind blowing through a bamboo grove or forest, and more, include:
myNoise (free with additional fee for expanded recordings)
NatureSpace (free with additional fee for expanded recordings)
Aura (subscription based)
Calm (subscription based)
Books (and Audiobooks)
Your Guide To Forest Bathing: Experience the Healing Power of Nature by M. Amos Clifford
> There are a plethora of books coming out about forest bathing but this is the first I have seen that incorporates the ‘more than the five senses’ approach through a variety of practices Clifford categorizes as imaginal, heart sense, proprioception, and body radar)
The Holotropic Mind: The Three Levels of Human Consciousness and How They Shape Our Lives by Stanislav Grof, M.D. with Hal Zina Bennett
China Root: Taoism, Ch’an, and Original Zen by David Hinton
Hunger Mountain: A Field Guide to Mind and Landscape by David Hinton
Forest Medicine by Qing Li
Forest Bathing: The Japanese Art and Science of Shinrin-Yoku by Dr. Qing Li
Your Brain on Nature: The Science of Nature’s Influence on Your Health, Happiness, and Vitality by Alan Logan and Eva Selhub
The Shaman’s Body: A New Shamanism for Transforming Health, Relationships, and the Community by Arnold Mindell
Working With The Dreaming Body by Arnold Mindell
Shinrin-Yoku: The Japanese Way of Forest Bathing by Yoshifumi Miyazaki
The Earth Has A Soul: The Nature Writings of C.G. Jung, edited by Meredith Sabini
Sight and Sensibility: The Ecopsychology of Perception by Laura Sewell
The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative by Florence Williams
The Art of Peace by Morihei Ueshiba (translated and edited by John Stevens)
The Essence of Shinto: Japan’s Spiritual Heart by Motohisa Yamakage
Training Programs
The Association of Nature and Forest Therapy Guides and Programs
www.natureandforesttherapy.org (based in the U.S.)
The Mindful Tourist Shinrin-Yoku Certification Training
www.themindfultourist.net (based in Thailand and Japan with branches in Brazil, Mexico, Singapore, and Sweden)
Yamabushido: Transformative Yamabushi Training
www.yamabushido.jp (based in Yamagata, Japan)
Forest Medicine Research Websites
Forest Medicine Therapy Society in Japan - www.fo-society.jp
The Society for Forest Medicine in Japan - www.forest-medicine.com
International Society of Nature and Forest Medicine - www.inform.org
[1] Northside Hospital, an Atlanta-based medical system, launched a forest bathing program for cancer patients in collaboration with the Chattahoochee Nature Center.
[2] Forest Bathing: The Japanese Art and Science of Shinrin-Yoku, Dr. Qing Li
[3] Something that will become increasingly more important due to climatic changes, initially for low-lying cityscapes that are near the water’s edge.
[4] The yamabushi are mountain priests of the Japanese spiritual tradition known as Shugendō, which is believed to trace back to a mountain hermit named En no Gyōja (634-707). Until recently, yamabushi were typically men but more and more women are becoming yamabushi. There are different traditions and lineages of Shugendō but all expressions are a weave of certain aspects of Taoism, Shintō, esoteric Buddhism, and early Japanese animism.
[5] (or Tao, or God, or Gaia, or Dainichi, the Cosmic Buddha, if you prefer)
[6] Increasingly, these same kinds of holographic entry points marking the presence of kami and tama have appeared in other countries outside of Japan including Brazil, California, Colorado, and Washington state.
[7] Amerikua is an ancient Mayan word for North, Central, and South America, what some people call Turtle Island. The name Amerikua means “Land of the Four Winds”. I often say that I am “Amerikuan” or a citizen of Amerikua. Shinrinbushi is a play on two Japanese words meaning “one who prostrates in the forest”.
[8] This simple triad is actually a specific meditation practice oriented to Great Nature but which employs a contemplative technique known in Chinese as hua-tou and wato in Japanese. Each phrase is a step in the meditation, moving from an awareness of posture to breath to one’s own flowing energy, but each phrase can also be meditated upon in the hua-tou/wato style.