The Nature Fix Quotes

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The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative by Florence Williams
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The Nature Fix Quotes Showing 1-30 of 85
“Distilling what I learned, I came up with a kind of ultrasimple coda: Go outside, often, sometimes in wild places. Bring friends or not. Breathe.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“Here are some of the essential take-homes: we all need nearby nature: we benefit cognitively and psychologically from having trees, bodies of water, and green spaces just to look at; we should be smarter about landscaping our schools, hospitals, workplaces and neighborhoods so everyone gains. We need quick incursions to natural areas that engage our senses. Everyone needs access to clean, quiet and safe natural refuges in a city. Short exposures to nature can make us less aggressive, more creative, more civic minded and healthier overall. For warding off depression, lets go with the Finnish recommendation of five hours a month in nature, minimum. But as the poets, neuroscientists and river runners have shown us, we also at times need longer, deeper immersions into wild spaces to recover from severe distress, to imagine our futures and to be our best civilized selves.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“We don’t experience natural environments enough to realize how restored they can make us feel, nor are we aware that studies also show they make us healthier, more creative, more empathetic and more apt to engage with the world and with each other. Nature, it turns out, is good for civilization.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“Muir wrote of time not in the wilderness: “I am degenerating into a machine for making money.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“If you have time for vacation, don’t go to a city. Go to a natural area. Try to go one weekend a month. Visit a park at least once a week. Gardening is good. On urban walks, try to walk under trees, not across fields. Go to a quiet place. Near water is also good.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“Between every two pine trees there is a door leading to a new way of life. — JOHN MUIR”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“May your trails be crooked, winding, lonesome, dangerous, leading to the most amazing view. —EDWARD ABBEY”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“I personally like Oscar Wilde’s broad definition: “a place where birds fly around uncooked.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“A 2014 study estimated that trees in the United States remove 17.4 million tons of air pollution per year, providing 6.8 billion dollars in human health benefits.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“Nature appears to act directly upon our autonomic systems, calming us, but it also works indirectly, through facilitating social contact and through encouraging exercise and physical movement. (p,166)”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“What else do you recommend?” I asked the middle-aged man with the bowl haircut. Clearly, Li gets asked this a lot. He had a small list. “If you have time for vacation, don’t go to a city. Go to a natural area. Try to go one weekend a month. Visit a park at least once a week. Gardening is good. On urban walks, try to walk under trees, not across fields. Go to a quiet place. Near water is also good.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“The idea of solvitur ambulando (in walking it will be solved) has been around since St. Augustine, but well before that Aristotle thought and taught while walking the open-air parapets of the Lyceum. It has long been believed that walking in restorative settings could lead not only to physical vigor but to mental clarity and even bursts of genius, inspiration (with its etymology in breathing) and overall sanity. As French academic Frederic Gros writes in A Philosophy of Walking, it’s simply “the best way to go more slowly than any other method that has ever been found.” Jefferson walked to clear his mind, while Thoreau and Nietzsche, like Aristotle, walked to think. “All truly great thoughts are conceived while walking,” wrote Nietzsche in Twilight of the Idols. And Rousseau wrote in Confessions, “I can only meditate when I am walking. When I stop, I cease to think; my mind only works with my legs.” Scotland”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“Analyzing 98 buildings over two years, they found a striking correlation between the level of greenery and the number of assaults, homicides, vehicle thefts, burglary and arson.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“When we are relaxed and at ease in our environment, our parasympathetic system—sometimes called the “rest and digest” branch—kicks in. This is why food tastes better in the outdoors, explains Miyazaki.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“As French academic Frederic Gros writes in A Philosophy of Walking, it’s simply “the best way to go more slowly than any other method that has ever been found.” Jefferson walked to clear his mind, while Thoreau and Nietzsche, like Aristotle, walked to think. “All truly great thoughts are conceived while walking,” wrote Nietzsche in Twilight of the Idols. And Rousseau wrote in Confessions, “I can only meditate when I am walking. When I stop, I cease to think; my mind only works with my legs.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“The difference in joy respondents felt in urban versus natural settings (especially coastal environments) was greater than the difference they experienced from being alone versus being with friends, and about the same as doing favored activities like singing and sports versus not doing those things. Yet, remarkably, the respondents, like me, were rarely caught outside. Ninety-three percent of the time, they were either indoors or in vehicles.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“By his count, the entire continental United States has fewer than a dozen sites where you can’t hear human-made noise for at least fifteen minutes at dawn.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“Anxiety is just excitement without breath.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“In the greener neighborhoods, death rates were lower for everyone after adjusting for income.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“To prove this, researchers collected undershirts of men who went skydiving for the first time. They then presented study subjects with either those shirts or ones worn by men who did nothing scary. The researchers measured elevated stress hormones only in the subjects who smelled the skydiver sweat. They smelled the terror and then caught it too. Fear detection is a handy skill in a social animal.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“Dirt can heal: in two separate experiments in England and the United States in 2007 and 2010, the mice lucky enough to be exposed to a common soil bacterium, Mycobacterium vaccae, performed better in a maze, showed less anxiety and produced more serotonin, a neurotransmitter many scientists think is associated with happiness. To test the phytoncide theory, Li locked thirteen subjects in hotel rooms for three nights.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“I use a humidifier with cypress oil almost every night in the winter!” You don’t need to harvest your own; he said standard health-store aromatherapy oils should do the job.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“The biophilia hypothesis posits that peaceful or nurturing elements of nature helped us regain equanimity, cognitive clarity, empathy and hope. When love, laughter and music weren’t around, there was always a sunset. The humans who were most attuned to the cues of nature were the ones who survived to pass on those traits.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“On average, study participants are significantly and substantially happier outdoors in all green or natural habitat types than they are in urban environments.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“You can see poverty from space.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“As the epidemiologist Ian Alcock put it, if you want to be happy, there is a simple, scientific formula: “get married, get a job and live near the coast.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“One-fifth of Japan’s residents live in greater Tokyo, and 8.7 million people have to ride the metro every day. Rush hour is so crowded that white-gloved workers help shove people onto the trains, leading to another unique term, tsukin jigoku— commuting hell.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“Walking was a philosophical act, facilitating a direct experience with divinity. It was a political act, mixing the educated classes up with the poor (who had always walked, doh). And it was an intellectual act, generating ideas and art. The ramblers of yore embraced a kind of radical common sense.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“Buddha, Jesus, and Reese Witherspoon all went to the desert to seek wisdom.”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative
“I find the intellectual compulsion to break apart the pieces of nature and examine them one by one both interesting and troubling. I understand it's the way science typically works: to understand a system, you have to understand the parts, find the mechanism, put your flag on a piece of new ground. The poets would find this is nonsense. It's not just the smell of a cypress, or the sound of the birds, or the color green that unlocks the pathway to health in our brains. We're full sensory beings, or at least we were once built to be. Isn't it possible that it's only when you open all the doors - literally and figuratively - that the real magic happens? (p. 127)”
Florence Williams, The Nature Fix: Why Nature Makes Us Happier, Healthier, and More Creative

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