The Well-Gardened Mind Quotes

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The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature by Sue Stuart-Smith
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The Well-Gardened Mind Quotes Showing 1-30 of 47
“The small pleasures of life are not so small really, it is just that we get into the habit of taking them for granted.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“Gardening is about a balance of different forces, human and natural, life and death. When it comes to contemplating the inevitability of death, decay, and decomposition, however, much of the garden’s power derives from a direct and earthy engagement with it. If you are not a gardener, it may seem strange to think that scrabbling about in the soil can be a source of existential meaning, but gardening gives rise to its own philosophy, and it is one that gets worked out in the flower beds.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“The eighteenth-century philosopher Immanuel Kant described how we love flowers “freely and on their own account.” Kant used flowers to illustrate his concept of “free” beauty, that is a form of beauty which we respond to regardless of utility or cultural value. Certainly, we know beauty when we see it. We recognize it as if something in us has been lying in wait for it. Beauty holds our gaze and saturates our awareness. Somehow the boundary between our self and the world shifts and we feel more alive in the moment of flourishing that it offers. Although the experience may be fleeting, beauty leaves a trace in the mind that survives its passing.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“«La paz no es solo la ausencia de guerra, sino un estado positivo de afirmación [...], el jardín no representa solamente un refugio, una pausa, sino la afirmación de un estado ideal, un modelo que hay que emular».”
Sue Stuart-Smith, La mente bien ajardinada: Las ventajas de vivir al ritmo de las plantas
“la belleza nos calma y revitaliza al mismo tiempo.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, La mente bien ajardinada: Las ventajas de vivir al ritmo de las plantas
“«El goce de la belleza —escribió— se acompaña de una sensación particular, de suave efecto embriagador», y si bien la belleza no puede protegernos del sufrimiento, sí puede, según Freud, «resarcir de muchas cosas».”
Sue Stuart-Smith, La mente bien ajardinada: Las ventajas de vivir al ritmo de las plantas
“Aunque la experiencia resulte fugaz, la belleza deja un rastro en la mente que sobrevive a su carácter efímero.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, La mente bien ajardinada: Las ventajas de vivir al ritmo de las plantas
“To look after a garden involves a kind of getting to know that is somehow always in process. It entails refining and developing an understanding of what works and what does not. You have to build a relationship with the place in its entirety – its climate, its soil, and the plants growing within it.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“Transitional processes allow us to imaginatively endow the world and feel part of something larger than ourselves. They are central to children’s play, and in adult life they play a role in the creative arts and in religion.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“All truly wise thoughts have been thought already thousands of times; but to make them truly ours, we must think them over again honestly, till they take root in our personal experience. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“Flowers first appeared on the planet after the age of the dinosaurs”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“They are associated with our dopamine, serotonin, and endogenous opioid systems and damp down our fear and stress responses. Hence, beauty calms and revitalizes us at the same time.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“What is the secret of beauty’s hold on us? Intuition suggests that it may be linked to our capacity to experience love, and research indicates that this is indeed the case.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“Beauty holds our gaze and saturates our awareness. Somehow the boundary between our self and the world shifts and we feel more alive in the moment of flourishing that it offers. Although the experience may be fleeting, beauty leaves a trace in the mind that survives its passing.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“Kant used flowers to illustrate his concept of “free” beauty, that is a form of beauty which we respond to regardless of utility or cultural value.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“The death of someone we love is a traumatic wrench – the finality, the irreversibility and the inhumanness – it is beyond our grasp. Death fractures our sense of the continuity of time, of a future with this person alongside us. Everything has to be reconfigured. There is a great deal of work in this, not work we have done before, for each loss is different. I think it is how it comes about that death, the most natural, inevitable biological happening, can come to feel so unnatural. Our innermost nature rises up in the urge to revolt against it, as if death should not be.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, 花花草草救了我
“Since ancient times, gardens have helped people bridge the gap between doing on the one hand and being on the other.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“In this age of climate crisis and separation from nature, we can no longer escape the connection between human nature and green nature, between human health and the health of the planet. How did it ever happen that we did? In ages gone by, people spent time meditating on such truths. They reflected on the mystery of life, and they often did it in a garden. Indeed, the origin of the garden goes back to ancient Persia when gardens provided respite from the desert heat and dust and were designed to nurture life spiritually as well as physically. The dramatic contrast with the harsh, arid surroundings was part of the effect. To sit in the restful shade of a garden accompanied by flowing water and vibrant greenery is an experience of peaceful plenitude that cannot fail to bring with it a sense of gratitude for the flourishing of the earth.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“the beauty of the natural world, especially the beauty of flowers, can sometimes help awaken or reawaken a love of life.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“The human aesthetic response includes an affinity for patterns in which regularity and order are combined with variation and repetition. The simple geometries we find in nature are perhaps at their most concentrated and compelling in the beauty of a flower’s form. Wildflowers, for example, commonly have five petals arranged in pentagonal symmetry. But no matter how elaborate or simple, the structure of any flower displays proportion, balance, and harmony, and we respond to this much as we respond to rhythm and harmony in music. This reaction may be linked to Zeki’s findings on mathematical beauty, for in the evolution of human culture, botanical patterning must surely have played a part in awakening the human mind to the possibilities of abstract beauty and mathematical form. Flowers”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“The enjoyment of the choicest natural scenes in the country and the means of recreation connected with them is thus a monopoly, in a very peculiar manner, of a very few very rich people. The great mass of society, including those to whom it would be of the greatest benefit, is excluded from it.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“The idea that we can cultivate the soul or the self like a garden goes back to ancient times and is beginning to be applied to the brain in contemporary science. It is, of course, replacing one metaphor with another, but we cannot think in any sophisticated way without metaphors.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“If there were no loss in the world, we would lack the motivation to create. As the psychoanalyst Hanna Segal wrote: “It is when the world within us is destroyed, when it is dead and loveless, when our loved ones are in fragments, and we ourselves in helpless despair—it is then that we must recreate our world anew, reassemble the pieces, infuse life into dead fragments, recreate life.” Gardening is about setting life in motion, and seeds, like dead fragments, help us re-create the world anew.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“A garden puts us in touch with a set of metaphors that have profoundly shaped the human psyche for thousands of years—metaphors so deep they are almost hidden within our thinking. Gardening is what happens when two creative energies meet—human creativity and nature’s creativity.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“I am in the kind of company that allows me to be alone and enter my own world. Both daydreaming and playing are increasingly recognized to contribute to psychological health and these benefits do not stop with the end of childhood.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“Like a suspension in time, the protected space of a garden allows our inner world and the outer world to coexist free from the pressures of everyday life. Gardens in this sense offer us an in-between space which can be a meeting place for our innermost, dream-infused selves and the real physical world. This kind of blurring of boundaries is what Donald Winnicott called a “transitional” area of experience. Transitional processes allow us to imaginatively endow the world and feel part of something larger than ourselves. They are central to children’s play, and in adult life they play a role in the creative arts and in religion.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“A close contact with nature affects us on different levels; sometimes we are filled with it, fully present and conscious of its effects, but it also works on us slowly and subconsciously in a way that can be particularly helpful for people suffering from trauma, illness, and loss.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“A garden gives you a protected physical space, which helps increase your sense of mental space, and it gives you quiet, so you can hear your own thoughts. The more you immerse yourself in working with your hands, the more free you are internally to sort things out and work them through.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“The study, which was published in the British Journal of Psychiatry in 2018, was the first horticultural therapy trial to be included in the journal, and its inclusion is an indication that gardening is gaining credibility”
Sue Stuart-Smith, The Well-Gardened Mind: The Restorative Power of Nature
“El miedo a la muerte es un temor primario generado por el instinto de supervivencia. Los antiguos egipcios abordaban ese miedo centrándose en el viaje al más allá, pero también hay un viaje psicológico que tenemos que hacer en esta vida para reconciliarnos con la muerte. El simbolismo del jardín puede consolarnos y sustentarnos al ir a emprenderlo. La jardinería se basa en un equilibrio de fuerzas distintas, humanas y naturales, de vida y muerte. A la hora de plantearnos la inevitabilidad de la muerte y la descomposición, la fuerza del jardín procede en gran parte de nuestra relación directa y material con él. Si no eres jardinera ni hortelana, quizá te parezca raro creer que remover la tierra puede dar sentido a la existencia, pero la jardinería crea su propia filosofía, que se refleja en los parterres de flores.”
Sue Stuart-Smith, La mente bien ajardinada: Las ventajas de vivir al ritmo de las plantas

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