We all know that gardening is good for us mind, body and soul. Thanks to
Flora Grubb for initially sharing
this article from CNN Health, we now learn some other ways that gardening is good for you.
I know that when I am out in the garden I feel so refreshed and invigorated and that may be because of the "involuntary attention" involved with gardening.
"We live in a society where we're just maxing ourselves out all the time
in terms of paying attention," says Andrea Faber Taylor, Ph.D., a
horticulture instructor and researcher in the Landscape and Human Health
Laboratory at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Humans have a finite capacity for the kind of directed attention
required by cell phones and email and the like, Taylor says, and when
that capacity gets used up we tend to become irritable, error-prone,
distractible, and stressed out.
Fortunately this "attention
fatigue" appears to be reversible. Following a theory first suggested by
University of Michigan researchers in the 1980s, Taylor and other
experts have argued that we can replenish ourselves by engaging in
"involuntary attention," an effortless form of attention that we use to
enjoy nature.
Trading your BlackBerry for blackberry bushes is
an excellent way to fight stress and attention fatigue, Taylor says, as
the rhythms of the natural environment and the repetitive, soothing
nature of many gardening tasks are all sources of effortless attention.
"The
breeze blows, things get dew on them, things flower; the sounds, the
smells," says Taylor, herself a home gardener. "All of these draw on
that form of attention."
This next bit is quite different in the realm of gardening benefits, but makes sense. We know that mycorhhizae bacteria is good for plants, why not bacteria that is good for us?
"Christopher Lowry, Ph.D., an assistant professor of integrative
physiology at the University of Colorado at Boulder, has been injecting
mice with Mycobacterium vaccae, a harmless bacteria commonly found in
soil, and has found that they increase the release and metabolism of
serotonin in parts of the brain that control cognitive function and mood
-- much like serotonin-boosting antidepressant drugs do.
Digging
in the dirt isn't the same as taking Prozac, of course, but Lowry
argues that because humans evolved along with M. vaccae and a host of
other friendly bugs, the relative lack of these "old friends" in our
current environment has thrown our immune systems out of whack."
Wow! Maybe that is why I really love getting my hands in super healthy soil. Who would have thought?!?
Winter is the time to be planning for the upcoming season so hopefully this has given more reason to get out there as much as possible this year.