Go Outside: It's Good for You

Interested in a healthier, happier life? Try connecting with the natural world. A new, technologically advanced body of research shows that spending time in nature can provide protection against cancer, high blood pressure, depression, stress, and more.

Nature WalksTake a walk in nature to improve your mood and your health.

A recent National Geographic article noted that advances in neuroscience and psychology have provided scientists with more tools to look at the way nature affects our brains and bodies. According to the article, 鈥淭hese measurements鈥攐f everything from stress hormones to heart rate to brain waves to protein markers鈥攊ndicate that when we spend time in green space, 鈥榯here is something profound going on,鈥欌 said University of Utah cognitive psychologist David Strayer.

Nature PlayImprove learning in the natural world.

University of Illinois environment and behavior researcher Ming Kuo found that . 鈥淣ature doesn鈥檛 just have one or two active ingredients,鈥 she told the university鈥檚 College News. 鈥淚t鈥檚 more like a multivitamin that provides us with all sorts of the nutrients we need. That鈥檚 how nature can protect us from all these different kinds of diseases鈥攃ardiovascular, respiratory, mental health, musculoskeletal, etc.鈥攕imultaneously.鈥

Other studies show that nature is essential to the well-being of children. Children learn and focus better, and are healthier and more relaxed in green spaces, researchers say. In its national guidelines on encouraging nature play, the National Wildlife Federation says, 鈥淣ature play is defined as a learning process, engaging children in working together to develop physical skills, to exercise their imaginations, to stimulate poetic expression, to begin to understand the workings of the world around them.鈥

At the 成人b站鈥檚 Nature Play Garden, visitors of all ages and abilities can roll down hills, splash in water, hide in logs, and more. The Nature Play Garden is part of the Regenstein Learning Campus.