• Susan Allison-Dean, RN, MS Nature Nurse Focused on "the connection piece with nature"
    Jan 20 2025

    Susan Allison-Dean is a Board Certified Advanced Holistic Nurse and Certified Clinical Aromatherapy professional with over thirty years of experience in nursing. During the first half of her career, she practiced mainly as a Certified Wound, Ostomy, & Continence Clinical Nurse Specialist, holding a joint position with Yale-New Haven Hospital & Yale University.

    In 1999, she experienced the profound loss of two significant family members just two days apart. This loss and the profound healing experiences that she experienced in nature led her to leave the disease-care model and shift her practice to health promotion, specifically nature and health.

    Sue is the Founder and CEO of TheNatureNurse.com, which focuses on connecting women with nature so they may live more joyous, vibrant, awe-inspiring lives in harmony with Mother Nature. She is the co-chair of the Global Nature Nurse Network, connecting nurses who specifically partner with the natural world to enhance holistic health and prevent disease.

    Sue also enjoys writing, traveling with her husband, and dabbling in other creative arts. She lives in New York and North Carolina in the US.

    How you became a Nature Nurse

    4:12 deep level grief, profound loneliness, pain
    6:02 mother nature 24/7 availability - transformative - helped me to live a joyous and productive life. Bring light into people's lives.
    9:03 Florence Nightingale "nature itself is healing"

    14: Nurse Pioneers in Global Nature Nurse Network

    Verla cites podcast episode with Professor Andy Jones systematic review and meta analysis of green space exposure and health outcomes (103 observational and 40 interventional studies investigating 100 outcomes: green space exposure decreased heart rate and blood pressure, HDL cholesterol, increased HRV, decreased preterm birth, diabetes, and all cause mortality in particular cardiovascular mortality.

    For transcript see Treesmendus.com

    Nature Nurse on Instagram
    https://www.linkedin.com/in/susan-allison-dean-rn-ms-ahn-bc-ccap/



    For peer reviewed research on how your time spent in green space can change your mindset, balance your nervous system and your heart rate please go to my website https://treesmendus.com and check out my books Take Back Your Outside Mindset: Live Longer, Stress Less, and Control Your Chronic Illness and Optimize Your Heart Rate: Balance Your Mind and Body With Green Space



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    50 mins
  • Dr Jim Doty Tells You to Balance Your Nervous System to Manifest Your Goals
    Jan 5 2025


    Dr James Doty says Balance Your Nervous System To Manifest Your Desired Goals

    The word manifest may put you off, but I like James Doty (MD)’s definition of manifesting. He says “once the body and the mind are in a state of balance, we have the power of manifestation, we can start thinking clearly about what we want to manifest.” Renown Stanford neurosurgeon and neuroscientist Dr James Doty says we all have goals and intentions. When your nervous system is balanced you can begin to manifest.Studies show that as little as 5 minutes outside in nature or even looking at an image of nature balances your nervous system. When you are outside in nature your autonomic nervous system shifts to the parasympathetic (PNS) and you become less self focused, calm, and more connected to others and your world around you. You experience joy and awe. The relaxed PNS state (that can also be achieved by breathing and just thinking about the joy and awe in the world) is what Dr James Doty’s recent book “Mind Magic: The Neuroscience of Manifestation and How It Changes Everything” (link: https://www.amazon.ca/Mind-Magic-Neuroscience-Manifestation-Everything/dp/1399710966/ref=monarch_sidesheet_title) teaches. The book is well worth the read and fits beautifully with your practice of spending time in nature or green spaces.

    The ability to manifest is based in Neuroscience

    Doty’s idea of manifestation is not the self-serving get rich quick scheme, tarot cards, crystals, or pseudoscience. Doty’s view is based in “significant developments in brain imaging that allows us to watch the brain transform on a cellular, genetic, and even molecular level. We can now speak about manifestation in terms of cognitive neuroscience……and the brain’s extraordinary ability to change, heal, and remake itself, known as neuroplasticity.”

    Manifesting according to Dr. Doty is the process of intentionally embedding thoughts and desires into your subconscious. For this he suggests visualization and picturing powerful positive emotions of your desired goal. Why? Because your brain will not know the difference between the real and the imagined. Dr Doty says this is manifestation is not magic – it is neuroscience.

    For peer reviewed research on how your time spent in green space can change your mindset, balance your nervous system and your heart rate please go to my website https://treesmendus.com and check out my books Take Back Your Outside Mindset: Live Longer, Stress Less, and Control Your Chronic Illness and Optimize Your Heart Rate: Balance Your Mind and Body With Green Space



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    24 mins
  • Dr Norman Farb Wants You to Test Drive Your Senses by "Sense Foraging"
    Nov 19 2024

    This is Verla Fortier of your Outside Mindset show. This podcast is about taking back your outside mindset by exploring and practicing new ways of noticing when you are outside close to nature whether you live in the city or country.

    Two podcast episodes ago I did a solo podcast on a great book “Better In Every Sense: How the New Science of Sensation Can Help You Reclaim Your Life.” This is the link to that podcast episode is titled Get Intentional About Using Your Senses.

    Today I have the author of this book with me. This is his bio.

    Norman Farb, PhD, is an Associate Professor of Psychology at the University of Toronto Mississauga, where he directs the Regulatory and Affective Dynamics laboratory. He studies the cognitive neuroscience of well-being, focusing on mental habits, such as how we think about ourselves and interpret our emotions. Together with Prof. Zindel Segal, he wrote Better in Every Sense, a book that describes the surprising role of sensation in mental health. His current research explores online interventions to support wellbeing, and neuroimaging of interoception, our sense of the body's internal state.

    Tanscript of interview is on my website Treesmendus.com

    For peer reviewed research on how your time spent in green space can change your mindset, balance your nervous system and your heart rate please go to my website https://treesmendus.com and check out my books Take Back Your Outside Mindset: Live Longer, Stress Less, and Control Your Chronic Illness and Optimize Your Heart Rate: Balance Your Mind and Body With Green Space



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    57 mins
  • Develop Your Tree Reading Skills To Find Your Way
    Sep 9 2024

    Tristan Gooley is a New York Times best selling author of How to Read Water, How To Read Nature, The Natural Navigator, The Lost Art of |Reading Nature’s signs, and The Secret World of Weather. Today we are going to talk to Tristan about his latest book How to Read a Tree.

    Tristan Gooley is a leading expert on natural navigation, and his passion for the subject stems from his hands on experience. He has led expeditions in 5 continents, climbed mountains in Europe, Africa, and Asia: sailed boats across oceans; piloted small aircrafts across Africa and the Artic. He is the only living person to both fly and sail single-handedly across the Atlantic, and he is a Fellow of the Royal Institute of Navigation and The Royal Geographical Society.
    2:47: In my 20s I went on big adventures finding my own way with bits of kit. After that I decided that instead of doing thousand mile expeditions , I would do very small journeys just using nature to find my way.

    Transcript Treesmendus.com
    natural navigator.com. IG thenaturalnavigator. Fb the naturalnavigator.

    For peer reviewed research on how your time spent in green space can change your mindset, balance your nervous system and your heart rate please go to my website https://treesmendus.com and check out my books Take Back Your Outside Mindset: Live Longer, Stress Less, and Control Your Chronic Illness and Optimize Your Heart Rate: Balance Your Mind and Body With Green Space



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    30 mins
  • Get Intentional About Using Your Senses
    Aug 15 2024

    Let’s Get Sensual: Get Intentional About Using Your Senses

    I read a good book recently titled “Better In Every Sense: How the New Science of Sensation Can Help You Reclaim Your Life.” The main message of the book is that by taking time to pause and engage with your senses (seeing, hearing, touching, tasting) you can feel better right away. You can do this indoors or outdoors.

    University of Toronto psychology professors – Dr Farb (neuroscientist) and Dr Zindel (clinical psychologist) urge you to – “ break out of negative thought patterns by engaging your senses.”

    Grounded in decades of research, the authors explain, “we often think that when we are struggling with a problem or a bad habit or life in general, we think we need to try harder, or tough it out. However this rarely works…..when we do this, our brains double down on thinking patterns that got us stuck in the first place.”

    This book explores the power of sensory experiences to liberate us from our ruts and dead ends.

    Your Brain Has Two Networks

    According to Farb and Segal your brain has two networks: the habit and the sensory networks.

    The habit network is devoted to rapid problem solving. You do need what the authors call your “house of habit” to glide through the essentials of your daily life. The is the hardware of your brain that you cannot adjust. It is also called the default mode network or DMN. The DMN system prioritizes self-judgement which can lock you into resistance mode. Here is where you can get stuck.

    Your Sensory Network Needs Your New Mindset

    Your sensory network is devoted to fresh insight. This is the software of your brain . This part you can adjust. You do this by 1) pausing and 2) noticing by using your senses. So for example, if you are in your house and the lamp is on – you can notice where the light is cast on the wall, where it is strongest, and how far out the light reaches, and the quality of the light in different places. This simple type of activity can change your brain. This change is called neuroplasticity. And you need the right mindset to get there.

    In my book “Take Back Your Outside Mindset: Live Longer, Stress Less, and Control Your Chronic Illness” I give you 101 ways to engage your senses and notice when you are outside in green space. By for example when you notice a tree, this taps into your DMN and tells it to let go – to relax.

    As I say in my books, your time is green space is non-pharmaceutical therapy that provides immediate relief, increases your ability to pay attention, to think clearly, to solve problems, increases your working memory and recall, helps you to regulate your behavior, increases your positive mood, lowers your resting heart rate…and let’s your brain restore itself.

    Make a Game With Your Senses

    What I like about “Better In Every Sense” is the simple exercises to practice noticing by engaging your senses.

    For peer reviewed research on how your time spent in green space can change your mindset, balance your nervous system and your heart rate please go to my website https://treesmendus.com and check out my books Take Back Your Outside Mindset: Live Longer, Stress Less, and Control Your Chronic Illness and Optimize Your Heart Rate: Balance Your Mind and Body With Green Space



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    22 mins
  • Managing Difficult Emotions As My Loved Ones Move Away
    May 8 2024

    This solo podcast episode is about managing difficult emotions when loved ones move away. I am working on managing my emotions as both my kids who are Canadian settle in London England.

    The first things kind people might say to me is : oh that must be hard having them both so far away or you must miss them.. and both are true in moments. And because I have the tools that I use to manage my chronic illness which is systemic lupus or SLE, I find this is a time in my life when again I can view the situation with fear as a loss or with curiousity as an opportunity to learn something new. And I know from my hero Ellen Langer Stanford social psychologist that “every thought affects every part of the body” so what I say to others matters if I want to feel good about my siutaion with my kids living away.

    For my recent trip to England I packed my 5 point plan.

    1. Noticing difficult emotions as they arise. So here they are: anger, fear, stress. So before I left I had negative and fearful thoughts like “why do I have to get on this plane, contribute to climate change to see my kids?” I am still naming these various emotions watch them come and go. I do my best not to judge them and try to watch them come and go like the weather.
    2. I pack my outside mindset with me everywhere. it is my guiding star. The kids, who also have outside mindsets – thank goodness already know that all I wanted to do was walk outside with family in green space while I was there. We all know this is where we are our best selves – smiling more, more relaxed, and noticing new things to keep us in the present. As Ellen Langer says simply noticing is mindfulness. So I ended up having so much fun outdoors with mu kids in England. We took a train to Lulworth Cove, near Bournemouth and hiked together for 4 hours, we spent an entire rainy day strolling around Hampstead Heath Park in London, and we spent two days roaming the grounds of Leeds Castle in Kent County. And I have the social media pictures to prove it on IG, facebook and linkedin.
    3. Dr Ellen Langer says that when we are having fun, we are being mindful. And when we are mindful we are attracted to others and they are attracted to us. The poet Keats must have known this too. When we toured his house in Hampstead, we learned that when he became very sick before his death in his early twenties, he became more and more jealous of his lover and asked her “who have you smiled with today?” When I moved back to my hometown of Pine Falls I noticed that everyone liked to find humor – to laugh. You meet someone on the street, chat, and have a laugh about something. I believe this has something to do with the native community close by Sagkeeng and more so in Pine Falls where laughter is used so often and so beautifully to articulate and recognize loss.
    4. Hand on my heart and say good for you, you are doing the best you can, and everything is ok. Langer goes even further and tells us to “assume everthing is going to be ok.” What can I thank right now? The fresh air, a tree, a bird….and notice how that feels.
    5. Climate action. Find transcript

    For peer reviewed research on how your time spent in green space can change your mindset, balance your nervous system and your heart rate please go to my website https://treesmendus.com and check out my books Take Back Your Outside Mindset: Live Longer, Stress Less, and Control Your Chronic Illness and Optimize Your Heart Rate: Balance Your Mind and Body With Green Space



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    18 mins
  • Stephen Leahy Award Winning International Environmental Journalist: Good News in Climate Change
    Mar 25 2024

    Stephen Leahy is an award-winning international environmental journalist with over 25 years of experience in the field. His work has been published in a wide range of prestigious publications around the world, including National Geographic, The Guardian, Vice, New Scientist, Maclean’s, Al Jazeera, and many others. Leahy's journalism focuses on critical environmental issues such as climate change, water scarcity, and biodiversity loss, aiming to bring global attention to these urgent matters.

    1. Would you please start by telling us why you became an environmental journalist and maybe a bit about that mid life crisis?

    5:07 For about 10 years I had a career in marketing. At one time I was the kind of the junk mail king of Canada sending out paper flyers by mail. I was at a direct mail conference and David Suzki was the guest speaker. It was kind of a downer because he was talking about climate change and environmental impact . And when he was asked "what can we do as an industry?" he replied "stop what you are doing and do something useful."

    6:01 I took that to heart because I was feeling tired of the long commute to work, the direct mail industry, wanted to do something more meaningful, spend more time with my family and more time outside of highly air conditioned offices. I wanted to integrate my work with my family life.

    Were you able to achieve what you set out to do?

    7:14 Absolutely. I was there for my kids before and after school. Could go for walks and schedule my won time . It took a few years because I had a family, a mortgage, and there were financial pressures.

    2. You wrote a book Your Water Footprint – please tell us a little about that and is there any good news here? What are the 3 things people can do day to day that will make a difference. person can do on a very small scale to help protect water.

    8:11 The book came about when someone in Uxbridge where I lived at the time asked me to do a info graphic approach to show in a visual the impact of our use of water. An Ottawa school is using the book for a project called Blue Schools. I ask the school kids if there is anything that we can make that does not require water. There really isn't anything.

    Is there anything we can do to protect water?

    10:18 Any time you consume anything be aware of the water consumption. The idea is to respect water. For thousands of years water has been considered sacred because we cannot survive without it or do anything without it. I think having that mindset of awareness helps us and water.

    For peer reviewed research on how your time spent in green space can change your mindset, balance your nervous system and your heart rate please go to my website https://treesmendus.com and check out my books Take Back Your Outside Mindset: Live Longer, Stress Less, and Control Your Chronic Illness and Optimize Your Heart Rate: Balance Your Mind and Body With Green Space



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    48 mins
  • "The Open Air Life" with Sweden's Linda Akeson-McGurk
    Dec 5 2023

    Today my guest is Linda Åkeson McGurk is a Swedish American writer and author of The Open-Air Life and the bestselling parenting memoir There’s No Such Thing as Bad Weather. She is a passionate advocate for the Nordic outdoor tradition friluftsliv and runs the blog Rain or Shine Mamma, where she shares tips and inspiration for outdoor play every day, regardless of the weather. McGurk and her work have been featured in The Wall Street Journal, Time Magazine, The New York Times, The New York Post, Huffington Post, Psychology Today and many more. When she is not working, she is usually found sauntering around the pine forests near her home in southwestern Sweden.

    5:52 What prompted Linda to write my first book and blogs. Reaching out to community.

    6:37 Latest book "The Open Air Life: Discover the Art of Friluftsliv and Embrace Nature EverY Day " wanted to share outdoor cultural traditions of Sweden.

    7:23 How to help people take the step

    11:45 Why getting into nature feels like going home. But nature is not a bottomless pit. View nature in terms of personal health, important to attach to environmental policy.

    18:00 What is Friluftsliv? (below are 4 of the 10 principles)

    1) Appreciate and are one with nature

    2) when you go to local nature spaces. If close by, much more likely to go. Get to know your local birds and trees.

    3) Non competitive. Feel the joy and keep it simple.

    4) Starts when the motor is turned off, when you compel yourself in space as in swimming, walking, running, cycling, cross country skiing, paddle boarding, kayaking..

    24:00 water skiing vs swimming - activity and personal thrill vs being and communing with what is under the water, communing with nature. Also the difference in the environmental impact. And which is most sustainable.





    For a full transcript of this conversation go to https://treesmendus.com

    For peer reviewed research on how your time spent in green space can change your mindset, balance your nervous system and your heart rate please go to my website https://treesmendus.com and check out my books Take Back Your Outside Mindset: Live Longer, Stress Less, and Control Your Chronic Illness and Optimize Your Heart Rate: Balance Your Mind and Body With Green Space



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    1 hr and 6 mins