Your phone is buzzing. Your inbox has 47 unread emails. You just scrolled past someone’s perfectly curated vacation while sitting at your desk, eating lunch out of a container. And somewhere between the notifications, the ads are trying to convince you that you need something you definitely can’t afford.
Talk about anxiety. Yikes! Just re-reading that, and I can feel the tension building.
Here’s the thing though… The most effective thing you could do for your anxiety isn’t another app (put that phone down!), another supplement, or another morning routine that requires you to wake up at 5 a.m.
What if it’s something way simpler and way less glamorous than all of that?
Well, this is exactly where a nature awareness journal comes in.
What Is a Nature Awareness Journal?
To be clear: This isn’t a gratitude journal.
It’s not a diary.
And you don’t have to sketch birds or press wildflowers between the pages (although honestly, no judgment if that’s your thing, and seriously, that sounds both wonderful and relaxing).
A nature awareness journal is really just a practice of writing down what you notice when you’re outside.
- What do you hear?
- What do you feel?
- What does the air smell like?
It’s not about writing something poetic or profound. It’s about slowing down long enough to actually be where you are instead of letting your brain run laps around everything that happened yesterday or might happen tomorrow (or that next spiral that social media has everyone on edge about).
And the science behind it is pretty hard to ignore.
Studies have shown that spending time in nature can:
- reduce stress levels
- reduce symptoms of anxiety and depression
- improve focus
- lower blood pressure
One study found that even just 20 minutes in a natural setting was enough to significantly reduce stress hormones.
Related Article: How You Can Gain Back Control with Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)
How Can You Create a Nature Awareness Journal to Reduce Anxiety?
The best part about this is that you don’t need much. Grab a notebook, a pen, and enter this whole idea with a willingness to actually pay attention to what’s going on around you. And yes, we know this can be harder than it sounds.
However, this isn’t about adding another task to your already packed to-do list. It’s the opposite. It’s about subtracting noise. Giving your brain a break from the constant input and letting yourself just… observe.
Here are a few simple ways to get started.
Related Article: 6 Calming Anxiety Techniques to Beat the Panic in 5 Minutes or Less
Try the 5-4-3-2-1 Sensory Grounding Exercise Outdoors
You might already know this one as an anxiety tool, and it works great on its own.
But doing it outside in nature? That’s a whole different experience!
Here’s how it works: Wherever you are, notice:
- 5 things you can see
- 4 things you can hear
- 3 things you can touch
- 2 things you can smell
- 1 thing you can taste
Then write it all down.
It sounds so simple that you might wonder if it even does anything. But the trick is that it forces your brain out of whatever anxious spiral it’s in and anchors it to right now.
And when you do this regularly and start reading back through your entries, you’ll notice something kind of cool—you start catching things you completely missed before. The way light hits a certain tree. A bird sound you never paid attention to.
It rewires you to look instead of just see.
Find Your “Sit Spot”
This one is so perfectly uncomplicated. Pick one place in nature, such as a bench, a spot under a tree, or even a patch of grass in your backyard, and just keep going back to it. That’s it. Really!
The magic here is embedded in the repetition. When you return to the same spot over and over, you start noticing how things change. The light is different in the morning than in the afternoon. The sounds shift between seasons. Even your own mood is different each time you sit down.
And this is really where the difference between being ‘somewhere’ and actually noticing where you are comes in. You can walk through a park every day and barely register it because your brain is busy replaying a conversation from work or planning what’s for dinner.
But when you sit down with the intention to notice—and then write about it—you’re living in the moment! You’re taking the world in, as opposed to the world taking you on a ride of its own.
Leave Your Phone Behind
I know. I know. This is the hard one.
Most of us bring our phones everywhere “just in case.” And then this usually turns into checking one notification, which turns into a quick scroll, which turns into 15 minutes of reading comments on a post that has absolutely nothing to do with your life.
You can’t fully engage your senses when half of your brain is waiting for a ping. It’s just not possible.
So when you go to your sit spot, or take a walk, or do your grounding exercise, consider leaving your phone at home. Or at the very least, put it on airplane mode and tuck it in your bag.
This might feel uncomfortable at first. Maybe even a little boring.
That’s okay.
This discomfort is just your brain adjusting to the absence of stimulation. Give it a few minutes. The quiet will start to feel less like something is missing and more like something you’ve been craving without realizing it.
A Little Peace in Your Everyday
It’s time you give yourself simple, uncomplicated ways to step out of the noise and find a little bit of peace in the middle of a world that is constantly demanding your attention. This is the break we all truly need.
And the research backs it up; nature genuinely helps with stress, focus, breathing, and emotional regulation. As with any new habit, start small. Start today.
Grab a notebook and go outside! See how you feel afterward. My bet is a whole lot more relaxed, making this practice entirely worthwhile.
Read Next: Try These 8 Daily Anxiety-Reduction Techniques to Help You Worry Less
Photo by Jay-r Alvarez
