Podme logo
HemUpptäckKategorierSökStudent
Gardening and mental health

Gardening and mental health

28:002022-05-24

Om avsnittet

Claudia Hammond reports on a trend which has emerged from the world-famous Chelsea Flower Show this year - a growing number of gardens designed with mental health in mind. So what is it about gardens and nature which makes us feel better? The Mothers for Mothers "This Too Shall Pass" garden is designed by Polly Wilkinson - a former counsellor who's worked with adolescents and new mothers with anxiety and depression. The charity's CEO Maria Viner wanted to reflect the joys and pain of motherhood - so Polly constructed a pathway with a crack in it - which narrows and is almost "fixed", echoing the impact that peer support can bring. The lifting of low mood is also seen as muted green and blue flowers give way to apricots and pinks. Sue Stuart- Smith is a psychiatrist, psychologist and now author of the bestselling book The Well Gardened Mind. She says it's hard to untangle the factors which might be contributing to the impact of nature on us. Dr Stuart-Smith explains how a study in the British Medical Journal found 8,000 studies on the impact of nature - but just 8 were randomised controlled trials. where people are randomly allocated gardening or another activity - so more research is needed. The mental health charity Mind has its first ever garden at Chelsea this year which will be relocated in Barrow-in-Furness once the show is over. We hear from Alice - who had an eating disorder and obsessive compulsive disorder from an early age - and Faris, who has post-traumatic stress disorder, and sought asylum in the UK after he was orphaned in the conflict in Sudan. They say that growing vegetables and caring for bonsai plants has helped to relieve their symptoms. The Place2Be garden will also be relocated at the end of the flower show - to Viking School in Northolt, west London. For the last 15 years the children there have been able to get support from the charity's school-based counsellor Miss Angela. CEO Catherine Roche says the garden will provide a safe space so the pupils relax during a busy day. The children helped to design the garden's oak benches with gardener Jamie Butterworth. He says having a mum who's a teacher and a dad who's a mental health nurse made the Place2Be the perfect match for him.Made in Partnership with The Open University

Senaste avsnitten

All in the Mind
All in the Mind

Smartphones and children, mental health labels and climate anxiety

2024-09-0327min
All in the Mind
All in the Mind

Toxic positivity

2024-06-1827min
All in the Mind
All in the Mind

Tetris as therapy; internet addiction and teens; the psychology of secrets

2024-06-1130min
All in the Mind
All in the Mind

Languishing and the search for meaning in the modern world

2024-06-0427min
All in the Mind
All in the Mind

Grief, summer seasonal affective disorder, and anxiety in older people

2024-05-2827min
All in the Mind
All in the Mind

Why is exercise good for your mental health?

2024-05-2128min
All in the Mind
All in the Mind

Dishonesty researcher accused of fraud; hypocrisy; suicide prevention; awe

2024-05-1427min
All in the Mind
All in the Mind

The psychology of hope

2024-03-2727min
All in the Mind
All in the Mind

Seasonality, learning to hope, and the gender citation gap

2024-03-2028min
All in the Mind
All in the Mind

How nightmares link to real-life fears, and new research tackling post-cardiac arrest PTSD

2024-03-1231min
logo

PODME

INFORMATION

  • Om kakor
  • Allmänna villkor
  • Integritetspolicy
  • Press

LADDA NED APPEN

app storegoogle play store

REGION

flag
  • sweden_flag
  • norway_flag
  • finland_flag

© Podme AB 2024