The Healing Power of Nature and Acceptance

Life starts all over again when it gets crisp in the fall.๐Ÿ‚

-F Scott Fitzgerald


Elder Robert D. Hales once said:

When you cannot do what you have always done, then you only do what matters most.

Those words sink deep for me as someone who lives with chronic pain.

There are many things I cannot do anymoreโ€”not the way I used to, not with the energy or freedom I once had. And yet, in the midst of those limitations, Iโ€™ve discovered that my life is being reshaped around what truly matters most.

๐Ÿ” Finding Clarity in Constraints

Elder Hales went on to say:

Physical restrictions can expand vision. Limited stamina can clarify priorities. Inability to do many things can direct focus to a few things of greatest importance.

That is the truth of my life. I donโ€™t have the stamina to do everything I once could. But I do have the vision to see what is worth my energy. Pain has forced me to slow down, to let go of what doesnโ€™t serve me, and to focus on what is most meaningfulโ€”faith, relationships, healing moments, and time in nature. ๐ŸŒฒ

๐Ÿ’› โ€œCome What May and Love Itโ€

Elder Joseph B. Wirthlin also offered a phrase I want to cling to:

Come what may, and love it.

His mother taught him those words, and he later reminded us that

adversity, if handled correctly, can be a blessing in our lives.

I admitโ€”I donโ€™t always love it. There are days when pain feels relentless, and my instinct is to resist, to grieve what Iโ€™ve lost, or to dwell in shame when I make mistakes. I make a lot of those. Mistakes. I find my brain just checks out while dealing with chronic pain. ๐Ÿง 

๐Ÿšค A Maritime Memoir Best Left Unsailed

Like this past weekend, for example. I may or may not have put my husband and myself in mortal danger on the lake (๐Ÿ˜ฌ oops). I turned off the boat engine when the battery was lowโ€”thinking Iโ€™d heard Brent say to shut it off. Turns out, he had said the opposite. ๐Ÿ˜ณ

This process set off so many megaddons-

We would have drifted helplessly across the lake. But Brent, my hero, jumped in and anchored us to shore ๐Ÿฅถ . Now he was soaked through with no dry clothes.

Meanwhile, the navy was literally training around us, however, we were too embarrassed to ask for help. What would you have done?

My dad had to haul out his sailboat โ›ต๏ธ that was already getting packed away for winter. The sight of them motoring across the harbor with no sailsโ€ฆwell, letโ€™s just say it was memorable.

There we were, covered in lifejackets and wrapped in blankets, being eaten alive by biting flies.

At the time, I didnโ€™t want to โ€œcome what may and love it.โ€ I wanted to wallow in shame for the mistake that stranded us. But shame didnโ€™t help. It only made me feel worse.

Looking back, I see parts of it that were quite humorous.

Brent’s pants (they had to be fished out of the lake after the wind blew them from their safe perch where they would stay dry while he swam us to safety) soon had the appearance that we had been shipwrecked for months by the time rescue came.

Wet sweatpants are diabolical. Wet sweat shorts on the other hand- marginally better.

So out came the fishing knife (he did not have them on at this stage of the procedure) and off came his pride and a few inches of dripping fleece. Suggesting a shipwreck much longer than the hour or so that it actually turned into.

I couldn’t help but think in this scenario, I was the Gilligan.

On the contrary, the more loving responseโ€”for myselfโ€”would have been to let it go. To choose self compassion. To laugh. To accept my parents’ kindness.

And Brent’s! Even as he frantically thought through what he needed to do then jumped in the water. Even as he stood there shivering and dripping wet. Even as he swatted flies in nothing but my blanket, he told me not to worry. Not to feel bad.

He encouraged self compassion from the outset. To remember that we would survive the โ€œfly apocalypse,โ€ catch a fish ๐ŸŽฃ , and make it home safely. He reminded me to stay focused on what matters.

And look at that, he DID catch one!

Meanwhile…

The devil whispered in my ear, “You’re not strong enough to withstand this storm.” I whispered in the devil’s ear, “I love your eggs.” ๐Ÿคฆ๐Ÿผโ€โ™€๏ธ

๐Ÿ„ Woodland Wellness: Discovering Peace Among Trees ๐ŸŒฒ

Elder Hales reminded us that even the senior leaders of our church arenโ€™t spared from affliction:

Rather, they are blessed and strengthened to press forward valiantly while suffering in and with affliction.

That idea gives me hope. If they can press forward valiantly, maybe so can I. Maybe so can we. Whatever our struggle may be.

Thatโ€™s where forest therapy comes in for me. When my pain feels like too much, I turn to the forest.

Dendrolatry

a deep reverence for the trees, where every branch whispers ancient wisdom and every root holds the secrets of the earth– to honour a tree is to honour the quiet, sacred connection between life and nature.

The forest is where I remember how to breathe, how to soften, how to let go of shame and find a thread of joy. The forest teaches me that even in adversity, there can be beauty. Even when Iโ€™m hurting, there can be laughter, resilience, and connection.

My adversity is chronic pain. It is woven into every corner of my life. It shapes my days and my choices, and so it will show up in my writing and conversations, too. It is part of who I am.

Some people wish Iโ€™d talk about it less, but this is my reality. And itโ€™s also where Iโ€™ve learned to discover meaning, humor, and even joy.

The woods invite me to notice beauty even when pain is loud. The trees ๐Ÿ‘†๐Ÿผ donโ€™t erase adversity, but they remind me that I am still alive, still loved, and still capable of joy. ๐Ÿƒ

๐Ÿ’– Embracing Love, Bidding Farewell to Shame

So next time I find myself swarmed by biting flies (literally or figuratively in the form of invasive thoughts), or when I am caught in the grip of pain, I hope I can remember Elder Wirthlinโ€™s (and his motherโ€™s) invitation:

Come what may, and love it.

Not because itโ€™s easy. But because itโ€™s the better way forward. ๐Ÿ˜Š

September was a thirty-
days long goodbye to
summer, to the season that
left everybody both happy
and weary of the warm,
humid weather and the
exhausting but
thrilling adventures

-Lea Malot

As we bid farewell to shame we also bid farewell to summer. The following is an unorganized smattering of my summer adventures. Enjoy perusing (or skip it altogether). I encourage you to do the same. Enjoy your memories. Feel free to share stories or pictures in the comments!

Enjoy your life and the beauty that nature provides. If you’d like to schedule a forest therapy walk before the snow flies, let me know in the comments, or email me @ pam.munkholm@gmail.com I’d love to show you how healing it really is.

Rewilding: Embrace Nature This Summer

Maybe the clouds and the trees and the flowers love looking at you too.

-Anonymous

Welcome to summer! We made it. Congratulations to all the Saskatchewanians.

Have you heard the term re-wilding? As we talk about wildness. I feel it only proper to start with a couple of personal stories. From when I was in the trenches of raising three crazy boys. It’s not the type of wildness we will be considering today. But those days were filled with all kinds of wild. Those darlings were like an orchestra that was constantly warming up. I felt like I was four days past my bed time for 23 years. So many days went sideways. And sadly, there was nothing I could do about it.

3 Wild Boys: Tales of Horseplay and Havoc

In the first memory, we find my youngest. In the bathroom. I heard him cheering and walked in to find him with his pants down around his ankles. No time for such useless actions as pulling up one’s pants when one has a phenomenal idea. The cause of his delighted cheering was the race he was having with his brother’s battery operated toothbrushes. Across the bathroom floor. ๐Ÿ˜

My second memory takes us to the living room. I hear a raucous going on in there where all three boys were “playing.” Not a big surprise to hear things ramping up. I was on an important call and chose to ignore them. Until I heard the middle child chanting, “fight, fight, fight!” ๐Ÿ™„

And to complete the set. A final story about the oldest. Though he wasn’t very old at the time. He was trying on his new shirt. He came out of his room to show me the fit. Smoothing it down the front, he thought it was fine. I thought so too until I noticed something on this brand new shirt. I went to brush it away to make sure it wasn’t a stain. Instead of brushing it stuck to my finger. “What is this?” I asked as he fell into a fit of giggles. ๐Ÿ˜Ÿ “what is it?” “A booger,” he snickered. ๐Ÿคข

But this is not the type of wild we are discussing today. Nor are we discussing me from my wild teenage years. Or what happens if I try to stay out late these days.

Absorbing Nature: The Art of Re-Wilding

What we are talking about is a return to nature. To our true selves without all the gadgets and distractions that get in the way. We are talking about stepping away from our expected path. Living free and organic. In a more natural state and less domesticated. We will discuss how to absorb nature. And different ways I am attempting to rewild myself.

Shed the submissiveness of domestication.

Daniel Vitalis

Re-wilding is an invitation to live quite simply. Unashamed. And in tune with the natural world around you. There is a sacred, pure energy that flows in nature. And when you are surrounded by it in a forest, that energy flows into you. Something that will feel like a whisper. That a part of you has been disconnected and is now re-established, back in place. The way it should be. The way it once was.

Biophilia

the ancient memory that lives in our bones- a quiet longing to belong to the earth, a deep and sacred bond that awakens our senses and nurtures our souls

This feeling gets obscured by the distractions and emotions of everyday life. To meet our societal expectations and norms. We must do as the masses have done. There is no other way. Fiddlesticks!

Re- wilding says, I will not. I will find another way. My way. But this takes a certain knowing of oneself. To be able to take that step.

When all the voices and reasoning of others contradict. I encourage you to dim those voices. And turn up the volume of your own intuition. The one that calls you to accept yourself. And takes you back to your roots. To the call of the wild. To your inherently bewitching soul.

Sound good? Leading to the next question. How is it done?

She might be down to earth and rooted in reality by her responsibilities, but her soul is a wild one; always set on finding magic in sunsets and sunrises that others take for granted.

-Daniel Mercury

Your Outdoor Daily Prescription

A good start to re- wilding is to get a daily dose of nature. Following is a list of invitations to do daily in July. Mix them up to suit your day. But fit one thing in daily. Track to see if your mental and emotional health improve over this time. Some of these activities seem geared to young children. This is part of the process. Be a kid again. Add to this list. Or make your own. But the idea is to get out there and connect.

Rewild yourself in July!11} nature scavenger hunt22} bird watching
1} make a nature bracelet12} make a bug hotel23} paint with nature
2} bike ride13} explore a new trail24} explore a new natural area
3} rock painting14} worm hunt25} sink or float
4} rainbow color hunt15} water play26} nature sensory bin
5} make a nest16} night walk (try not to get kidnapped)27} nature journaling
6} take a closer look17} build a fort28} forest art
7} mud pies18} paint with mud29} curiosity walk
8} fill a box with tiny treasures19} animal track hunt30} find examples of interconnectedness
9} puddle jumping. 20} tree/ leaf rubbings31} silence walk- use your auditory senses
10} salt dough fossils21} animal observation

This is a movement of sorts. Where we normalize quietly existing without the need to defend or explain ourselves. Wouldn’t it be lovely, as chronic comrades, to have healthy days at work. Where instead of calling in sick we can call in healthy. “I feel fabulous today and I cannot waste it at the office. I will be building a fort in the forest instead. If you need me, I cannot be reached.”

She beats to the beauty of her wildflower heart and seashore soul.

Angie Weiland- Crosby

Enchanted Escapes: My Forest Future

As I grow older I see the beauty of living surrounded by nature. I want a house and yard full of plants and trees. Weird rocks I have collected. A garden. I want to take care of my animals and write stories and posts by a window with sunlight shimmering through. As my crazy hair gets more gray and wiry.

I don’t know. Maybe I’m like this because I drank from the hose. Is it weird that I just want to talk to trees and animals? Bob Ross didn’t think so.

I guess I’m a little weird. I like to talk to trees and animals. That’s okay though, I have more fun than most people.

-Bob Ross

And isn’t that what lifts us up on the bad days? Finding a way to absorb the good and discard the bad. Can you absorb nature? I think so.

I can go for a walk and take in the sights and sounds and it can be good. Or I can go along that same trail and really take in what I see, smell, touch and hear. And absorb the good energy. Remember that your soul knows nature. It is familiar with that feeling. Society and modern living is what is foreign. We yearn to go back to our roots.

When I look back on my life, I want to see that I was passionate and weird instead of just trying to be everyone’s cup of tea.

Wild Woman Sisterhood

Sorry if I’m not your cup of tea. I’m not even my own cup of tea. I’m barely a cup and I don’t like tea. I’m more like a rusty bucket of haunted bog water. Sorry if I’m not your rusty bucket of haunted bog water.

TragicAllyHere on X

Can I get an Amen?

As I look back over the years I can see I’ve come full circle. At the age of 9 I wanted to live in the forest. Growing my food and living off the land. In our little playhouse. To barter and use pine cones as currency. Over the years, the allure of a big house and fancy cars and all the commodities grabbed me. But now in my forties I have come back to desiring to live in the forest. To grow my own food and live off the land. In a tiny house. To barter and use pine cones as currency. This is where I will end up if I allow my wild heart to lead the way.

life is simply a mix of mayhem and magnolias, so embrace this gentle riot and gather flowers along the way.

Kat Savage

Where Will Your Wanderlust Lead You?

Liminal

the transitional space between who you once were, and who you are becoming; on the threshold of significant change.

Join me in this liminal phase. Where we choose who we want to become.

As summer days begin. Do not get caught up in the mess of becoming the “hot girl of summer” instead join me. We will be holding our own “feral nature girl summer.” We will go in the woods to find trails and creeks. We will collect rocks and prefer animals and trees over people.

She came to her garden and whispered to the plants until her smile returned and her mind was calm.

-unknown

This is what my time to re-wild looked like this week. A craving for the sand between my toes. And the streaming river water up to my thighs. The sun on my face. A quiet space of bird song. Head space to enjoy the expanse of changing clouds and skittering bugs. A peace that is not often sought in this world. Gadzooks! I found it!

Wildflowers can’t be controlled and neither can the girl with a soul boundless as the sky, and a spirit as free and wild as the ocean.

Melody Lee

Try it out my friends, and then tell the others!