Living Near A Forest Makes For A Healthy Amygdala

A link from a reader:

A study conducted at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development has investigated the relationship between the availability of nature near city dwellers’ homes and their brain health. Its findings are relevant for urban planners, among others.

Noise, pollution, and many people in a confined space: life in a city can cause chronic stress. City dwellers are at a higher risk of psychiatric illnesses such as depression, anxiety disorders, and schizophrenia than country dwellers. Comparisons show higher activity levels in city dwellers’ than in country dwellers’ amygdala — a central nucleus in the brain that plays an important role in stress processing and reactions to danger.

I suspect those with healthier amygdalae shy away from the city. I knew a rabbit once, and asked him why he liked traveling so often to the local city. His eyes lit up, as he described all the people around, all the things happening, and all the smells, and sounds. Clearly his amygdala was enthralled.

When I traveled to the same city periodically, I smelled little more than burned diesel fuel, garbage, and the periodic smell of some indeterminable food like scent. The people around me were always stressed and busy as they hustled on their way, there was a clear criminal and homeless element which I felt compelled to keep an eye on, used chewing gum over various ages was all over the sidewalk, and it seemed as if everything had a thin layer of a solidified smog-like material coating it. When I would get home, I’d feel as if I needed a shower.

In retrospect, it would seem his amygdala was flagging gross movement-like stimuli he saw a positives, and ignoring the negatives. My amygdala was flagging the negatives, and ignoring the gross movements of people around me.

To me, a remote forest is the opposite of that city. Be it the bark, the rocks, the moss, the grasses, the waterfalls, or the plants, everything seems pristine and fresh. The air is pure. Threats are usually minimal, and being armed will just about eliminate them entirely. The pace is slower, and relaxing.

The environment has a way of taking an amygdala in relax-mode, and focusing it on the minute beauty, from the complex individual leaves of thick moss beds, to the beauty of little minnows hanging in the water of a pond, to the silly wiggles of tadpoles rising up to take breaths of air with little frog legs dangling out their backsides, or crawfish slowly moving from one hiding spot to another on the rocky floor of a pool in a stream, to the smell of grasses, freshly broken and stomped as you walked through them. And then occasionally your amygdala enters high gear as a porcupine clumsily stumbles into view, or a garter snake slithers through the grass away from you, or you come on a box turtle digging a hole in a sunny area with its rear legs to lay eggs.

My guess is a city slicker in the wild, with an amygdala that needs shocks and aggressively stimulating stimuli to feel alive, would miss all that entirely and find the environment boring.

It is possible those with more developed amygdalae that prioritize threats/negativity well and operate at lower revs absent them, would choose a forested environment. Regardless, I have no doubt they would do worse in the city than they would in the woods.

Then again, this is probably just another case of amygdalae subconsciously seeking out the environments they are adapted to. Rabbits gravitate to the world of high population densities because that will mean a resource glut, while K’s seek out places where things are a little more spread out, signaling a more K-selecting environment where they can thrive honestly.

Another interesting data-point, nonetheless.

Spread r/K Theory, because there is nothing as sublime as living in the environment you are designed for

This entry was posted in Amygdala, Anxiety, Conservatives, K-stimuli, Liberals, Politics, Psychology, r-stimuli, rabbitry. Bookmark the permalink.
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Jake Saga (@sagajake)
7 years ago

Very eloquent.
I’ve been moving towards relocating to a rural/village environment for a while now, just trying to come up with the way to make it happen in terms of a job and income. But I am with you.
My poor son said a day ago that he wishes we were still up north, camping, as we were just before school started. He longs for that environment, too.
It must happen. Es muss sein.

everlastingphelps
everlastingphelps
7 years ago

My work requires me to occasionally travel to Manhattan for a week or two at a time. I tend to go native pretty quickly wherever I am (I consider it my natural adaptability.)

First, I don’t particularly like Manhattan. I don’t like the people, I don’t like the attitudes, I don’t like the architecture, I don’t like the prices, and other than eating a trattoria every night, I don’t care for the food. It was better under Giuliani, degenerated under Bloomberg, and is absolutely awful under Di Blassio.

But more importantly, I become angry, irritable and vulgar in NYC.My best example — I’m pushing a dolly full of document boxes at evening rush hour, and go to cross the street. As I do, jaywalking, I’ll add — I step right in front of a city bus, who honks at me. My reaction was not, as it normally would be, “holy cow, I just stepped right in front of that bus, I’m lucky to be alive!” My reaction was, “fuck you you fucking fuck, I’m fucking walking here. Asshole.”

My inner monologue does not normally sound like that. It does about 4 days into a trip to NYC.

Reenay
Reenay
7 years ago

Sounds about right, and why I went with a nice quiet suburban neighborhood that is somewhat out of the way, but still close enough to workplaces and stores. I’m a quiet, introverted computer guy though, so I don’t exactly stare at trees, but having a yard with some greens is still nice.

everlastingphelps
everlastingphelps
Reply to  Reenay
7 years ago

Ditto. I stayed in the city limits, because I consider a daily commute over 30 minutes a crime against humanity, but I made sure to get a house that literally has a park on the other side of my alley. Got a million dollar view for a blue collar price. After moving for the second time in 5 years, I’ve decided this is the house I’m dying in, too.

(It’s not an accident that the park is also off major roads, has few enough trees that the majority of it is arable, and has an intermittent water source. Grid down, God willing I can organize the neighborhood to feed itself on that park.

I have no doubt that God provided this house, and this house in particular, for me and my family.)

Pitcrew
Pitcrew
7 years ago

I’m more of a cornfield guy. Especially once harvest is over. Cornfields, cotton fields, dairy farms and hay bales as far as the eye can see. That’s living.

Hank Rearden
Hank Rearden
7 years ago

You’re such a savage! Take it as a compliment, as savage means “dweller of the woods,” which our European ancestors were for long centuries.

Origin and Etymology of savage: Middle English, from Anglo-French salvage, savage, from Late Latin salvaticus, alteration of Latin silvaticus of the woods, wild, from silva wood, forest
merriam-webster.com/dictionary/savage

Duke Norfolk
Reply to  Hank Rearden
7 years ago

Ha! I love that. Thanks for pointing that out. I’m going to own the title, savage.

info
info
7 years ago

The problem is that nature is being polluted and soiled by urbanites especially exarcerbated by modern industrial tech.

trackback
7 years ago

[…] Source link […]

lowell
lowell
7 years ago

My experience with rabbits is not that they find nature boring so much as they find it terrifying. As you mentioned, having a rifle with you more or less eliminates all the threats and you can just enjoy being out and about. SNL actually did a great skit about this once about a NYTimes correspondent coming in from Alaska to try and recruit some of the others and losing them all when he told them they would have to drive themselves and that there are no therapists after they completely misidentify a shotgun.

And now I’ve got to go get an IT job in a stinkin city for about ten years to afford the small scrap of nowhere at the base of a mountain to build an Earthship on so that I can kiss civilization goodbye.

infowarrior1
7 years ago

Its unfortunate that pollution and environmental destruction is making forests fewer and smaller.

everlastingphelps
everlastingphelps
Reply to  infowarrior1
7 years ago

The amount of US forest land has been stable since the mid 1970s. Don’t let the fearmongers fool you.

info
info
Reply to  everlastingphelps
7 years ago

Cool. But pollution is still a big problem. Especially plastic which seems to be polluting everything. As well as other toxic pollutants that come from industrial activity that end up in the forests.