Highland Climate Festival Nature-Connection Activities

Gratitude for Nature

Today, identify two or three things that you are grateful for in nature. This could be the shade of tree, the sound of the birds, the whispering of the wind in the trees or the sight of a baby animal. Tomorrow, identify two or three things. Each day, try to identify things in nature to be grateful for (or other areas of your life).

Practicing gratitude for nature is a simple process, involving being thankful for the things we see, hear, feel and experience all around us. Noticing beauty in nature and identifying the positive things that happen each day, however small, and being grateful for them, can help us to focus less on the negative things that happen and the negative emotions that we feel.

Gratitude can help you to build improved nature-connection because it increases your awareness of the natural world and the beauty that it contains. Increasing your nature-connection through engaging with nature through your senses and immersing yourself in your natural surroundings in itself brings mental, physical and emotional benefits, but practicing gratitude for nature can bring additional benefits. Increased nature-connection, through practicing gratitude for nature, can also bring environmental benefits, as people with higher levels of nature-connection often do more for nature, both in terms of reducing their impact on the environment through using fewer resources and through taking positive actions to help the environment and reduce their contribution to climate change. As humans we have a reciprocal and symbiotic relationship with nature, and recognising, feeling and showing gratitude to nature for what it provides us and how it supports us often results in us wanting to protect nature in return. Practicing gratitude for nature reminds us that we are a part of nature rather than separate from it.