Your Garden As Healer
One great garden tip is
to recognize your garden as a healer.
Let's think about the Garden As Healer. The word for ‘paradise’ comes from the Persian word for a garden and has
always meant the same thing in every culture. It is representative of
‘paradise on earth’ and is our opportunity to own a little bit of heaven
– here and now. It has a restorative significance as a healer when we
understand that gardens provide us with a place of sanctuary and
well-being. The garden has the potential to provide a place of refuge
from stress, “the health epidemic of the 21st century” according to The
World Health Organization. Medical doctors suggest that stress resulting
in illness is the causative factor underlying 70% of all visits to the
family doctor. The ability of the garden to provide this place of
healing and peace becomes crucial as more and more people succumb to
this dis-ease of ‘modern day life.’ This is a perfect example of how a garden as healer can apply to our modern life.
It matters little whether an indoor garden is a few pots on a
windowsill or a lush garden room, what does matter is that plants add a
dimension to the home/and or workplace that literally changes the energy
and adds life. There is something about caring for plants and tending to
them whether watering, re-potting, or touching the leaves that
re-connects us on a deep level with an overwhelming sense of awe about
this miracle of life of which we are an integral part. As we plant the
seed or see the cyclical nature of the gardens we nurture, time stands
still, and we bask in the knowledge of our relationship to the earth,
and to the spiritual aspect of ourselves.
Reasons for creating an indoor garden include: corners in rooms and
on furniture are softened when plants are introduced and placed in these
areas; living plants create feelings of calm and well-being; starting
seeds indoors provides a jump-start on spring for those of us who get
twitchy fingers in January and allows us to grow different types of
plants not usually available from greenhouses; growing herbs indoors
facilitates our ability to cook with fresh herbs all year round;
teaching children to garden provides an opportunity for the healing
aspects of gardening to become a life-long aspect of their lives; indoor
gardening is a stress-management tool taught in various classes related
to providing a higher quality of life for people dealing with loss
through death, divorce, or trauma in their lives. This is a true example of a garden as a healer.
Steps to Creating your Indoor Garden
1. Purpose – what do you want to achieve – healing, meditation,
growing herbs for cooking, or a project with the children? How can a garden as healer support your intentions?
2. Space – how much space is available – a closet, basement room,
living room, corner of the bedroom, windowsill?
3. Seating – is there room in your space for a seating area?
4. Characteristics – create a specific type of garden such as a
collection of Ficus, orchids, herbs, or ferns.
5. Features – include water features such as fountains, art,
sentimental objects, wind chimes, aroma and/or colour therapy, candles,
and /or music.
6. Location – is the location conducive to gardening indoors?
7. Light – is the light adequate or will you need artificial lights?
8. Plants – what plants will you grow? Indoor gardens can include
anything from a tabletop garden, herb garden, healing garden, meditation
garden, container garden, water garden, or wildlife garden. Thomas Moore
wrote, “We may have to learn again the mystery of the garden: how its
external characteristics model the heart itself, and how the soul is a
garden enclosed, our own perpetual paradise where we can be refreshed
and restored.” In other words, the indoor garden can provide a place of
sanctuary where we can take a moment and re-connect with our own
sacredness, hhow we can know the garden as healer.
Gwen Nyhus Stewart, B.S.W., M.G., H.T., is an educator, freelance
writer, garden consultant, and author of the book The Healing Garden: A
Place Of Peace – Gardening For The Soil, Gardening For The Soul and the
booklet Non-toxic Alternatives For Everyday Cleaning And Gardening
Products. She has written this article on the Garden As Healer and she owns the website Gwen’s Healing Garden where you will find
lots of free information about gardening for the soil and gardening for
the soul. To find out more about the books and subscribe to her free
Newsletter visit
http://www.gwenshealinggarden.ca
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