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Health & Wellness

Slow Down: How Our Fast-Paced World Is Making Us Sick

By Linda Buzzell, AlterNet. Posted July 2, 2009.


Living under unnatural time pressures causes a myriad of psychological, social and physical ailments.
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Not so very long ago, humans -- like the rest of the animals and plants on earth -- moved through our natural cycles at nature's pace. Time was marked by the passing of the seasons, the life cycles of human, animal and plant life and the yet grander cycles of the moon and the other celestial bodies.

Homo sapiens, a late-appearing species in the long history of our unimaginably ancient planet and universe, evolved during the recent (as the universe views these things!) Pleistocene era, adapted for a life intimately connected with and expressive of our natural surroundings on the African savannah and beyond.

And this is how we lived for millennia.

In the last 150 years, however, the human relationship with time has radically changed. Some say the problems started earlier, with the development of agriculture or writing, but it was really the Industrial Revolution -- the rise of the Machine -- that put humans in thrall to mechanical processes and machine time. And the recent exponential speeding up into Cybertime has accelerated the process still further. Industrial time was bad enough (Charlie Chaplin did a wonderful job of visualizing that "cog in the wheel" feeling in his film "Modern Times") but Cybertime can be dizzyingly discombobulating for a Pleistocene primate.

And that's how many modern people feel -- completely frazzled and out of synch with our deepest selves.

The results of this disconnection from nature and nature's pace show up in therapists' and doctors' offices every day. Living under unnatural time pressures causes a myriad of psychological, social and physical ailments. Delinked from the natural rhythms of our bodies and the rest of the planet, we struggle with diminishing success to adapt to the strange mechanical and disembodied world we have created.

As a practicing psychotherapist and ecotherapist, when I see patients who are suffering from depression or anxiety I ask them to keep a time-journal in which they record the hours and minutes spent each day outside, as well as the hours spent inside in front of a screen. My clients are often shocked to realize how disassociated they have become from nature and our species' natural ways of living, and the effect this disconnection is having on their psyche. In fact, a 2007 study from the University of Essex shows that a daily "dose" of walking outside in nature can be as effective at treating mild to moderate depression as expensive antidepressant medications that can sometimes have negative side-effects.

Time poverty is now a recognized psychological and social stressor. In a speeded-up, highly complex society, there just isn't enough time for everything: our demanding jobs, our interlocking bureaucratic responsibilities (taxes, insurance, legal issues), our loved one, kids, our community (including the rest of nature), plus commuting and keeping up with traditional media and endless 24/7 online communications. Constantly rushing to keep up as we inevitably fall further behind, we find ourselves destroying not only our own health, but our habitat and the habitat of the people, plants and animals with whom we share the planet.


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See more stories tagged with: ecotherapy, ecopsychology

Linda Buzzell, M.A., MFT is the co-editor with Craig Chalquist of the new anthology Ecotherapy: Healing with Nature in Mind, just released by Sierra Club Books (May 2009). She is a psychotherapist and ecotherapist in Santa Barbara.

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Caution -
Posted by: pelican beak on Jul 2, 2009 12:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Truly living at nature's leisurely pace means hyper-paced society will become surreal.

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they call it the 'rat race' but rats are much smarter
Posted by: Suzon on Jul 2, 2009 1:48 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm so glad that I grew up when I did. My childhood memories are about cycling to play in the woods, not of having a Playstation.

More and more of us are rejecting the corporate-made world. You can join a bartering organization, raise some chickens, grow some food.

Last evenlng a handful of strawberries from my allotment was a wonderful treat. Grown without chemicals, they were red, juicy and delicious all the way through (hate the tasteless white core of commercial strawbs!).

This is one article I can be in 100% agreement with!

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Hate to sound like a broken record...
Posted by: Lily H. on Jul 2, 2009 2:50 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
but I'd been trying to live by this philosophy but my marriage failed because I wasn't willing to participate in the work/spend/consume lifestyle promulgated in the early 80's, by my then-husband and our changing culture.

I wanted to remain a homemaker and tend to home and hearth, not just because I may or may have not cared about supposed upward mobility, but because I could already see the damage done by a culture that demanded two parents keep up a rat-in-a-treadmill pace just to stay ahead of the game, per se.

Suddenly, there was no place for even airing an opinion like mine, and was looked upon as being out-dated and "behind the times". I caved in, eventually, but too late, other outside elements took its toll, and I found myself a single mom, now forced to participate in precisely the same force I so railed against.

Even still, I found sanctuary in the home I cultivated for my children and I, and vowed to stay as close to my ideals as humanly possible. No mean feat in this too-fast paced life we'd been handed.

Ironically, I am now a cancer patient, and once again, I have the time to nurture myself and adhere more to the author's belief system, one that I continue to advocate for, above all else as the most sensible, human-friendly life possible.

Just last night, I met with my garden club (something I joined while still in the rat-race), where we had a wonderful potluck at our leader's home, who boasts a mountain-top home with a small but lovely herb garden.
I have to say as I breathed in the aromatics of the herbs, that there nothing in life compared to communing with nature, and that we are undersold as a society if we are led to believe otherwise.

The author speaks truth to the soul...

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Read Tolle
Posted by: weathered on Jul 2, 2009 5:42 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
we've had the gift inside us all along.

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Otto
Posted by: otto on Jul 2, 2009 6:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Writers like Thomas Merton and People like Richard Rohr and his "Center for Action and Contemplation"
encourage us to become more contemplative, wherever we are. Eastern mystical religions offer the same wisdom. Learn to slow down, relax, become aware of things, commune with God and all of creation: your attitude and outlook changes to one of peace and gratitude, rather than rush and seek satisfaction in the pursuit of possessions.

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I'll Bring It Up To My Boss
Posted by: FoonTheElder on Jul 2, 2009 6:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'll bring this up to my boss. I'm sure he will be all for it....for himself only.

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"Time" a construct...
Posted by: Spiritgirl on Jul 2, 2009 8:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thanks for confirming what I've already known. I'm lucky enough to have a small garden. I find that when I am out there weeding, planting, digging - "time" doesn't have a meaning! I hear the birds singing all around me, I smell the air. Last night we had a thunderstorm, and I smelled the air - it took me back to the wonder of childhood! It was fresh, exciting, and a very good thing.

This thing that was created called "time" has displaced most people. I always laugh when I hear my neighbors talk about needing a "park" because they want "to be with nature"! "Nature" is all around but far too many cannot "see" because they refuse to sit and be still with themselves! Maybe this recession will remind people to stop, and take back their "time" and reconnect with the people and things they really want to do!!!

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I KNEW it!
Posted by: willymack on Jul 2, 2009 9:20 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I knew there was an upside to being a lazy slob. This is what I've been trying to tell my wife for years. Thank you, Ms Bozzell!

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Remember
Posted by: JSquercia on Jul 2, 2009 11:23 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Remember when Computers were first introduced .We were told they would increase productivity so much that we would have all the leisure time we could want . A three day work week was deemed easily doable in this new world .
I remember it well because that was when I started working . I had a train Commute of roughly an hour and a 20 minute walk to my place of employment . The time on the train was mine to do with as I pleased . I could nod off or play cards the choice was mine . I was unreachable to anyone
Then came the cell phone at first a rare item that seemed only to used by some idiot telling the person on the other end "guess where I'm Calling from " . Annoying yes but relatively rare. BUT THEN everyone seemed to have one and they seemed more more being used for business purposes and now the company had Cart Blanche to change my commute from MY time to THEIR time . OF course this was not to be considered overtime .
However it got even worse soon there was not only the cell phone but the PC enabling You to do far more work on the commute and now at home as well . Then came the final blow at your "free" time the Cell phone and PC morphed into one small take it with you everywhere item .
Do most people working today even have any idea of a non 24/7 ASAP world ? Probably not
That is sad . I remember when I was a little boy my Dad worked on Wall Street and he worked a half day on Saturdays . When those half days were no longer required we were all so happy .
Wouldn't it be wonderful if we could somehow be "unreachable" again
BTW don't feel sorry for me I am retired and unreachable EXCEPT when I chose not to be

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» RE: emember Posted by: pelican beak
Time is not the enemy
Posted by: La Colombetta on Jul 2, 2009 11:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
But I do think that external modernist forces do their best to sidetrack our lives and how we spend our precious time. Time seems to be a necessary accomplice in the flowering of physical reality and consciousness, so I try to work with it, rather than against it. Fortunately nature does provide us with a wonderful template as to how we should go about doing this. It's also important not to give in to peer pressure in daily life. If someone is very parasitic and constantly demanding you spend time with them, they are likely not a true friend. Honor your natural bodily rhythms and don't let society dictate how you should be feeling every second of the day. We cannot be 'on' all the time, and really, we shouldn't be. 'Perpetual-teenager mode' is a very accurate phrase to describe such compulsive manic behavior.

"Reconnect with companion and wild animals." This is an important point. I think I read somewhere that humans have a far less anxious response to other species than they do with each other.

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Right on.
Posted by: monkeywrench on Jul 2, 2009 11:35 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Paragraph eight of this article, on time poverty, just nails it; we have become so used to ever increasing complexity – like a frog that boils to death in slowly heated water because it doesn't have the sense to notice the change and jump out – that we fail to see how we are being robbed, not just of time, but of simple peace, by our ceaseless (and often pointless) flailing. Endless complexity, endless demands to solve hundreds of stupid little problems minute-by-minute because of our (needlessly) complicated lives, is tremendously stressful, even when the outcomes are positive.

As for nature? Good luck slowing down to commune with nature on any decent scale in a big city; that usually requires a long drive in choking traffic, completely negating any benefit. (Somethng else we have lost in cities that has been overlooked is the simple act of contemplating the stars in the heavens, something that is at once awe-inspiring, calming, and humbling, and somethng that is absolutely essential for us to realize our place in this universe. (Where I live, I'm lucky if I can see 20 or 30 of the brightest, let alone the billions in the universe and our own galaxy that I saw as a kid growing up in the country.)

We tend to look at only the negative stress that makes us sick; but I believe that it is complexity itself that is doing it. The mind needs time to rest and play, even when it is awake; but modern life feels more like being trapped in a carnival midway, or like a version of chinese water torture where the drops come at you more like endless rain rather than a drip-drip-drip. We are literally driving ourselves crazy with our own cleverness and self-involvement.

Today, we are always in a great hurry –– but, for WHAT?

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» RE: ight on. Posted by: pelican beak
speed, speed, but no direction
Posted by: Jaffe on Jul 2, 2009 4:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The busyness mania is not "real" but superimposed, and it is infected with technology.

Try reclaiming "real" time, corresponding with actual nature, petting a cat without anticipating your cellphone buzz, meditating, going an entire day unwired . . .

Addictions are very hard to break. Directionless speed is an addiction underwritten by global PoMo capitalism (or whatever you want to call it).

Let's confront the global imprisonment politically even as we try to break with it.

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» RE: speed, speed, but no direction Posted by: progressiveview
The Last Human Spring
Posted by: Tucker on Jul 3, 2009 9:14 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If you like the Ecotherapy anthology, please read L.S. Heatherly's "The Last Human Spring" and/or visit the nurturome.org web sites. Mr. Heatherly's ideas and philosophy are destined to become major influences in this field.

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Makes a lot of sense to me...
Posted by: bnvasquez on Jul 3, 2009 5:12 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have to agree with this author. I think all the time commitments make us sick. I feel it is especially harder for students (especially low income college undergrads just getting by, I'm lucky enough to get scholarships, but some of my fellow peers are not so lucky). Honestly, I could be biased when agreeing with this piece because 1) I'm a student who does tend to get a bit frustrated when drowned with tiredness even if the week wasn't so stressful, so yeah I'm going to agree and 2) I'm a psych major hoping to be a clinical psychologist with an emphasis on therapy, so yes anything like this seems to make a lot of sense to me.

Hopefully I could practice what I preach and practice some of these points she makes.

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OUT TIME IN NYC,.
Posted by: ruruben on Jul 7, 2009 1:48 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
MKV to AVI ,Professionally convert your mkv files to avi format, other popular video and audio format supportedTINE

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TIME IS THE KEY INGREDIENT
Posted by: NeedyBad on Jul 7, 2009 2:38 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a very refreshing article for everyone who is caught in the socio-economic topsy-turvy world we live in today.
Stress + Anxiety are not only psychological disorders, but also leading cause of poor health. They contribute immensely to Obesity and Overweight, especially when you factor in job-loss and long-term unemployment in the equation.
How can we have some control over this catastrophe? I certainly believe TIME is the key ingredient for success. TIME waits for no man, and therefore it is imperative that we measure TIME against all of our stressors like financial stress and anxiety. How much does it cost to take a break and get a breath of fresh air from all your worries? Is this TIME too expensive ? It will also do your health some good.
I would like to recommend a book that can guide you to " Overcome Any Obstacle, Achieve Any Goal, and Accelerate Your Success with Motivational DNA" (Drives, Needs and Awards): GET Motivated ! by Tamara Lowe (2009 ) ISBN 9780385524698

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Americans Need Paid Vacations -- and might get them, thanx to Paid Vacation Act of 2009, H.R. 2564
Posted by: Gregory Wright on Jul 10, 2009 12:09 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
'How Our Fast-Paced World Is Making Us Sick' expresses some of the reasons that Americans need to catch up with the rest of the developed world and get some paid vacation time to slow down and experience nature and the world again.

Which is why anyone interested in this topic should come to the Vacation Matters Summit in Seattle, August 10-12, 2009.
See Right2Vacation.org -- linked text -- for more info.

(Also see TimeDay.org -- linked text
-- the website of the conference sponsor, Take Back Your Time.)

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