shinrin-yoku
SHIN-rin YOH-koo
Forest bathing. The practice of immersing oneself in the atmosphere of a forest — not hiking through it or studying it but simply being present in it, breathing it, letting the forest work on the body.
Etymology
Japanese — shinrin (forest) + yoku (bath). Coined by the Japanese Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries in 1982 as a public health initiative. Now supported by a body of medical research on the physiological effects of time in forests.
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