Five grounding techniques to use with nature photography

Five grounding techniques to use with nature photography

Sometimes life is overwhelming.

However, calming overwhelm doesn’t have to be a challenge. Grounding activities are designed to help ground yourself in the present moment and bring you to a place of calm. This helps relieve the anxious feeling and giving your mind a moment to pause. Take a minute to yourself, go outside or look at a nature landscape and use these techniques.

Five simple grounding techniques.

  1. Rainbow Method

  2. Visualize being at the place you see

  3. Breathe Deeply

  4. Play a memory game

  5. Try the 5-4-3-2-1 method

     

Rainbow Grounding Method

Find a calming space with your photo. Begin to start looking to spot and name as many objects that match the colors of the rainbow as you can. If you can’t find an object of a specific color, think about something you like or are interested in that might be that color.
Grounding Techniques  with Calming Captures
Johnson’s Beach, Perdido Key, Florida

RED: What do I notice that is red?
ORANGE: What do I notice that is orange?
YELLOW: What do I notice that is yellow?     
GREEN: What do I notice that is green?
BLUE: What do I notice that is blue?
PURPLE: What do I notice that is purple?

Visualize being at the place you see
Using each of your senses, imagine the noises you hear, the objects you see, and the scents you smell. Think about what you’d do there and how it makes you feel.
Johnson’s Beach, Perdido Key, Florida

Breathe deeply

Slowly inhale, then exhale. If it helps, you can say or think “in” and “out” with each breath. Feel each breath filling your lungs and note how it feels to push it back out.
Yosemite National Park, Four Mile Trail

Play a memory game

Look at a detailed photograph or picture for 5–10 seconds. Then, turn the photograph face-down and recreate the photograph in your mind in as much detail as possible. Or, you can mentally list all the things you remember from the picture.
La Jolla Cove, San Diago, California

Try the 5-4-3-2-1 method

Working backward from 5, use your senses to list things you notice around you.
For example, you might start by listing:

5 things you hear
4 things you see
3 things you can touch from where you’re sitting
2 things you can smell
1 thing you can taste

Make an effort to notice the little things you might not always pay attention to, such as the color of the ground or the hum of the air conditioner.

Use these techniques for the next time you need a breather, feel free to print it out and keep it on your desk or share it with a friend. The world needs more moments of calm. Enjoy and keep on being uniquely you!

Peace & Love, 
Erica 
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