Advertisement
Plants

Go ahead and spend more time gardening -- it’s good for you

Some patients find their own path to wellness. Tommy Tennyson, who suffered a stroke from a brain tumor more than a decade ago, credits his garden with saving his life.

“After my stroke, when I felt like it, I needed something to do,” the Virginia man says in a Newport News Daily Press story. “I always enjoyed working outside, so I started small and here I am today. When I’m alone and busy, I don’t think about it too much or how I look. I really don’t like to talk about it.”

Tennyson isn’t alone in his belief in the power of gardening. The American Horticultural Therapy Assn. defines different ways that “people-plant relationships” can help people with depression, memory loss, cognitive problems and more.

Advertisement

“People with physical or mental disabilities benefit from gardening experiences as part of [horticultural therapy] programs, and they learn skills, adaptations, and gardening methods that allow for continued participation at home,” the website says in part.

Ah, more reasons to stop and smell the roses.

Advertisement
Advertisement