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Thesis
May the forest be with you: A phenomenological study of disenfranchised grievers and their time in nature during the COVID-19 pandemic
(2021)
  • Mira Bronstein, St. Catherine University
  • Amanda Schaeppia, St. Catherine University
  • Becky Timm, St. Catherine University
  • Taylor Tinkham, St. Catherine University
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic began in earnest in the United States in March 2020, and a slew of challenges came with the adjustment. Individuals felt the isolation of quarantine while grieving disenfranchised losses, losses that alienate the griever from the community, and social rules of grief such as canceled events, missing friends and family, and missing milestones at work or school. One place that was not closed to the public during the height of the pandemic was the outdoors. Nature is beneficial to mental, physical, and spiritual health. In this phenomenological study, we describe how being in nature helped adult disenfranchised grievers during the COVID-19 pandemic. Using a non-probability convenience snowball sample recruited through social media, 45 participants who identified as disenfranchised grievers due to COVID-19 pandemic and reported an increased amount of time outside during the pandemic shared up to five photos and had space to write a narrative about how their time in nature helped them address/heal from loss. We used Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis to analyze the data. Narrative themes included the context of the pandemic, turning to nature for healing, and emotional, physical, social, and spiritual relief. In conclusion, participants had positive, transformational, affirming, and joyful experiences in nature that helped them make meaning of their disenfranchised grief during the COVID-19 pandemic. This study’s implications include a need for easier access to outdoor spaces, and the ability for practitioners, allopathic and holistic, to prescribe time outdoors to their patients. Implications for future research include disenfranchised grief, the impacts of indoor nature spaces, and comparisons of various natural settings on disenfranchised grievers.
Publication Date
May, 2021
Advisor
Carol Geisler
Citation Information
Mira Bronstein, Amanda Schaeppia, Becky Timm and Taylor Tinkham. "May the forest be with you: A phenomenological study of disenfranchised grievers and their time in nature during the COVID-19 pandemic" (2021)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/carol-geisler/74/