When you spend a considerable amount of the year stuck in traffic, answering emails, and dealing with annoying coworkers, being outdoors can provide a much-needed reset. You set your phone to silent, cook some food over the fire, and feel your problems gradually retreat to the back of your mind as the sky fills up with stars. What can possibly go wrong?
Well, as everyone who spends time in nature knows, there are certain “taxes” you need to “pay” for the peace and quiet it offers, such as “donating” your blood to mosquitoes or providing “temporary housing” to bugs inside your tent. So to reassure you that it’s not your lack of ability but rather part of the deal, we collected a bunch of relatable camping and hiking memes about the challenges that wait along the way.
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worked in catering once on a movie set, offering energy drinks around midnight. - "No way i drown that garbage down my body". Said it, and took another deep puff from his filter less (Roth Händle) cigarette, straight via his lungs into his 100 lb overweight frame.
Also trying to keep my mouth closed so I don't look like a out of shape mouth breather that I am
On average, people need to spend over an hour (67 minutes) outside each day to feel refreshed, according to a survey from Talker Research.
Their poll of 2,000 American adults revealed that over half of them (57%) are also craving time spent outdoors more now than ever before.
checks out, looking at the amount of finnish metal bands: one for every musical taste!
Data also shows that those who spend time outside say it relaxes them (68%), puts them in a better mood (66%), and helps them clear their head (64%).
At the same time, people feel that being forced to spend more time inside than they prefer can lead to feelings of depression (38%), anxiousness (33%), and loneliness (32%).
My daughter got a badge from Girl Guides in the UK for buying and comparing chips (fries) from different takeaways in the town. Definitely sticking to their original ethos.
Six in 10 (58%) also get stir-crazy after spending too much time inside, with the average threshold of indoor time being 10.5 hours per day.
However, sometimes circumstances simply do not allow you to pick up your backpack and go outside.
Respondents report feeling disappointed (48%) when their outdoor plans change, as well as frustrated (32%) and annoyed (28%).
Findings reveal that two-thirds (67%) of Americans view travel as a form of self-care, and 4 in 10 (42%) said they need to book a trip to “escape” at least once every 6 months.
One-third of Americans (33%) regularly book vacations around outdoor activities they enjoy and are the most excited about, trips to the beach (44%), national park visits (29%), and cross-country driving (12%).
This is probably why more than half (57%) prefer driving to their vacation destination, compared to 25% who prefer flying.
Darn you. I was just about to have that with my lunch. Operative word beeing "WAS"...
According to Claire Wilcox, M.D., who is a general and addiction psychiatrist in private practice, an associate professor of translational neuroscience at the Mind Research Network, and an adjunct associate professor at the University of New Mexico, beyond exercise, science has shown that outdoor time might actually boost our mental capacities, which would help us make wiser decisions and change bad habits.
“Furthermore, because outdoor activities—like rock climbing, team sports, and even backpacking or hiking—often require us to work with, and rely on, other people, especially when challenges emerge, we build important relationship skills in the outdoors,” she says.
“Nature gives us the gift of much-needed separation from excessive technology, urban noise and clutter, and stressful work and home environments. And this gifts us with perspective,” Wilcox adds.
“For many of us, time outside can enhance our sense that there is something greater than ourselves beyond the day-to-day sensory experiences; we may leave the outdoors with a greater sense of purpose. Spirituality is a source of comfort for many people, and higher levels are associated with greater well-being.”
And if, for some reason, something isn’t entirely to your liking, you can always make and share a meme about it after you come back!
Or come to Australia. It's easier to keep a safe distance from bison when hiking there.
Ah yes, reaching the summit just on sunset, coming back down in the pitch dark with a heart attack.
I get annoyed when healthy me does the grocery shopping when unhealthy me wants snacks
The funny part is the Duke Energy sponsorship, as they pollute the environment with coal ash.
Werewolf soup? Fungus lives in trees, the cap is just the fruiting body. Drink this and you will see God
I listened to a podcast about marthon runners who p00ped themselves but still finished
Or if they wait until you've finally caught up with them, exhausted, and then they immediately continue climbing up.
Truth: the OG "bigfoot" was an escaped s***e in Texas who wore animal skins and raided people's kitchens at night. Texas is the only State where its legal to bag a bigfoot
And then you fumble the tpap, and sit and watch it roll away, away, away...
