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Embodied earth kinship: interoceptive awareness and relational attachment personal factors predict nature connectedness in a structural model of nature connection.

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Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Previous research has found that nature connectedness, an experiential close connection to nature with cognitive, affective and physical benefits, profoundly impacts individual wellbeing and subsequently increases pro-environmental behaviors. However, little is known about the personal and contextual factors that predict nature connectedness. Testing theory derived from a qualitative interpretative phenomenological analysis study, this research addresses the lacuna in the literature. A structural equation model analysis finds that interoceptive awareness significantly predicts nature connection, that secure attachment to nature significantly explains this relationship, and that these inter-related constructs predict both pro-environmental behavior and wellbeing. This revised model of nature connection indicates important antecedents for the human-nature bond, illuminating in particular that the interpersonal relational processes foundational for close bonding with humans also occur in bonding with nature. Structural equation modeling indicates that emotional awareness is the dimension of interoceptive awareness that most significantly predicts nature connection, suggesting that the more aware a person is of the connection between inner bodily sensations and emotions, the more likely they can bond with nature. Given that interoceptive awareness indicates a coherent relationship with the self, including effective communication between body, mind and feelings, this process is therefore implicated in the capacity for humans to bond with nature. In sum, this present research points to the efficacy of an embodied, secure attachment with nature to help close both the human-nature disconnection chasm, and the environmental value-action gap. Theoretical and methodological implications for research and policy are discussed.

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Peer reviewed: True


Acknowledgements: I would like to thank my supervisor Dr. David Good and my academic advisor Dr. Eolene Boyd-MacMillan for providing co-supervision and invaluable ideas and feedback. Thank you to the Cambridge Trust and the University of Cambridge for funding this research as part of my doctoral studies. A special thank you to the participants in this research, especially those who participated in the in-depth interviews. Their wisdom, perspective, and shared life-experience is the foundation of this undertaking. I acknowledge Indigenous communities who have long-held sacred the human-nature relationship and environmental land defenders, protectors, advocates, and artists around the world, who refuse to abdicate responsibility and care of the planet. A very deep thank you to the collective ontological body that stretches far further than skin or geography. Thank you to the trees, who inspired this research and to whom it is dedicated.

Journal Title

Front Psychol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1664-1078
1664-1078

Volume Title

15

Publisher

Frontiers

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International