Seek both green and blue space

Include water settings, not only greenery, in your restorative time.

Why it works

Both vegetated ("green") and water-based ("blue") environments offer the soft fascination and coherence that ART says drive restoration. Water in particular tends to score high on perceived restorativeness, giving another reliable route to engage attention gently and recover directed focus.

How to do it

  1. When possible, choose routes or spots near water — a river, lake, shore, or fountain.
  2. Combine green and blue space when both are accessible.
  3. Spend the time attending to the scene rather than to your phone.

Evidence

A growing body of "blue space" research associates time near water with improved wellbeing and restoration, broadly consistent with green-space findings. (observational)

Much blue-space evidence is observational and confounded by access, activity, and socioeconomic factors; the direction is encouraging but causal strength is limited.

Sources

  • White et al., blue-space exposure and wellbeing research

Common mistake

Assuming only forests "count" and overlooking accessible water settings that may be just as restorative and easier to reach.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach helps you find the most restorative setting actually available to you — green or blue — rather than skipping restoration because the ideal place is out of reach.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).