WAT Method
How WAT Helps Restore Mental Wellbeing.
“There is countless research backing up the benefits a walk can have on mental health”, Matthew Way, Psychiatrist.
Walking is far more than exercise. Clinicians, academics and community programs worldwide show that walking together can improve mental clarity, reduce isolation and create a greater sense of belonging and purpose. We outline here the various impacts of walking.
Mental wellbeing isn’t shaped by one single factor and it can’t be restored through one single channel either. What makes WAT powerful is that it works at the same time on multiple layers: physiological, psychological, social, existential, attentional and imaginal. Step by step, conversation by conversation, change happens on various levels.

The Physiological And Psychological Levels: When the Body Leads, the Mind Follows.
- Walking in nature creates measurable biological changes linked to improved mood and emotional balance.
- Sustained walking outdoors is associated with a reduction in cortisol (the main stress hormone) and an increase in serotonin and dopamine, neurotransmitters involved in mood regulation. This combination produces a natural antidepressant effect, with some studies showing a 20–30% decrease in cortisol levels after time spent walking in natural settings.
- The gentle left–right rhythm of walking also creates bilateral stimulation, similar to mechanisms used in EMDR therapy. Research suggests this type of movement can help reduce overactivation of the amygdala (the brain’s fear center) and support better autonomic nervous system regulation — in other words, helping the body shift out of chronic stress mode.
- Walking also supports activation of the Default Mode Network (DMN), a brain network involved in autobiographical reflection and meaning-making. This is the mental space where we connect experiences into a coherent story about who we are and where we are going.
- Walking side by side makes it easier to talk about difficult or emotional topics. Unlike face-to-face conversations, which can sometimes feel intense or confrontational, walking creates a more natural flow. This dynamic is widely used in systemic therapy and outdoor cognitive behavioral approaches because it helps emotional expression feel safer and less pressured.
- Nature itself also plays a powerful role. According to Attention Restoration Theory developed by Stephen Kaplan, natural environments help restore our capacity to focus. This is particularly helpful for people dealing with stress or trauma, where concentration is often impaired by mental overload.
- Gentle physical movement can also make it easier to access difficult memories. Walking creates a state of calm alertness — relaxed but attentive — which may help previously blocked thoughts or emotions emerge in a way that feels manageable rather than overwhelming.

The Social and Existential Level: Reconnecting with Others — and with Meaning.
- Mental health struggles are often intensified by isolation. WAT counters this by creating a sense of shared presence and belonging. The trained guide helps establish a good environment: safe, supportive, and human.
- The guide also encourages participants to reconnect with their bodies and their sense of being alive in the world. Many psychological difficulties involve a feeling of disconnection from the body, from time, from meaning. Walking restores rhythm through breadth and steps, perspective through landscape and horizon, and continuity through shared experience.
- These are not just poetic ideas. They are deep therapeutic metaphors lived physically: moving forward, finding direction, feeling grounded again.

The Attentional Level: Mindfulness in Motion.
- WAT naturally cultivates mindfulness — not by asking people to sit still, but by bringing attention to breath, steps, sensations, sounds, and surroundings while walking. This gentle anchoring in the present moment helps calm the nervous system and reduces rumination, a key driver of anxiety and depression.
- Walking in nature supports what researchers call soft fascination: the environment captures attention effortlessly, allowing the mind to rest and reset. This restores cognitive resources that are often depleted by stress and constant mental load. Over time, this practice strengthens the ability to shift from mental overactivity to grounded presence.

The Imaginal Level Mental Imagery & Inner Narratives.
- WAT also engages the mind through guided imagery, metaphors, and symbolic reflection. Stories, landscapes, and questions activate the brain’s imaginal processes — the same systems involved in memory, emotional processing, and meaning-making.
- Mental imagery can help people approach difficult experiences indirectly and safely. Instead of confronting emotions head-on, participants explore them through symbols, metaphors, and narrative distance, which supports emotional regulation and integration. This is one reason why walking and reflective storytelling together can unlock insights that feel both gentle and profound.
Walk. Talk. Reconnect
WAT works because it doesn’t separate mind from body, or individual from environment. It brings movement, conversation, and nature together to create the conditions where clarity, regulation, connection, and meaning can gradually re-emerge. Sometimes, the next step forward really does begin with a step.

WAT is where walking becomes better thinking. Why wait?
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