gardening stress relief
-
- Posts: 606
- Joined: Tue Feb 18, 2020 12:22 pm
- Location: St. Louis, USA
Re: gardening stress relief
I find that getting outdoors and jogging is great stress relief. Muscle action releases an anti-anxiety hormone into the bloodstream. My usual jogging course around an athletic field could get a little boring, but the trees slowly changing over the year and the ever-changing clouds are always interesting. And keeping my wind up allows my wife to enjoy effortless banging.
Age 79 in 2024. On testosterone replacement due to hypothalamus malfunction. (Attention depressed guys: low testosterone is a cause.) Healthy health nut but ED due to getting old. Like to keep enough cardiovascular ability to thrust for 30 min.
Re: gardening stress relief
Any time my wife asks me to work in the yard my anxiety and blood pressure go up. I hate yard work with a burning passion, and now that I near 80 my ability to do heavy work is rapidly diminishing.
Dave, 80, Maryland - Implant (Titan) 2008 by Dr. Andrew Kramer (failed Sept 2020) - never used due to a stroke that, among other things, ended my sex life.
Life is not the way it's supposed to be, it's the way it is.
Life is not the way it's supposed to be, it's the way it is.
Re: gardening stress relief
I love to garden too. I was raised in a family that always grew vegetables in the summer. One aunt & uncle had a garden that was near a half-acre, plus they had fruit trees. Grandma had fruit trees and we had a huge grape vine in our yard.
We normally grow a garden every year, but this year we won't. I always set it up, till the ground, plant the starters, fence it off. Wife is the one who maintains it, but she is having a knee replacement this summer.
I'll just stay happy tending to the two apple trees that are now 6 years old and we have gotten just two apples so far. Year one an ice storm took them down to the ground, year two a late cold snap killed buds, year three ants ate the apples as soon as they grew, year four was the cicada invasion and they laid eggs in every apple, last year the apples still looked like cicada infested and the neighborhood squirrels ate them. I'd like a cherry tree but there isn't room for two more trees in our yard. As far as a citrus tree, I don't think there are any that would survive Ohio temps.
We normally grow a garden every year, but this year we won't. I always set it up, till the ground, plant the starters, fence it off. Wife is the one who maintains it, but she is having a knee replacement this summer.
I'll just stay happy tending to the two apple trees that are now 6 years old and we have gotten just two apples so far. Year one an ice storm took them down to the ground, year two a late cold snap killed buds, year three ants ate the apples as soon as they grew, year four was the cicada invasion and they laid eggs in every apple, last year the apples still looked like cicada infested and the neighborhood squirrels ate them. I'd like a cherry tree but there isn't room for two more trees in our yard. As far as a citrus tree, I don't think there are any that would survive Ohio temps.
Nov. 8, 2019
4+ years, Coloplast Titan OTR
Married 36 years to my beautiful young bride
Always here to answer questions if you PM me
4+ years, Coloplast Titan OTR
Married 36 years to my beautiful young bride
Always here to answer questions if you PM me
Return to “General Discussion”
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 41 guests