美国人试图用公园来缓解焦虑的传统
The American Tradition of Trying to Address Anxiety with Parks

原始链接: https://time.com/7288956/american-tradition-anxiety-parks/

随着美国迎来又一个国家公园的繁忙夏季——预计游客人数再创新高,尽管面临预算削减和潜在关闭——一种历史平行显现出来。当前公园旅游的热潮与19世纪末因快速工业化和社会变革而引发的现象相似。 在1870年代,内战后的动荡和技术进步中,美国人普遍患有一种被称为“神经衰弱”的疾病——本质上是由现代生活引起的疲惫和焦虑。医生开出“西部疗法”,鼓励患者,尤其是男性,通过徒步旅行和骑马等荒野体验来恢复精力。这一概念受到西奥多·罗斯福和约翰·缪尔等人的支持,推动了早期的保护运动和国家公园的扩张。 虽然“神经衰弱”不再是一种诊断,但人们对缓解压力需求的基本需求依然存在。今天的不安——经济不确定性、政治分裂——驱使人们寻求自然的慰藉,呼应了这种历史冲动。露营和公园游览的持久受欢迎程度表明人们继续相信户外具有恢复能力,强调了保护和投资这些“心理健康避风港”对未来世代至关重要。

一篇最近的《时代》杂志文章,讨论了美国历史上利用公园来对抗焦虑的例子,引发了 Hacker News 的讨论,重点突出了现代压力的根源。用户们哀叹了将“焦虑”——通常源于经济压力、过度工作和人际关系疏远——用药物治疗,而不是解决系统性问题的倾向。 许多评论者表达了对仅仅建议“减轻压力”的沮丧,指出这对那些为了生计而长时间工作的人来说是不切实际的。 几个人同意,真正放松身心并评估其影响,需要较长时间(大约三周)*远离*工作,但很少有人能负担得起这种奢侈。 对话涉及了更高薪水和更低压力工作之间的权衡,一些人指出即使这些选择也在减少。最终,共识倾向于需要系统性变革——包括财富再分配和更强大的社会安全网——而不是个人应对机制。
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原文

As summer approaches, America’s national parks are bracing for an influx of visitors, even as deep federal cuts to park services likely mean fewer camp employees, closed campgrounds, long lines, and cancelled programs. Travelers have been warned away from some national parks by experts, urged to reschedule for next year.

But millions are still opting to go. Last summer, a record 332 million people visited America’s 63 national parks. Based on yearly upward trends, the estimates for this summer are even higher. In a “hold-your-breath year” for national park tourism, Americans are still turning en masse to the natural environment as respite from the stresses of modern life.

The frenzy shouldn’t surprise us. With festering worries related to economic uncertainty, inflated costs, and federal policy whiplash, the popularity of park vacations is no coincidence. Rather, the rush to escape to these beautiful sanctuaries echoes a long history of Americans turning to nature for relief from anxiety, particularly during moments of sudden and widely felt changes.

In the 1870s, the United States was in the midst of the most spectacular transformations yet in its history. The end of the American Civil War brought an end to slavery and the emancipation of some 4 million Black people, while a slew of new innovations brought irreversible changes to the day-to-day lives of all Americans.

Read More: When History Tourism Puts Profit Before the Past

New machinery brought advanced manufacturing, jobs, speedier production of goods, and lower costs for consumers. Hundreds of thousands of miles of telegraph cable delivered information at break-neck speed, forever reshaping how Americans accessed news, communicated, conducted business, and envisioned the world. And the completion of a continent-crossing railroad in 1869 revolutionized travel, making it possible to move people and cargo across vast distances in hours, rather than weeks or months.

Spurred by monumental developments in technology, industry, and travel, more Americans than ever before—including new immigrants—made their way to growing cities, seeking work, education, entertainment, and exposure to new people, ideas, and possibilities.

Sudden and rapid change fired up excitement about the future. But it also stirred anxieties.

During this time, American doctors noticed more and more seemingly healthy patients with a range of complaints about hard-to-explain medical issues, including digestive problems, hair loss, sexual dysfunction, aches and pains without identifiable injuries, and profound exhaustion without obvious cause.

In response, a widely respected neurologist named George Miller Beard offered a theory. Americans, he said, were suffering from a malady called “neurasthenia.” Writing in The Boston Medical and Surgical Journal, Beard borrowed an old term used to describe “weakness of the nerves” and reintroduced it to the medical community as a “morbid condition” afflicting Americans at a worrisome rate. In his 1881 book American Nervousness, Beard also pinpointed the key culprit: modern change.

For instance, new communication technology delivered shocking news of faraway crime, disaster, and war; mechanization in industry brought extreme economic volatility and labor strife; speedy railroad travel introduced the real possibility of horrific accidents involving “wholesale killings.” Even the invention of the pocket watch, a simple hand-held timepiece, fostered a maniacal obsession with punctuality. Americans were “under constant strain,” Beard warned, “to get somewhere or to do something at some definite moment.”

Constant strain was a big problem, according to Beard and his contemporaries. Victorian-era neurologists theorized that the body functioned like an electrical machine, powered by energy distributed through the nervous system. When Americans spent too much energy navigating the extreme shifts and new worries in their modern lives, they experienced aches, pains, exhaustion, irritability, and malaise. Doctors also theorized that urban life only made such conditions worse by further taxing and weakening the body.

In response, a range of popular remedies and medical treatments for neurasthenia emerged. Some doctors recommended that women suffering symptoms should halt all physical and intellectual activity. Colloquially known as the “rest cure,” this treatment—famously recounted in “The Yellow Wallpaper,” a horror novella written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman—involved isolation in the home, bed rest for weeks, and an embargo on reading, writing, drawing, socializing, and exercising.

Women patients and doctors, including New York City physician Grace Peckham, successfully argued that the rest cure was not only quack medicine but more harmful to patients than the nervous sickness itself. Thus, it didn’t stick.

What did catch on was the “West cure,” a different kind of treatment originally reserved for men. Neurologists worried that the urban environment, factory work and office jobs, and other modern pressures were making men tired, indecisive, and physically weak. On doctor’s orders, male patients ventured into the western wilderness, where, it was thought, the natural environment would inspire the mind and reinvigorate the body. Prescriptions emphasized physical exercise, including hiking and horseback riding.

The legacies of this are notable. In the 1880s, Theodore Roosevelt, a young, well-to-do New Yorker at the time, suffered from a range of neurasthenic conditions including asthma, and he sought treatment. Roosevelt was so inspired by his own privileged experience of the West cure, and its restorative outcomes, that later, as president, he built upon state park preservation and forest protection acts to dramatically expand federal support for public access to park lands, including National Parks. Most famously, in 1903, Roosevelt partnered with naturalist John Muir—also diagnosed as neurasthenic—to expand federal protection for Yosemite in the Sierra Nevada mountain range in California.

Initially, it was urban elite white men, like Roosevelt, who were most likely to have the means to travel and to pay for the therapy of riding horses, hunting game, and sleeping under the stars. But the notion of the natural world as an antidote for the stresses of modern life appealed broadly, across lines of class, race, and gender.

By the end of the 19th century, city planners, imagining more healthful, walkable, livable urban environments, also incorporated green spaces for urban residents to enjoy for free. From small picnic areas and playgrounds to sprawling urban parks designed to feel like the bucolic countryside, American cities began providing West cure benefits without the steep price tag or the need to travel.

Camping became another popular, and more affordable, option for vacations from modernity. Working people could purchase a simple tent, one-burner stove, and a few other provisions, load up the horse and buggy and head to a park or campground just outside the city. This cheap and accessible alternative to West cure travel ballooned in popularity in the early 20th century, with the proliferation of camping guides and camping clubs, the growth of the National Park Service, and the introduction of the car. Enthusiasm for camping and national park tourism as affordable restorative activities endured through the 20th century. And they remain as popular as ever today.

Neurasthenia as a diagnostic category, has not endured. It disappeared in the early 20th century, thanks mainly to the rise of psychoanalysis and expanding knowledge about mental health and conditions like chronic fatigue, anxiety disorders, phobias, and depression.

But its most popular remedy—particularly exercise, outdoor recreation, and reflection in nature—has proved truly beneficial for both mental and physical health.

Amid unsettling changes, Americans touted the curative powers of the natural world, fueling the call for outdoor exercise and recreation, and laying the groundwork for the astounding growth of national and state park tourism. Today, with so much to worry about, it is important to remember how national and state parks, and the workers who run and sustain them, have long played a healing role in American society. As we head off to America’s many majestic park destinations—our favorite “mental health escapes” and “calmcation” getaways—may this history reinforce the need to preserve, protect, and invest in them, especially in uncertain times.

Felicia Angeja Viator is associate professor of history at San Francisco State University, a culture writer, and curator for the GRAMMY Museum.

Made by History takes readers beyond the headlines with articles written and edited by professional historians. Learn more about Made by History at TIME here. Opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of TIME editors.

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