The 5 best smelling houseplants to relieve anxiety, according to experts

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Lavender on a windowsill | via Shutterstock

Taking the time to look after our mental health is vital, despite the many distractions work and social obligations can present. One of the simplest ways of incorporating self-care into your life and home is through caring for plants, and as April is Stress Awareness Month, the experts at UK Therapy Rooms sought to discover which houseplants could provide the most benefit in terms of boosting your mood and alleviating stress with their calming aromas.

These houseplants are proven to reduce stress and improve your mental wellbeing.

The Japanese principle of Shinrin-yoku, or ‘forest bathing’, maintains that spending time in natural environments is beneficial for health, and it’s not just hearsay. Studies have proved that walking through a forest for just 15 minutes a day substantially lowers blood pressure and the stress hormone cortisol when compared with walking through an urban area. 

And although not everyone has access to a forest, park, or larger green area, it’s simple enough to pick up a houseplant from a garden centre or supermarket to bring some greenery into your home.

Your choice of houseplant depends on how much space, time, and money you’re willing to invest in your new acquisition. However, the following plants not only have characteristics that aid in stress relief, but are easy to care for too:

1. Lavender

Famed for its dreamy scent, Lavender is the ideal plant to have in your bedroom, as its benefits include not only stress relief but improved sleep too. Lavender is remarkably easy to grow, and when placed in a sunny spot (a windowsill is perfect) its flowers will bloom in late spring and provide colour and scent all through the summer months. Lavender isn’t just visually appealing either, the flowers can be cut and used in a herbal tea to wind-down before sleeping. 

2. Mint

Another herb that produces a distinctive scent, this cheerfully green and bushy plant has been proven to increase alertness and enhance short-term memory. Mint is best kept in your kitchen, but not just to brighten up the space. Much like lavender the leaves can be used in a relaxing herbal tea blend, but also in a refreshing mojito mock or cocktail! 

3. Chamomile

Known primarily as an outdoor plant, Chamomile is perfectly happy to be kept indoors too, and the bushier Roman variety can brighten up the dullest of spaces in colder months. Proven to improve both mood and memory with its sweet scent, this vibrant and hardy flowering plant is the perfect companion to help bring the outdoors in. A favourite ingredient in relaxing herbal teas, chamomile is also known to improve sleep quality!

4. Jasmine

There are several varieties of this sweet-smelling floral plant, with blooms ranging from white to pink and pale yellow. So whether you opt for the climbing summer jasmine or the more shrublike winter variety, you’ll be provided with star-shaped clusters of blooms with their heady scent, known to ease anxiety and promote restfulness. Best placed somewhere warm and with partial sunlight, jasmine is the ideal plant to have in a living room or reading nook, to really appreciate its soothing aroma.

5. Rosemary

Although regarded primarily as a savoury addition to cooking, rosemary is also used in aromatherapy because of its invigorating and woody scent. Ideal for invoking a walk along a Mediterranean hillside, rosemary needs plenty of sunlight to thrive, so a kitchen windowsill is the ideal spot. The hardy leaves can be cut throughout the year to use as a fragrant  addition in cooking or brewing tea, but just smelling this earthy plant has been proven to lower cortisol levels.

Dr. Daniel Glazer, Clinical Psychologist and co-founder of UK Therapy Rooms says:

“Holistic strategies take a whole-person approach to stress management, focusing on the physical, emotional, social and mental aspects of wellbeing. Some effective holistic strategies for stress management include mindfulness meditation, yoga, exercise, healthy eating, and getting enough sleep.

Small changes in our environment can also help to play a part with different elements such as lighting, noise or even temperature proven to impact our mental wellbeing. Studies have also shown that those who spend time in nature and substantially more likely to report better mental and physical health, and this even extends to houseplants which have been proven to reduce stress.

 However, it is important to approach in a personalised way, considering what someone needs, finds helpful and can make use of in their own life.”

Credit to https://www.uktherapyrooms.co.uk/, who provided the above post.


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