46 min

Why Outside Challenges Like Harsh Weather Can Feel Bad and What to Do About It (Sarah Histand, mental health informed adventure fitness trainer‪)‬ Humans Outside

    • Nature

Ever seen that meme that asks “why do I live some in a place where the air hurts my face?” Heading outside in harsh conditions can feel like a personal attack that has your whole body and mind screaming “noooooooooo!” You want to want to do it, but you don’t. You know there’s no actual danger, but if feels like there is. You want to be someone who goes outside and does cool stuff, but you can’t figure out how to calm down that internal “nope” monologue.
So what can you do about it? In this episode Alaska-based mental health informed adventure fitness trainer Sarah Histand tackles the big question of dealing being kind to your nervous system while teaching it that, hey, heading outside for challenges big and small is a safe and even fun idea. Listen now.

Connect with this episode:
Learn about Ski Babes and Mind and Mountain
Follow Sarah Histand on Facebook
Follow Sarah Histand on Instagram
What to Wear in Cold Weather, Sarah’s first Humans Outside episode
Join the Humans Outside Challenge
Follow Humans Outside on Instagram
Follow Humans Outside on Facebook
Some of the good stuff:
[2:57] Sarah Histand’s (different from last time) favorite outdoor space
[6:10] How Sarah got into the subject of mind meets mountain
[10:53] Why going outside in harsh weather or for big challenges sometimes feels so very bad
[13:40] Why sometimes it feels totally fine and other times it feels totally not fine
[19:05] All about very individualized risk tolerance
[24:19] Steps for overcoming this problem
[25:13] Snacks and other comfort items
[30:54] Baby steps aren’t just for babies
[32:24] This is an everyone problem -- not just beginners
[37:27] No comparing, please
[39:48] Learning to balance intuition with social pressure
[45:01] How to find more about Sarah

Ever seen that meme that asks “why do I live some in a place where the air hurts my face?” Heading outside in harsh conditions can feel like a personal attack that has your whole body and mind screaming “noooooooooo!” You want to want to do it, but you don’t. You know there’s no actual danger, but if feels like there is. You want to be someone who goes outside and does cool stuff, but you can’t figure out how to calm down that internal “nope” monologue.
So what can you do about it? In this episode Alaska-based mental health informed adventure fitness trainer Sarah Histand tackles the big question of dealing being kind to your nervous system while teaching it that, hey, heading outside for challenges big and small is a safe and even fun idea. Listen now.

Connect with this episode:
Learn about Ski Babes and Mind and Mountain
Follow Sarah Histand on Facebook
Follow Sarah Histand on Instagram
What to Wear in Cold Weather, Sarah’s first Humans Outside episode
Join the Humans Outside Challenge
Follow Humans Outside on Instagram
Follow Humans Outside on Facebook
Some of the good stuff:
[2:57] Sarah Histand’s (different from last time) favorite outdoor space
[6:10] How Sarah got into the subject of mind meets mountain
[10:53] Why going outside in harsh weather or for big challenges sometimes feels so very bad
[13:40] Why sometimes it feels totally fine and other times it feels totally not fine
[19:05] All about very individualized risk tolerance
[24:19] Steps for overcoming this problem
[25:13] Snacks and other comfort items
[30:54] Baby steps aren’t just for babies
[32:24] This is an everyone problem -- not just beginners
[37:27] No comparing, please
[39:48] Learning to balance intuition with social pressure
[45:01] How to find more about Sarah

46 min