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An Awe Walk

What gives you a sense of awe? That word, awe—the feeling of being in the presence of something vast that transcends your understanding of the world—is often associated with the extraordinary. You might imagine standing next to a 350-foot-tall tree or on a wide-open plain with a storm approaching, or hearing an electric guitar fill the space of an arena, or holding the tiny finger of a newborn baby. Awe blows us away: It reminds us that there are forces bigger than ourselves, and it reveals that our current knowledge is not up to the task of making sense of what we have encountered.

But you don’t need remarkable circumstances to encounter awe. When my colleagues and I asked research participants to track experiences of awe in a daily diary, we found, to our surprise, that people felt it a bit more than two times a week on average. And they found it in the ordinary: a friend’s generosity, a leafy tree’s play of light and shadow on a sidewalk, a song that transported them back to a first love.

We need that everyday awe, even when it’s discovered in the humblest places. A survey of relevant studies suggest that a brief dose of awe can reduce stress, decrease inflammation, and benefit the cardiovascular system. Luckily, we don’t need to wait until we stumble upon it; we can seek it out. Awe is all around us. We just need to know where to look for it.

Along with Virginia Sturm, a UC San Francisco neuroscientist, I studied the effects of an “awe walk.” One group of subjects took a weekly walk for eight weeks; the other group did the same but with some instructions: Tap into your childlike sense of wonder, imagining you’re seeing everything for the first time. Take a moment during each walk to notice the vastness of things—when looking at a panoramic view, for example, or at the detail of a flower. And go somewhere new, or try to recognize new features of the same old place. All of the participants reported on their happiness, anxiety, and depression and took selfies during their walks.

We found that the awe-walkers felt more awe with each passing week. You might have thought that their capacity for awe would start to decrease: This is known as the law of hedonic adaptation, that certain pleasures or accomplishments—a new job, a bigger apartment—start to lose some of their thrill over time. But the more we practice awe, it seems, the richer it gets.

We also found evidence that the self can extend into the environment. In the awe-walk condition, people’s selfies increasingly included less of the self. Over time, the subjects drifted off to the side, showing more of the outside environment—a street corner in San Francisco, the trees, the rocks around the Pacific Ocean. Over the course of our study, awe-walkers reported feeling less daily distress and more prosocial emotions such as compassion and amusement.

Nearly three years into a pandemic that’s made many of us feel powerless and small, seeking out the immense and mysterious might not seem appealing. But often, engaging with what’s overwhelming can put things in perspective. Staring up at a starry sky; looking at a sculpture that makes you shudder; listening to a medley of instruments joining into one complex, spine-tingling melody—those experiences remind us that we’re part of something that will exist long after us. We are well served by opening ourselves to awe wherever we can find it, even if only for a moment or two.

This article has been excerpted from Dacher Keltner’s book, Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your Life

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Aliya Sep 19, 2024
I practiced this day 1 of the pandemic in California. I work with seniors and that day we went from 3'-6' in a matter of hours. I had already watched a 60 minutes years prior that said "It is a matter of WHEN, not IF regarding viruses and a global pandemic" I unfortunately paid attention. I took pictures of all the different trees in my neighborhood with intent to one day sketch them. I think I actually sketched one.
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Joseph Sep 12, 2024
I finished reading Dacher Keltner's book and am glad to have come across this excerpt. It reminds me there is so much more to find awe in and around me. I need to make it a weekly habit to take these awe walks more often. Thanks for the reminder.






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Linda Sep 12, 2024
Inspiring
Enjoy
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Maria Charles Sep 11, 2024
I am in awe of life. I walk 4 days in the park. Other days are mass days. I notice the sunrise. Every morning it's different. The ducks and their antics. The singing birds. The flow of the lake. The diamonds shimmering on the lake (sunlight on the water) they sparkle. One special day a bird was singing on a branch. I stopped to listen and made a video. For several minutes, he sang just for me. Then, he just flew away. I stop to inspect the new blossoms on the trees, the intense greenery of the grass after a few days rain. We now have a squirrel or two. A pure white feather on the ground. Things that most walkers just pass by. Sadly someone (evil person) killed a mother duck but her 7 children were teens. They are taking care of each other, and growing well. Always together. Some other 'noticing people' and I call them the 7 warriors. We carry cracked corn for them, and pray they stay safe. I can find something new everyday...for 25 years. Praise God. Thank you.
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Sharon Joy Kleitsch Sep 11, 2024
What a gift on this day, which had been called Peace Day until Sept 11, 2001, as two planes plowed through - one and then the other - the Twin Towers. We were struck with awe and wonder. Talk about transcendence... Thank you.

What about taking awe up a few notches, just for fun? Let's track what happens when complex adaptive systems experiment with awe and wonder during the Fritjof Capra's Course for 12 weeks, beginning this month? That could be an organization, neighborhood, or my favorites - cities and bio-regions. We're exploring it in the City of St Petersburg Florida, since Kelter's surprise visit to the Dali Museum in August 2023. We are a City of Compassion, based upon the Charter of Compassion, living into being a beloved community. Gary King has been placing HAPPINESS signs on city and utility posts for years. Now they are in the public schools. Is there something in these cohering fields? Love?
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Lorraine Watts Sep 11, 2024
I feel an expansion of energy in my head when in awe. This is relatively new after many years practicing yoga. I get the same expansion when playing my native American flute.
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Susan Starkey Sep 11, 2024
Beautifully said! And I’ll add that- having a sense of the mystery we call the Creator, God, Universal Source, etc. enlightens this experience of Awe all the more.
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Nikos Veis Sep 11, 2024
Very nice and inspirational. Thank you..