The Role of Bushcraft in Trauma Recovery
Jacks Genega, Founder of Wildcard Wilderness Survival
Published in Issue 119 of Bushcraft Magazine
The Impact of Being Uprooted
When viewing the natural world around you, one may see that we are not so different from the trees that tower over us. There are times when we stand tall and are deeply rooted and steady, but there are times when we also feel strain. There are seasons where we feel bent, broken, or even uprooted entirely. These life disruptions may last seconds to years, but they all leave an imprint. They shape how we move through the world, how we see ourselves, and how we relate to others.
In a culture that often avoids discomfort, trauma remains one of the most misunderstood parts of our living experience. It is often minimized, stigmatized, or ignored, yet it is not rare. It is not a weakness. It is human.
Yet, like a tree that grows a new limb after injury, we can become stronger, more complex, and more grounded than before. In a world that often feels loud and disconnected, the quiet of the forest offers a powerful space for healing. Through the art of wilderness living, or bushcraft, we not only tend to the forest around us, but to the landscape of our own inner worlds. This inner forest is made of our thoughts, emotions, memories, and instincts. It holds both the tangled undergrowth of fear and doubt, and the steady roots of strength, curiosity, and resilience.
The practice of bushcraft can teach us how to ground ourselves, strengthen our foundation, and stand with confidence. For many, that healing may not happen within structured systems or all at once. It happens outside. It happens slowly. It happens not only through doing, but also through being.
It can happen through bushcraft.
Understanding the Nut
Much like the forest around us, our society relies on structure to function. Our brains constantly interpret the world, forming predictions and rules that guide how we think, feel, and behave. Whether through political, religious, or familial systems, we build frameworks that help us make sense of life and hold accountability.
When trauma hits, it is like a storm tearing through that structure, snapping limbs, splitting trunks, and pulling roots from the soil.
But we are taught to push through.
Instead of processing our pain, many of us absorb and hold on to it, developing a longing for belonging in a world that tells us to get over it and move on.
Just as a tree’s rings hold the memory of every drought and storm, we carry our experiences within our nervous systems.
In order for us to truly understand those with trauma, we need to stop asking each other what is wrong with them, and start asking what has happened as every moment in life is built on all the moments before.
The life of a tree is all contained within its seed, so in order for us to understand the hickory, we must try to understand the nut.
It helps to look at the brain.
Our brains are made up of interconnected systems that work together to shape how we experience the world.
Some regions are responsible for basic survival functions like breathing and heart rate. Others are deeply involved in processing emotions such as fear, anger, joy, sadness, and even connection, while also helping us store and recall the memories tied to those experiences. The prefrontal cortex, which continues developing into our mid twenties, plays a key role in decision making, problem solving, and regulating how we respond to those emotions.
This is why trauma can shape how we see ourselves and how we think, feel, and respond to the world, especially when it happens early in life, before those regulatory systems are fully developed.
Research shows that trauma can physically impact the brain. The hippocampus, which plays a key role in memory formation and stress regulation, can shrink, making it difficult to process and organize experiences. The amygdala, responsible for detecting threat and triggering fight or flight responses, can become overactive, heightening fear and emotional reactivity.
When we experience trauma, the systems involved in threat detection and emotional processing can become more reactive. Fear can feel heightened. Anger can surface more quickly. Sadness can feel heavier or harder to move through. At the same time, the parts of the brain responsible for regulation, reasoning, and perspective can become less effective.
In response, people often reach for ways to soothe these symptoms, trying to quiet what feels overwhelming or out of place. Those with trauma will struggle with what they deserve and instead might run away from their distress and turn to self sabotage as a means of coping. But masking the pain does not resolve it.
If those experiences remain stored and unprocessed, the body can stay locked in a cycle of fear and stress.
There are only so many trees that can fully grow in tainted soil.
But just like soil can be restored, the brain can change.
When we begin to safely release and process stored emotions, the brain can shift. The amygdala can calm. The hippocampus can regain function. New pathways can form.
The question then becomes, how do we do that in a way that feels safe and sustainable?
This is where bushcraft can intersect with recovery in a meaningful way.
The Forest as a Place of Repair
In a world driven by speed, noise, and constant input, the forest offers something radically different. It offers quiet. It offers rhythm. It offers a space to release. Instead of struggling to fit in, nature is where we belong.
When someone is in a state of fight, flight, or freeze, the lower parts of the brain are in control. In that state, reasoning is not accessible. What the body needs is rhythm, safety, and sensory input that brings it back down.
Nature provides this immediately through the movement of water, flowers swaying in the breeze, and the changing of light.
Spending time in nature has measurable effects on both the body and mind. It lowers cortisol, helping shift the nervous system and mood by reducing anxiety and depression, while also enhancing focus, memory, and problem solving through what’s known as attention restoration. Exposure to natural environments can support immune function, reduce inflammation, and improve cardiovascular health, while natural light helps regulate sleep cycles.
The forest becomes more than a setting. It becomes a participant in the healing process.
Regulate, Relate, and Reason
There is a well established approach to trauma recovery described by neuroscientist, Dr. Bruce Perry, as the 3 R’s: regulate, relate, and reason. It reminds us that healing does not start with logic. It starts with the body.
Regulation comes first.
Bushcraft, or the art of wilderness living, is more than a collection of skills. It is a way of engaging with the natural world that requires connection. Whether it’s tool construction, medicine procurement, food procurement, shelter building, fiber arts, or fire construction; bushcraft allows our relationship with the natural world to grow, effectively promoting our relationship to the self to grow in an environment rich in active and passive repetitions.
Whether building a fire, shaping wood, or navigating terrain, each of these rhythmic activities demands awareness and creates steady, predictable input that calms the body.
That repetition matters.
The steady motion of shaping a wooden spoon. The patience required to foster a flame into existence. The observation needed to read the land. These are not just practical skills. They are regulating experiences. They slow the nervous system. They bring the body out of stress and into rhythm where our stored emotions are transfigured into brilliant masterpieces. Primitive skills repair the primitive brain.
Without needing to force anything, the system begins to settle.
Once we are regulated, we can begin to relate.
This is where community comes in. The limbic system, which processes emotion and attachment, responds to safety, presence, and trust. Building a shelter, starting a fire, or preparing food together requires cooperation and shared experience.
There is no pressure to perform. No need to prove anything. Just a steady, non judgmental space where people can feel seen, understood, and supported. This connection is vital in trauma recovery, as strong relationships provide emotional safety, reduce feelings of isolation, and help reestablish a sense of belonging. It allows the body to fully come out of survival mode. It rebuilds trust not only with others, but with the world itself.
Now we can begin to reason.
When the body is calm and connection is present, the higher brain becomes accessible again. This is where reflection and problem solving can take place.
Bushcraft offers a natural entry into this stage through tangible experience whether it's a fire you build, a shelter you created, or a skill you developed through repetition.
These are real, lived experiences that reinforce capability.
Growing Confidence Through Skill
Confidence is often discussed as something that can be built through mindset alone. But in the wilderness, confidence comes from experience. You either make the fire or you do not. This honesty and accomplishment are what makes skills so powerful. The warmth of a fire you built, the shelter you crafted, or a meal you foraged from the forest floor can all reignite a sense of achievement and purpose. You are not just gaining a skill, you are gaining proof.
Proof you can learn.Proof you can adapt.Proof you can rely on yourself.
And by proving to yourself that you are capable, gives you integrity, something that is often lost when navigating trauma.
The reward isn’t just comfort, rather it’s identity. It’s the shift from “I am broken” to “I can do hard things.” Every spark you strike from steel becomes a spark of purpose. Every knot you tie, every bow you carve, is a vote for the person you are becoming.
In this way, bushcraft is not just about survival. It is a pathway with regulation, connection, and growth.
Because while fear may always exist, it does not have to control us. We do not move on from our trauma. We must move through it.
And through that process, we begin to step back into a place of agency, where we are no longer defined by what has happened, but by how we choose to move forward.
The confidence gained through skill does not stay in the forest. It carries into everyday life.
Bushcraft Belongs to Everyone
Around shared fires, during group builds, and through collective learning, people form connections that go beyond the skills themselves. There is a sense of belonging that emerges. Not from fitting into a predefined role, but from contributing to something shared. And for many, that sense of belonging is just as important as the skills they are learning.
It provides support. It provides perspective. It provides a reminder that growth does not have to happen alone.
Bushcraft is not reserved for a specific type of person.
It does not require a certain background, identity, or level of experience.
The wilderness does not judge. It does not exclude. It responds only to engagement.
And for those willing to step into it, it offers something increasingly rare.
A chance to slow down.A chance to reconnect.A chance to rebuild.
And a chance to know that it is okay to be a total nut. Because from every nut, a mighty tree can grow.
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