A Year of Seasonal Self-Care with Plants and Rituals
I wrote a blog at the beginning of 2026 on Rituals and Intentions and I received so much wonderful feedback from clients and friends recognising that they too were struggling like me to put in action in their health even though the desire was there. The main feedback I got, was people wanting some simple tips to support their health.
So this year, 2026, I am committing to writ a blog each month on self-care guidance using plants and rituals that align with each season and are simple and easy to implement. When we want to create new habits we have to practice at it. Habits don’t become a part of of our lifestyle immediately, so we need to make it easy, we need to resonate with how good it makes us feel so we understand it’s worth and we have to keep doing it. Healthy living takes practice.
Modern life does seem to encourage us to view the body as if it is separate from nature— eating the same foods, keeping the same pace, and expecting the same energy levels all year round. But traditional systems of medicine understood something very different: the body is not separate from the seasons, it flows with them.
I have been told many times how people feel so overwhelmed about health guidance now and I understand how easy it is get side-tracked with the latest super supplement or new health hack but if we are not taking care of the foundations of our health then nothing will be that miracle cure. And when we go against our natural rhythm, when we don’t tune into what our body’s needs; health issues can easily come up.
When you feel overwhelmed, then just making small simple swaps, aligning yourself with the rhythm of nature and tuning into what your body needs each season, then you can build energy and vitality just using plants as medicine.
My seasonal self-care guidance is not about rigid rules or detox programmes. It’s about recognising the natural rhythms as it changes throughout the year, understanding what the body and the mind needs at that time and supporting the body before imbalance turns into symptoms. But also recognising we are all busy and don’t have much time and this is why I am focussing on simple ways for healthy living.
This blog series draws on three complementary traditions —
Western herbalism
Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM)
Ayurveda
— all of which view health as a relationship between the environment, the nervous system, digestion, detoxification and the flow of energy.
Both TCM and Ayurveda describe health through the elements (Water, Earth, Fire, Metal and Wood in TCM and Air in Ayurveda).
Join me in creating wellness with the rhythm of nature.
Read my first month here:
January – Winter / Water
Warming Rituals for Cold Days