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A caregiver is someone who provides direct care for a child or person who requires specialized care, such as a person who is chronically ill or the elderly. It’s typically a long-term commitment, emotionally exhausting, usually unpaid, and often accompanied by the person’s “real” full-time job.
In a recent study, Harvard Business School Professor Joseph Fuller found that 73% of employees in the United States have some type of caregiving responsibility, many of whom reported that caregiving negatively affected their careers. Balancing the responsibilities of a full-time job and caregiving can also have adverse effects on a person’s physical and mental health.
It’s widely known that connecting with nature improves people’s health and wellbeing. The Bureau of Land Management manages 245 million acres of public land in the United States that provide a wide variety of recreational opportunities.
“The landscape can absorb your emotions that the humans can’t,” says BLM employee and caregiver, Gina Clingerman. “Nature takes away what you can’t carry.”
We invite our nation’s caregivers to enjoy their public lands for some respite. Come alone or bring your family and friends. Whether you like to walk, hike, camp, fish, cross-country ski, hunt, bike, bird watch, drive, picnic, or just sit in nature—there’s a place and an activity for everyone.