Forest therapy is a practice for supporting wellness through immersive engagement in natural environments. Fostering physical and mental health through guided outdoor walks, gathering(s) and exercises, forest therapists offer multisensory experiences that encourage slowness, tranquility, and attunement to nature. Commonly considered to have emerged in the 1980s from the Japanese notion of shinrin-yoku, or “forest bathing,” forest therapy—as Crawley highlights—is merely a new term to describe longstanding Indigenous practices of healthy and reciprocal relationships with lands, waters, and all beings.