“Beenomials”: exploring beekeeping as a rehabilitation tool in the field of mental health
A. Barbieri

TL;DR
This paper explores how beekeeping can help improve mental health by fostering connection, collaboration, and well-being in a therapeutic community.
Contribution
The study introduces beekeeping as a novel rehabilitation tool in mental health through a pilot project in an Alpine therapeutic community.
Findings
Beekeeping activities helped reduce emotional intensity and encouraged non-verbal communication among participants.
Participants developed social skills and experienced increased self-esteem by teaching beekeeping to high school students.
The project highlights the potential for community-based, inclusive mental health interventions through beekeeping.
Abstract
Beekeeping is a peculiar activity able to connect people both to nature and to other people. Extant research shows how it provides beekeepers with meaning, opportunities for learning, and a sense of connection to bees as well as to the surrounding ecosystem. The relationship of care and interdependence that is established supports well-being, encourages collaboration and positive social relations. “Beenomies” is a pilot project inspired by the union of opposites symbolically associated with bees: love and war, sweetness (honey) and bitterness (venom), the individual and multiplicity (society), regeneration and death. As CG Jung observed, honey expresses, psychologically, “the joy of life and the life urge which overcome […] the dark and the inhibiting. Where spring-like joy and expectation reign, spirit can embrace nature and nature, spirit”. Drawing on this psychological and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBehavioral Health and Interventions
