When Jennifer Chilton and Graeme Thirde were looking at nurseries for their eldest daughter, Imogen, they quickly realised that the traditional approach to early education wasnât for them. âWe didnât want her to be stuck indoors all the time,â says Chilton, an IT consultant from London.
We wanted her to be able to run around outside and climb and develop confidence in her body and the way it interacts with her surroundings.
Come Back To Nature
Finding a nursery called Little Forest Folk, which encourages children to learn by immersing themselves in the outdoors, was the first step on a path to the family reconnecting with the natural world on a more meaningful level.
Imogen, now seven, and her sister Florence, six, have continued their outdoor education at an independent primary school set in three acres of beautiful National Trust grounds. âWe wanted to go back to basics with the way we raise the girls,â says Chilton. âWhen we were growing up we were always outdoors, but most children today no longer have that opportunity.â
For all four family members, this desire to live closer to nature is reflected in their choice of footwear. âWe all wear Vivobarefoot shoes and absolutely love them,â says Thirde, who spent nine years in the army before retraining as a garden designer. âWhen youâre wearing them, youâre experiencing a connection with the ground the way we were intended to.â
âVivos feel like sheâs slipping her foot into a sock; thereâs no pressure on her toes, or seams inside. She absolutely loves them.â
Beyond that, knowing their daughtersâ feet arenât being constrained by their shoes as they run, climb and play amid trees, fields and wildlife at the school they attend fits in with Chilton and Thirdeâs philosophy of how they want their daughters to grow up.
Find Happiness on Your Own with The Ones You Love
âWe want the girls to have the stress-relieving benefits of being in nature, and Vivos fit perfectly with that,â says Chilton.
When they wear their shoes, I know theyâre using their feet properly. And they can barely feel the shoes, which helps them really lose themselves in their environment.
Giles Hutchins, his wife Star and daughters Lilly-Belle and Hazel are another family dedicated to living in harmony with the natural world. For the past two years, they have lived in 60 acres of ancient woodland in West Sussex, with chickens and a vegetable plot.
The woodland is where Hutchins, an author, strategist and coach, runs his business, The Future Fit Leadership Academy, taking leaders through transformative experiences in nature to help them transform their companies into âregenerative, life-affirmingâ organisations.
âWe go off into the woods and I encourage them to notice the details of nature â the trees, the birdsong, the smell,â he says. âBy the time we reach the main area, where they sit and talk and listen, theyâre in a different space mentally, which they usually find means they have a clearer awareness of their fears, and personal and organisational challenges.â
Before he tried his first pair of Vivobarefoot shoes, Hutchins says heâd never considered the impact of traditional shoes on our feet. But once he did, the revelation was instant. âI realised that weâve been lessening our connection with nature all this time, as well as deforming our feet and those of our children,â he says.