At first glance, the behavior of a child who begins to talk actively and continuously in the natural silence (in the forest, mountains, by a lake) seems contradictory: the expected tranquility turns into a verbal stream. However, from the perspective of neuroscience, developmental psychology, and ecopsychology, this is not a contradiction, but a natural reaction of a developing brain to a cardinal change in the sensory and cognitive environment. The silence of nature is not emptiness, but a catalyst for internal processes.
The urban environment represents a constant cognitive-auditory stress for the nervous system. The background noise of traffic, multiple visual stimuli (advertising, crowds), the need for selective attention, and the suppression of irrelevant signals exhaust the resources of the prefrontal cortex — the area responsible for controlling behavior, including speech.
In a natural environment, where sounds that do not require a response and do not pose a threat dominate (wind noise, bird chirping, water trickling), the brain exits the mode of constant "defensive" filtering.
There is a decrease in the activity of the amygdala, associated with stress and the detection of threats.
At the same time, the Default Mode Network (DMN) — a set of areas (medial prefrontal cortex, cingulate cortex) active during rest, when a person is not occupied with solving external tasks — is activated. DMN is associated with autobiographical memory, self-reflection, spontaneous thought generation, and internal speech.
Interesting fact: Studies conducted using EEG and fMRI (for example, the works of neuroscientist David Strayer) show that after several days spent in nature, people's cognitive abilities increase significantly, especially those related to creative problem-solving. This effect is more pronounced in children whose DMN and speech centers are in the phase of active formation. Their brain, freed from the need to filter noise, begins to "play back" accumulated experience and knowledge through the speech channel.
The theory of "soft fascination" (soft fascination), proposed by psychologists Rachel and Steven Kaplan, explains the restorative effect of nature. Natural stimuli (clouds, flowing water, foliage) attract attention in a non-intrusive way, without requiring concentration, but preventing boredom. This state of "unoccupied" attention is ideal soil for internal reflection, which is naturally externalized by the child — brought out through speech.
Nature acts as an ideal, indirect "interlocutor". Unlike adults, who can interrupt, ask questions, or correct speech, the natural environment silently accepts any verbal stream. For a child, this is a situation of absolute speech safety, where you can practice the language without fear of evaluation, correction, or misunderstanding. He comments, describes, asks himself questions, and answers them immediately, conducting a full-fledged dialogue with the world.
When entering a new, rich, but unfamiliar environment, a child encounters cognitive dissonance. His existing schemes (by Piaget) cannot fully assimilate the experience of high mountains, huge trees, the scale of the forest. In this context, speech performs several key functions:
Nominative and categorizing: "This is a pine, and this is a spruce. This is a anthill, and this is a thicket." By naming objects and phenomena, the child incorporates them into his picture of the world.
Planning and regulating (speech "for oneself", according to Vygotsky): "Now I will climb this rock... Oh, it's slippery, I need to hold on to the branch." External speech helps plan actions in an unfamiliar, potentially complex environment.
Emotional-expressive: "Wow! Look how high! I'm scared... How beautiful!" Natural landscapes often evoke strong emotions (surprise, admiration, a slight fear) that are difficult for children to experience silently. Speech serves as a valve for emotional release and understanding of experiences.
Example: A vivid illustration is the phenomenon of "egocentric speech" described by Lev Vygotsky. In a new, complex situation, such speech does not disappear, but, on the contrary, intensifies, becoming an instrument of self-regulation. In the forest, the child uses it to literally "think out loud" to cope with the stream of new impressions.
From an anthropological point of view, the natural environment is evolutionarily familiar to humans (and especially to children, whose behavior is less socialized). In such conditions, ancient, pre-social communication patterns can be awakened. Continuous speech alone with nature may be a form of acoustic marking of space, a way to assert one's presence in a large, potentially "unexplored" world, similar to how animals use sound signals. This is a way to "fill" space with a familiar, safe element — one's own voice, creating an auditory equivalent of home comfort.
Thus, the continuous speech of a child in the natural silence is not a violation of peace, but its direct consequence and proof of the deep work of the psyche. This is a complex phenomenon where:
Neurophysiological relaxation and activation of internal dialogue networks (DMN).
Psychological safety of the unvalued environment.
Cognitive necessity to process and appropriate new experience through verbal formulation.
Evolutionarily determined need for acoustic interaction with the natural world.
The silence of the forest or mountains does not "silence" the child, but on the contrary, becomes a resonator of his inner world, which could not be heard in the conditions of urban noise. This is not just a conversation — it is an active process of cognition, self-regulation, and emotional mastery of the world, carried out in the most natural way for a developing person — through living, spontaneous speech.
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