Adelante
DACA-DALE
Clip: Season 25 | 18m 30sVideo has Closed Captions
New immigration policies are offering hope to hundreds of thousands
New immigration policies are offering hope to hundreds of thousands, including those benefiting from Deferred Action for Labor Enforcement. We'll be hearing from workers who have secured social security numbers, driver’s licenses, and temporary protection against deportation, thanks to the support of Voces de la Frontera.
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Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Adelante is a local public television program presented by MILWAUKEE PBS
This program is made possible in part by the following sponsors: Johnson Controls
Adelante
DACA-DALE
Clip: Season 25 | 18m 30sVideo has Closed Captions
New immigration policies are offering hope to hundreds of thousands, including those benefiting from Deferred Action for Labor Enforcement. We'll be hearing from workers who have secured social security numbers, driver’s licenses, and temporary protection against deportation, thanks to the support of Voces de la Frontera.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
How to Watch Adelante
Adelante is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship- Growing up in the country, I had no idea how lucky I was to have nature around me all the time.
Okay, guys.
You have to be on your best behavior right now, okay?
Hi.
(lips smack) Good morning.
(laughs) One of the things I've found as a therapist is that spending time in nature is imperative for good mental health.
How are you guys?
Yeah, did you sleep good?
What is that?
A camera?
It reduces stress, lowers blood pressure, increases positive mood, and improves cardiac and respiratory function.
Doctors have even started prescribing time in nature as a treatment.
Hi, Jingle.
Don't eat Mama's hair.
You don't need to eat my hair.
No, you have plenty of hay.
Today, I've invited a certified naturalist and an outdoor therapist to my farm to learn how we can find healing in our own backyard.
(serene music) - My name's Jenna Burris.
I'm a psychotherapist of about 18 years, and I specialize in taking my clients outdoors for therapy.
(gentle music) - [Elizabeth] When you would have a client that would normally be seen indoors in an office, what would the difference be when you would move them to a trail or just outdoors?
- We grow when we get outside of our normal day-to-day environment.
When we go outside, this is where humanity started.
We spend 90% of our time indoors now, about 10% outside, and that's the opposite of where we were a couple hundred years ago.
We're meant to be outside, and I would invite people to try it.
I would invite people to see what nature has to show us, to reconnect with that part of ourself, the biological part of ourself, the part that is integrated with nature.
How does it affect us?
How do we affect it?
- So, as far as what we're going to look for today out here, what are some things that we should be aware of?
- One thing I would look for is just the different shades of green that you see all around, the different textures, and let your eye start to take in the mass amount of detail that's out here versus kind of seeing things in blocks.
Like, really look for the individual expression of each plant and each tree.
My name is Megan Drevline and I'm a Wisconsin Master Naturalist and a yoga and mindfulness instructor.
- [Elizabeth] How does nature help us heal?
- Nature is an incredible healer.
Everything from just the physical and mental benefits that you receive from breathing in the air in a space that's full of plants photosynthesizing and trees letting off information to communicate with other trees, like, you interact with that just through your breath.
So, just something as simple as being outside and breathing can shift your mood, your immunity, your sense of connection with the world around you, and those are all really powerful things in maintaining a healthy mental state.
We just had a lot of rainfall and I would suggest some nice deep breaths to kind of ground with the environment around you.
The rainfall has a great way of cleaning the air and releasing negative ions into the air, which have been proven to help with mood, with immunity, things along those lines, so it's a great way to just connect with, like, the actual microenvironment that you're experiencing, because you're absorbing the chemicals that the trees are releasing, you're absorbing the chemicals that the plants are releasing, and by chemicals, I mean, like, the best of things.
- Yeah, good chemicals.
- Yeah, the good chemicals.
(Elizabeth laughs) - One of my favorite parts of this trail is the pine rows.
- This tree is actually valued for more than just the way it looks.
I know that long, long, long ago in Celtic tradition around the winter solstice, people of the Celtic tradition would bring in pine and other coniferous branches to put around their mantle, and the heat from the fire through those winter months would release the essential oils into the air, boosting their immune system, because the chemicals these needles hold are also antimicrobial, antibacterial.
So, a lot of health benefits with these guys.
- Additionally, just being in the forest, the additional vitamin D we receive from the sun, the additional oxygen we receive from the trees, the little oils that the trees release, it works for us, and I think it works even therapeutically, because it improves our creativity, our problem solving.
There's great research through a lot of centers in Japan out to when they go out into the forest, taking people's biometrics before they go out, when they come back.
When it helps our heart rate, our breathing, it improves our brain functioning.
(tranquil music) (birds chirp) - [Megan] Not everybody has access to a yard, but it doesn't mean they don't have access to a space that they can connect to nature.
So, that might be a park.
That might be a trail.
Just even a tree.
You know, developing a relationship with a tree in the sense of, you know, observing it with a curious eye.
Like, what do the leaves actually look like?
You know, what make them unique?
How do they change through the seasons?
Like, how does the bark look?
What does the bark feel like?
Going outside, finding a place that you're kind of drawn to, and then really exercising curiosity about that space can really allow you to bring a connection into nature no matter where you live.
(tranquil music)
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Clip: S25 | 5m 18s | Vote 2024 Table Talk - Democracy (5m 18s)
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Clip: S25 | 18m 30s | New immigration policies are offering hope to hundreds of thousands (18m 30s)
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Clip: S25 | 7m 43s | Wisconsin EcoLatinos is a nonprofit, fiscally sponsored by the Center for Community Stewardship (7m 43s)
VOTE 2024 - Table Talk on Education
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Clip: S25 | 8m 18s | Milwaukee PBS partnership with Marquette University's Civic Dialogues. (8m 18s)
VOTE 2024 Table Talk and Dr Michael Mendez
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Clip: S25 | 6m 50s | VOTE 2024 Table Talk and Dr Michael Mendez (6m 50s)
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Clip: S25 | 4m 42s | Víctor Huyke, publicist for the newspaper El Conquistador (4m 42s)
UMOS Farm and Food Workers Relief
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Clip: S25 | 10m 10s | United Migrant Opportunity Service, UMOS (10m 10s)
Mexican Fiesta - Antonio Guajardo
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Clip: S25 | 7m 53s | Mexican Fiesta began in 1973 with the purpose of celebrating Mother's Day & Mexico's independence. (7m 53s)
Julieta Zavala is a fashion design artist in folk art
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Clip: S25 | 6m 23s | Julieta Zavala - fashion design artist in folk art (6m 23s)
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Clip: S25 | 11m 30s | Domestic Violence does not discriminate. (11m 30s)
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Clip: S25 | 12m 29s | Yesica Coria is a Mexican folk artist whose works with corn leaves amaze us. (12m 29s)
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Clip: S25 | 16m 12s | Elena Abend and Orlando Pimentel are married Venezuelan artists. (16m 12s)
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Clip: S25 | 17m 25s | Jessica Solt has a hereditary condition that caused her to have surgery to remove her stomach. (17m 25s)
DACA Law Proposals in Wisconsin
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Clip: S25 | 24m 18s | Immigration Reform has not been consolidated in the US is because Democrats/Republicans don't agree. (24m 18s)
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipSupport for PBS provided by:
Adelante is a local public television program presented by MILWAUKEE PBS
This program is made possible in part by the following sponsors: Johnson Controls