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Moving Through the Winter: How Physical Activity Supports Mental Health

As the daylight hours grow shorter and temperatures drop, many people experience changes in energy, motivation, and mood. For some, winter brings mild sluggishness; for others, it triggers more significant mood changes, such as Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) or exacerbation of existing depression and anxiety. In interventional psychiatry, we often discuss medication, neuromodulation, and innovative therapies, but we also emphasize one intervention consistently supported by research: movement.

Movement is one of the most accessible ways to support mental health during colder months. It acts on the brain through multiple pathways—biochemical, structural, behavioral, and social. While it can feel difficult to stay active during winter, movement can play a protective role against seasonal mood declines and augment the effects of clinical treatment.


Why Winter Impacts Mood

Multiple environmental factors converge during winter, making it uniquely challenging for the brain:

  • Reduced daylight exposure alters circadian rhythms, reducing serotonin and increasing melatonin production, leading to low mood, fatigue, and disrupted sleep.
  • Colder temperatures can lead to less time outdoors, decreasing exposure to fresh air and restorative environments.
  • Social withdrawal is more common, and loneliness contributes significantly to mental health symptom severity.
  • Behavioral inertia increases—when we slow down, we tend to stay slowed down.

These changes can compound existing mental health symptoms, creating a cycle that is difficult to interrupt. Movement is one of the few levers that can positively influence each of these factors simultaneously.


How Movement Affect the Brain

Movement—particularly moderate aerobic exercise—supports mental health in several interconnected ways:

Neurochemical Enhancement

  • Physical activity increases:
  • Serotonin, which supports mood stability
  • Dopamine, associated with motivation and reward
  • Endorphins, natural pain- and stress-reducers
  • BDNF (Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor), which promotes neuroplasticity

Neuroplasticity is particularly important in interventional psychiatry; treatments such as ketamine, TMS, and psychedelic-assisted therapies also leverage this mechanism. Movement enhances these therapeutic effects and supports long-term recovery.

Circadian Rhythm Regulation

  • Movement—especially outdoors—helps regulate sleep-wake cycles through light exposure and consistent behavioral cues. Better circadian health correlates strongly with improved mood and anxiety outcomes.

Stress Hormone Regulation

  • Exercise can lower baseline cortisol over time, helping decrease chronic stress, irritability, and rumination. Even brief movement breaks throughout the day can meaningfully reduce physiological arousal.

Cognitive Benefits

Regular activity improves:

  • Attention
  • Working memory
  • Processing speed
  • Executive function

These benefits are especially helpful for individuals experiencing cognitive slowing associated with depression.

Structural Brain Changes

Long-term aerobic exercise is associated with:

  • Increased hippocampal volume (important for memory and emotional regulation)
  • Strengthened prefrontal cortex function (impulse control, decision-making)

Both regions are implicated in mood disorders


Movement Does Not Have to Mean “Exercise”

One of the biggest barriers to staying active in the winter is all-or-nothing thinking. When people hear “exercise,” they imagine gyms, intense running, or hour-long workouts. In reality, movement can be gentle, brief, and woven into daily routines.

 Examples include:

  • Walking with a coat and gloves for 10–15 minutes
  • Stretching during work breaks
  • Gentle yoga or mobility work
  • Light strength training at home
  • Indoor dance breaks
  • Household tasks that require lifting or bending

Small movements increase blood flow and elevate mood without requiring gym memberships or significant time commitments.


Behavioral Activation Strategies

Try:

  • Scheduling movement the same time daily
  • Pairing movement with something enjoyable (podcast, music)
  • Using accountability partners
  • Tracking streaks lightly—not obsessively
  • Setting very small goals (5 minutes)

Success is measured by showing up, not intensity.


Social Movement Matters

Movement with others adds layers of benefit:

  • Increased accountability
  • Reduced loneliness
  • Increased oxytocin from shared activity
  • More positive affect afterward

Community winter activities such as run clubs, indoor pickleball, yoga classes, or weekly walks can be protective against isolation.

Indoor Options for Severe Weather

When conditions truly limit outdoor activity, consider:

  • Guided YouTube workouts
  • Mobility flow or stretching sessions
  • Resistance bands
  • Stationary cycling
  • Bodyweight circuits
  • Mall walking
  • Virtual fitness communities

The aim is consistency—not perfection.

How Much Is Enough?

While guidelines suggest 150 minutes of moderate activity per week, mental health benefits begin at 5–10 minutes daily. The body and brain respond quickly to consistent stimulation.


The Bottom Line

Movement is one of the most powerful, evidence-based tools for supporting mental health during the winter season. It acts quickly, improves brain chemistry, regulates circadian rhythms, reduces stress, and enhances the effectiveness of interventional psychiatric treatments. Most importantly, movement is adaptable—available in small doses, indoors or outdoors, alone or with others.

For individuals feeling the weight of the season, remember that you do not need to feel motivated first. Movement itself generates motivation. Starting small creates momentum, and momentum leads to meaningful improvement.

If you have questions about integrating movement with your existing treatment plan, or if winter symptoms are becoming unmanageable, our clinic is here to support you.

References

American Psychiatric Association. (2023). Physical activity and mental health: What the research says. Retrieved from https://www.psychiatry.org

Harvard Health Publishing. (2021, October). Exercising to relax. Harvard Medical School. Retrieved from https://www.health.harvard.edu

Mayo Clinic. (2023). Depression and anxiety: Exercise eases symptoms. Retrieved from https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/depression/in-depth/depression-and-exercise/art-20046495

National Institute of Mental Health. (2023). Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD). Retrieved from https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/publications/seasonal-affective-disorder

Psychiatry.org. (2022, November). Exercise as an evidence-based intervention for depression and anxiety. American Psychiatric Association. Retrieved from https://www.psychiatry.org/news-room/apa-blogs

Ratey, J. J. (2008). Spark: The revolutionary new science of exercise and the brain. New York, NY: Little, Brown and Company.

World Health Organization. (2022). Physical activity fact sheet. Retrieved from https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/physical-activity

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