If you're going to be a grammar nazi. Be a correct one.
Nature is healing. Going into the green and the blue heals the body and spirit. I used the correct heals. I did not mean march or put your feet in. I meant heal and purify yourself. And spelled the word correctly to reflect as such.
1 year ago4 points(+0/-0/+4Score on mirror)1 child
"Heals" is the third-person singular present tense of the verb "to heal" (e.g., "Time heals all wounds"), while "healing" (the gerund/noun form) is what you would use in this context (e.g., "Nature provides healing").
"Get your heals in" is a command to make something heal rather than to receive healing.
In English, we don't typically use the construction "get your [verb] in" for abstract concepts like healing.
"Heals" is also confusing because it can be easily confused with "heels" (shoes/feet).
For encouraging people to benefit from nature's restorative effects, you could say:
- "Get your healing from nature."
- "Let nature heal you."
- "Recharge in nature."
- "Find solace in the outdoors."
The picture is sideways regardless of your abuse of English
Also, the image is sideways
Nature is healing. Going into the green and the blue heals the body and spirit. I used the correct heals. I did not mean march or put your feet in. I meant heal and purify yourself. And spelled the word correctly to reflect as such.
"Get your heals in" is a command to make something heal rather than to receive healing.
In English, we don't typically use the construction "get your [verb] in" for abstract concepts like healing.
"Heals" is also confusing because it can be easily confused with "heels" (shoes/feet).
For encouraging people to benefit from nature's restorative effects, you could say:
- "Get your healing from nature."
- "Let nature heal you."
- "Recharge in nature."
- "Find solace in the outdoors."
The picture is sideways regardless of your abuse of English