In Virginia Woolf's feminist lecture A Room of One's Own , she articulates what seems to be a common truth for most people, introvert, extrovert and ambivert alike: that one needs both the physical and mental space to be undisturbed if they are to generate their best creative work. While critics have pointed out that her treatise on women who write literature was an elitist, narrow-minded argument which failed to consider women who were not afforded the numerous privileges she enjoyed, she still broke important ground. Woolf's premise focused on access to a private environment conducive to creating a work of fiction, but in this brief musing I will expand upon that idea and ask, what about a our inner pull to access a space which correlates with our pristine concept of nature in order to connect with our inner selves and even a higher purpose of protecting that environment which fulfills and sustains us? Not everyone has had or will ever have access to the kind of envi...