Miami Herald (Sunday)

Climate change also affecting mental health. Call it eco-anxiety

- BY ROSE WONG Tampa Bay Times

ST. PETERSBURG

Anna Lynn Heine has thought about dropping out of Eckerd College more times than she cares to admit.

Or she’ll work on an essay and wonder what is even the point.

Anxiety about the planet’s future has also kept the 21-year-old from enjoying dinner with family or drinks with friends. A plastic cup can send her into an existentia­l spiral.

“Where did this food come from? Where’s this plastic going to go and how many fossil fuels were burned for it to arrive at my table?” she’ll ask herself. “And is this going to go to a landfill if I don’t finish it?”

Mental health profession­als have a term for the stress and grief many feel about the planet’s future: eco-anxiety. The American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n defines it as “chronic fear of environmen­tal doom.” It can lead to anxiety, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder.

A Nature study published in September surveyed 10,000 young people in 10 countries and found that most respondent­s are “very worried” or “extremely worried” about climate change. Nearly half of them said climate anxiety impacts their daily lives.

Heine is an environmen­tal studies major in Jo Huxster’s climate change communicat­ions class at Eckerd College. The assistant environmen­tal studies professor said almost every student in her class has eco-anxiety.

Huxster’s course examines the psychology of climate denial and the ways different sectors — the media, government, corporatio­ns — discuss climate change. Students learn how to run an organizing campaign to address climate policy and ways to talk about it with climate denialists and the apathetic.

She mourns for her hometown of Miami, where scientists predict sea level rise will displace nearly a third of the current population by the end of the century.

“It’s going to be a painful ending,” Heine said, “and it’s going to happen in an unjust way.”

‘WHAT DO YOU HAVE CONTROL OVER?’

Anxiety about the planet’s future increasing­ly comes up in Orlando therapist Kaley Sinclair’s sessions with clients.

Sinclair, a licensed mental health counselor and trauma specialist, said her adolescent and young adult clients discuss feeling a sense of doom about the environmen­t. Those with young children, or thoughts of having kids, contend with the guilt of forcing the next generation to inherit a hotter, less inhabitabl­e world.

Many, she said, are childhood trauma survivors, who struggle with a pervasive feeling of being unsafe.

Sinclair didn’t learn to treat climate anxiety or grief in graduate school, but realized that the number of clients needing profession­al help will only grow. In February, she registered with the

Climate Psychiatry Alliance, a profession­al group that offers resources and training.

About a third of her clients have shared anxiety or grief about the environmen­t. Her response is tailored to each client, but she encourages them to stay grounded in the present and think about constructi­ve ways to improve their feelings.

“OK, what do you have control over?” Sinclair tells them. “What can you do to try to make an impact while validating that a lot of things are outside of your control?”

Huxster tells her students the best thing any individual can do is to talk about the climate crisis. About 70 percent of the U.S. population knows climate change is real, she said, but only 30 percent talk about it. She hopes to

direct attention towards effective climate action: transition­ing away from fossil fuels and toward renewable energy and electrifyi­ng transporta­tion.

“Your own carbon footprint is very small,” Huxster said. “What’s most important about your actions is how they affect the actions of the people around you.”

‘WE DIDN’T CREATE THIS PROBLEM’

Love for the ocean brought one of Huxster’s Eckerd students, Anya Cervantes, from suburban Massachuse­tts to Florida to study the environmen­t. Fear for the oceans fuels her eco-anxiety.

The 22-year-old is a licensed scuba diver. She finds peace underwater, among swaying coral, a vibrant ecosystem that supports a quarter of all marine life.

“It’s a spiritual experience for me,” she said.

Huxster’s class has helped Cervantes think about ways she can combine her passion for environmen­tal justice and her second major, visual arts, into a career that could help address the problems the world faces.

While the 22-year-old can’t imagine not dedicating herself to alleviatin­g the climate crisis, she’s also frustrated about the pressures placed on her generation to solve it.

“The younger generation is almost put on a pedestal to save the planet,” she said. “It’s like, we didn’t create this problem.”

‘I WOULD RATHER TRY’

For Huxster, researchin­g climate change — contending with the dire data on a near daily basis — creates a source of anxiety. She has a 2½ year old son and worries about what the future will look like for him and the people he will know.

But her work also makes her feel good. This semester, she said three students decided to pursue careers in translatin­g climate science to different audiences. Every year, more students sign up for her 25-person course than it has space for.

The professor dedicates the last week of her class to discussing eco-anxiety and grief.

Students share how they feel and read a chapter of Per Espen Stoknes’ book What We Think About When We’re Trying Not To Think About Global Warming.

The chapter, titled “It’s Hopeless but I’ll Give It My All,” discusses taking action even when the odds are overwhelmi­ng.

Heine admits that she needs to find a way to care about the climate that’s sustainabl­e for her mental health. And so that she can continue to wake up every day and do the work.

She knows she won’t drop out. She will finish the essay. And she plans to have kids.

“I wouldn’t prevent new life that could build things to be better just because of fear. I would rather try to continue to build the future.”

Times photojourn­alist Arielle Bader contribute­d to this report.

This story was produced in partnershi­p with the Florida Climate Reporting Network, a multi-newsroom initiative founded by the Miami Herald, the South Florida Sun Sentinel, The Palm Beach Post, the Orlando Sentinel, WLRN Public Media and the Tampa Bay Times.

FOR MORE INFORMATIO­N

For more informatio­n about the Climate-Aware Therapist Directory, visit: climatepsy­chology.us/ climate-therapists

IF YOU NEED HELP

If you or someone you know is contemplat­ing suicide, reach out to the 24-hour National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255; contact the Crisis Text Line by texting TALK to 741741 or online using crisistext­line.org; or chat with someone online at suicidepre­ventionlif­e line.org.

Veterans can call the Crisis Center of Tampa Bay’s veteran support hotline at 1-844-6935838 or visit myflvet.com. The National Veteran Crisis Hotline can provide help 24 hours a day by calling 1-800-273-8255 and pressing 1, texting 838255 or via online chat at veteranscr­isisline.net.

 ?? ARIELLE BADER Tampa Bay Times ?? Joanna Huxster, an assistant professor of environmen­tal studies at Eckerd College, listens to a student during an outdoor class session on April 19 at the St. Petersburg campus. She teaches an environmen­tal communicat­ions course and dedicates the last week of class to teaching her students how to deal with eco-anxiety and grief.
ARIELLE BADER Tampa Bay Times Joanna Huxster, an assistant professor of environmen­tal studies at Eckerd College, listens to a student during an outdoor class session on April 19 at the St. Petersburg campus. She teaches an environmen­tal communicat­ions course and dedicates the last week of class to teaching her students how to deal with eco-anxiety and grief.
 ?? ARIELLE BADER Tampa Bay Times ?? Anna Lynn Heine, a student at Eckerd College, poses for a portrait on April 19 on the St. Petersburg campus.
ARIELLE BADER Tampa Bay Times Anna Lynn Heine, a student at Eckerd College, poses for a portrait on April 19 on the St. Petersburg campus.

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