This month
it hit 47 degrees in Portugal. And it looks like the extreme weather is linked
to global warming.
Dr
Friederike Otto, one of the scientists who pioneered studies spelling out the
role of global warming in extreme weather events, has said every heatwave today
is made more likely, frequent and intense by climate change.
The heat
itself is overwhelming enough, so what if it’s also causing you to worry about
the state of the environment?
Do you
have eco-anxiety right now?
Hilda
Burke, psychotherapist, couples counsellor and author of The Phone Addiction
Workbook, says anxiety usually relates to things that may or may not happen in
the future. So when it comes to eco anxiety, “it’s a fear related to our
ecology, our environment – but it’s a future fear.
“I think
what’s happening is eco-anxiety is in the past, because it’s happening now,”
Burke adds. “If you look at any credible climate science, it is happening now –
the world is heating up, and there’s our lived experience to support that.”
Burke
thinks the stage we’re in now is more an “eco grief”.
She
explains: “Our climate is changing, people are dying as a result of this
extreme weather, and nature is being destroyed… We’re in the grieving stage,
where it’s not a future-dated fear, it’s actually a response to what’s
happening in the here and now.”
What are
the signs you might be experiencing eco-related grief?
First, you
might feel a sense of loss over the more stable weather conditions of the past.
“Many people are feeling the grief of a loss of a climate that was comfortable
to live in. No matter how much we complained about the British weather, it
sustained life, and it was reasonably comfortable,” says Burke.
But for
Burke, the biggest sign of eco grief is a feeling of helplessness. “The
helplessness of, well, what can I do? There’s a helplessness – you see it
around war, you see it around Covid – [a feeling] like, it’s too big. How am I
actually going to impact this or improve it in any way?
“We can
feel very small, very defenceless, and very helpless, which is a state that
[can] really lead to depression, when we have that sense of powerlessness.”
What can
you do to navigate it?
First,
Burke recommends “feeling that grief” – instead of ignoring it and pretending
nothing is happening. She indicates navigating eco grief is different to
managing anxiety. “A lot of my clients are anxious about things that may never
happen, will never happen, could never happen” – but climate change is already
in progress.
“The
approach is to feel that [grief] and then go: What do I do with that? What
action do I need to take to help? It’s probably going to be something that is
related to helping the environment, to do something that eases the pressure on
the environment. So it will be personal action that will help shift the person
out of that helplessness state.”
There are
techniques you can do to help calm yourself too – such as meditation, breathing
exercises or tapping. “Anything you find relaxing will help, but the problem is
still there. So I think there needs to be some connection to the problem, and
some commitment to action that you feel is meaningful,” says Burke.
“There are
things we can do, if only to help with our own sense of helplessness – how are
we living our lives? Are we driving big SUVs, are we taking 12 flights a year,
or are we buying lots of fast fashion?”
When it comes
to tackling global warming, she acknowledges “systems need to change” but
suggests extreme weather like we’re experiencing right now can be a “wake-up
call” too, to push us into considering our own impact a bit more.
These might
seem small and insignificant, but as Burke adds: “I think in terms of our
personal eco grief, it can certainly help, if we feel like we’re acting
responsibly to what’s going on.
“Yes, it’s
a tiny piece of the puzzle, but if everyone were to look after their own
personal responsibility, it would affect massive change.”
While the ppl in South - that already froze/boiled to death in their homes - are expected to be frugal and supposedly green, Germany is considering burning wood pellets to warm themselves this winter. Oh, solidarity, how you mean different things to different ppl. How the definition of “people” means different things to “different” (“special”?) ppl.
By guida from Lisbon on 27 Jul 2022, 05:58