How climate change affects your mental health Britt Wray

For all that’s ever been said
about climate change,

we haven’t heard nearly enough
about the psychological impacts

of living in a warming world.

If you’ve heard the grim climate research

that science communicators like me
weave into our books and documentaries,

you’ve probably felt bouts of fear,
fatalism or hopelessness.

If you’ve been impacted
by climate disaster,

these feelings can set in much deeper,

leading to shock, trauma,

strained relationships, substance abuse

and the loss of personal
identity and control.

Vital political and technological work
is underway to moderate our climate chaos,

but I’m here to evoke a feeling in you

for why we also need
our actions and policies

to reflect an understanding
of how our changing environments

threaten our mental,
social and spiritual well-being.

The anxiety, grief and depression
of climate scientists and activists

have been reported on for years.

Trends we’ve seen
after extreme weather events

like hurricane Sandy or Katrina

for increased PTSD and suicidality.

And there are rich mental-health data
from northern communities

where warming is the fastest,

like the Inuit in Labrador,

who face existential distress
as they witness the ice,

a big part of their identity,

vanishing before their eyes.

Now if that weren’t enough,

the American Psychological Association

says that our psychological
responses to climate change,

like conflict avoidance, helplessness
and resignation, are growing.

This means that our conscious
and unconscious mental processes

are holding us back

from identifying the causes
of the problem for what they are,

working on solutions and fostering
our own psychological resilience,

but we need all those things
to take on what we’ve created.

Lately, I’ve been studying a phenomenon

that’s just one example
of the emotional hardships

that we’re seeing.

And it comes in the form of a question

that a significant amount of people
in my generation are struggling to answer.

That being:

Should I have a child
in the age of climate change?

After all, any child born today

will have to live in a world
where hurricanes, flooding, wildfires –

what we used to call natural disasters –

have become commonplace.

The hottest 20 years on record
occurred within the last 22.

The UN expects that two-thirds
of the global population

may face water shortages
only six years from now.

The World Bank predicts that by 2050,

there’s going to be
140 million climate refugees

in sub-Saharan Africa,
Latin America and South Asia.

And other estimates put that number
at over one billion.

Mass migrations and resource scarcity

increase the risk for violence,
war and political instability.

The UN just reported that we are pushing
up to a million species to extinction,

many within decades,

and our emissions are still increasing,
even after the Paris Agreement.

Over the last year and a half,

I’ve been conducting
workshops and interviews

with hundreds of people

about parenting in the climate crisis.

And I can tell you

that people who are worried about
having kids because of climate change

are not motivated by an ascetic pride.

They’re nerve-racked.

There’s even a movement
called BirthStrike,

whose members have declared
they’re not going to have kids

because of the state
of the ecological crisis

and inaction from governments
to address this existential threat.

And yes, other generations have also
faced their own apocalyptic dangers,

but that is no reason to disregard
the very real threat to our survival now.

Some feel that it’s better
to adopt children.

Or that it’s unethical
to have more than one,

especially three, four or more,

because kids increase
greenhouse gas emissions.

Now, it is a really unfortunate
state of affairs

when people who want kids
sacrifice their right to

because, somehow, they have been told
that their lifestyle choices are to blame

when the fault is far more systemic,

but let’s just unpack the logic here.

So an oft-cited study
shows that, on average,

having one less child
in an industrialized nation

can save about 59 tons
of carbon dioxide per year.

While in comparison,

living car-free saves nearly 2.5 tons,

avoiding a transatlantic flight –
and this is just one –

saves about 1.5 tons,

and eating a plant-based diet
can save almost one ton per year.

And consider that a Bangladeshi child

only adds 56 metric tons of carbon
to their parents' carbon legacy

over their lifetime,

while an American child, in comparison,
adds 9,441 to theirs.

So this is why some people argue

that it’s parents from nations
with huge carbon footprints

who should think the hardest
about how many kids they have.

But the decision to have a child
and one’s feelings about the future

are deeply personal,

and wrapped up
in all sorts of cultural norms,

religious beliefs, socioeconomic status,
education levels and more.

And so to some, this debate
about kids in the climate crisis

can seem like it came from another planet.

Many have more immediate threats
to their survival to think about,

like, how they’re going to put
food on the table,

when they’re a single mom
working three jobs,

or they’re HIV positive
or on the move in a migrant caravan.

Tragically, though, climate change
is really great at intersectionality.

It multiplies the stresses
marginalized communities already face.

A political scientist once said to me
that a leading indicator

that climate change is starting
to hit home, psychologically,

would be an increase
in the rate of informed women

deciding to not have children.

Interesting.

Is it hitting home with you,
psychologically?

Are you perhaps someone
with climate-linked pre-traumatic stress?

A climate psychiatrist coined that term,

and that’s a profession now, by the way,
shrinks for climate woes.

They’re getting work at a time
when some high schoolers

don’t want to apply
to university any longer,

because they can’t foresee
a future for themselves.

And this brings me back to my main point.

The growing concern about having kids
in the climate crisis

is an urgent indicator
of how hard-pressed people are feeling.

Right now, students around the world
are screaming for change

in the piercing voice of despair.

And the fact that we can see
how we contribute to this problem

that makes us feel unsafe

is crazy-making in itself.

Climate change is all-encompassing

and so are the ways
that it messes with our minds.

Many activists will tell you

that the best antidote
to grief is activism.

And some psychologists will tell you
the answer can be found in therapy.

Others believe the key is to imagine
you’re on your deathbed,

reflecting back on what’s mattered
the most in your life,

so you can identify
what you should do more of now,

with the time that you have left.

We need all these ideas, and more,

to take care of our innermost selves

as the environments we’ve known
become more punishing towards us.

And whether you have children or not,

we need to be honest
about what is happening,

and what we owe one another.

We cannot afford to treat

the psychological impacts
of climate change

as some afterthought,

because the other issues, of science,
technology and the politics and economy,

feel hard, while this somehow feels soft.

Mental health needs to be an integral part

of any climate change survival strategy,

requiring funding,
and ethics of equity and care,

and widespread awareness.

Because even if you’re the most
emotionally avoidant person on the planet,

there’s no rug in the world
that’s big enough to sweep this up under.

Thank you.

(Applause)

对于气候变化的所有说法,

我们还没有听到足够多的

关于生活在一个变暖的世界中的心理影响。

如果你听过

像我这样的科学传播者
在我们的书籍和纪录片中编织的严峻气候研究,

你可能会感到恐惧、
宿命论或绝望。

如果您
受到气候灾难的影响,

这些感受可能会更加深入,

导致震惊、创伤、

紧张的关系、药物滥用

以及个人
身份和控制的丧失。 正在进行

重要的政治和技术工作
以缓和我们的气候混乱,

但我在这里唤起你的一种感觉,即

为什么我们还需要
我们的行动和政策

来反映
对我们不断变化的环境如何

威胁我们的心理、
社会和精神健康的理解 -存在。

多年来,人们一直在报道气候科学家和活动家的焦虑、悲伤和抑郁。

飓风桑迪或卡特里娜飓风等极端天气事件之后,我们看到的趋势

是增加 PTSD 和自杀率。

还有来自北方社区的丰富的心理健康数据
,这些社区

变暖最快,

比如拉布拉多的因纽特人,

当他们目睹作为

他们身份的重要组成部分的冰

在他们眼前消失时,他们面临着生存的痛苦。

现在,如果这还不够

,美国心理学会

表示,我们
对气候变化的心理反应,

比如避免冲突、无助
和顺从,正在增长。

这意味着我们有意识
和无意识的心理过程

正在阻止

我们确定问题的原因
,寻找

解决方案并培养
我们自己的心理弹性,

但我们需要所有这些东西
来承担我们创造的东西。

最近,我一直在研究一种现象

,它只是我们所看到
的情感困难的一个例子

它以一个问题的形式出现,我们

这一代的很多人
都在努力回答。

那就是:

我应该
在气候变化的时代生孩子吗?

毕竟,今天出生的任何孩子

都必须生活在
一个飓风、洪水、野火——

我们过去称之为自然灾害——

已经司空见惯的世界。

有记录以来最热的 20 年
发生在过去 22

年。联合国预计,
全球三分之二的人口

可能在
六年后面临水资源短缺。

世界银行预测,到 2050 年,

撒哈拉以南非洲、
拉丁美洲和南亚将有 1.4 亿气候难民。

其他估计
数字超过 10 亿。

大规模移民和资源稀缺

增加了暴力、
战争和政治不稳定的风险。

联合国刚刚报告说,我们正在将
多达 100 万种物种推向灭绝,

其中许多是在几十年内,

即使在《巴黎协定》之后,我们的排放量仍在增加。

在过去的一年半里,

我一直在

与数百人

就气候危机中的育儿问题进行研讨会和采访。

我可以告诉你

,那些
因为气候变化而担心生孩子的

人并不是出于苦行者的骄傲。

他们神经紧张。

甚至还有一个
名为 BirthStrike 的运动,

其成员宣布
他们不会生孩子,

因为
生态危机的状况

以及政府
对解决这一生存威胁的不作为。

是的,其他几代人也
面临着他们自己的世界末日危险,

但这没有理由忽视
现在对我们生存的真正威胁。

有些人认为
收养孩子更好。

或者说
拥有一个以上,

尤其是三个、四个或更多是不道德的,

因为孩子会增加
温室气体排放。

现在,当想要孩子的人牺牲自己的权利时,这是一种非常
不幸的情况,

因为不知何故,他们被告知当错误更加系统性时
,他们的生活方式选择应该受到指责

但让我们在这里解开逻辑。

因此,一项经常被引用的研究
表明,平均而言,在工业化国家

少生一个孩子
每年

可以节省约 59
吨二氧化碳。

相比之下,

无车生活可以节省近 2.5 吨,

避免跨大西洋飞行
——这只是一次——

节省了大约 1.5 吨

,吃植物性饮食
每年可以节省近 1 吨。

考虑到一个孟加拉儿童

在其父母的碳遗产中仅增加了 56 公吨的碳

,而相比之下,一个美国儿童为他们的父母
增加了 9,441 公吨碳。

所以这就是为什么有些人

认为来自
碳足迹巨大国家的

父母应该最认真地考虑
他们有多少孩子。

但生孩子的决定
和一个人对未来的感受

是非常个人化的,

并且包含
在各种文化规范、

宗教信仰、社会经济地位、
教育水平等方面。

所以对一些人来说,这场
关于气候危机中孩子的辩论

似乎来自另一个星球。

许多人对他们的生存有更直接的威胁

比如他们将如何把
食物放在餐桌上,

当他们是一个从事三份工作的单身妈妈时

或者他们是艾滋病毒阳性
或正在移民中 大篷车。

然而,可悲的是,气候变化
在交叉性方面确实很棒。

它使
边缘化社区已经面临的压力倍增。

一位政治学家曾经对我

说,气候变化开始
在心理上影响家庭的一个主要指标是

,知情女性

决定不生孩子的比例增加。

有趣的。

从心理上讲,它是否与您同在

您可能是
患有与气候相关的创伤前压力的人吗?

一位气候精神病学家创造了这个词

,顺便说一句,现在这是一个职业,
因气候问题而萎缩。

他们
在一些高中生

不想再
申请大学的时候找到工作,

因为他们无法预见
自己的未来。

这让我回到了我的主要观点。

人们越来越担心
在气候危机中生孩子,这

是人们感受到压力的一个紧迫指标。

眼下,世界各地的学生

在用刺耳的绝望之声呼唤变革。

事实上,我们可以看到
我们如何促成

这个让我们感到不安全的问题,

这本身就是疯狂的。

气候变化是包罗万象


,它扰乱我们思想的方式也是如此。

许多活动家会告诉你

,解决悲伤的最佳方法
是积极行动。

一些心理学家会告诉
你答案可以在治疗中找到。

其他人认为关键是想象
你在临终前,

反思
你生命中最重要的事情,

这样你就可以确定
现在应该做更多的事情,

以及你所剩的时间。

我们需要所有这些想法,甚至更多,

来照顾我们最内心的自我,

因为我们所知道的环境
对我们变得更加惩罚。

无论你有没有孩子,

我们都需要诚实地
对待正在发生的事情,

以及我们彼此欠对方的东西。

我们不能把气候变化

的心理影响

当作事后的想法,

因为其他问题,如科学、
技术、政治和经济,

感觉很硬,而这在某种程度上感觉很软。

心理健康需要

成为任何气候变化生存战略不可或缺的一部分,

需要资金、
公平和关怀的伦理

以及广泛的认识。

因为即使你是
这个星球上情绪最回避的人,世界上

也没有
足够大的地毯可以把它扫到下面。

谢谢你。

(掌声)