
Schools have closed. Wildfires have broken out. Trains have been cancelled and buses have caught on fire.
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It’s not just the UK, and it’s not just this month. Parts of France and Spain have experienced exceptionally high heat, while India has been battling a weeks-long, unbearably hot spell. The El Niño currently in place will probably bring very hot weather “nearly everywhere for June to August,” the UN said.
These warming trends have been growing for decades, and are expected to continue. So perhaps it’s no wonder people – especially younger people – are experiencing “climate grief”.
In a TikTok, UK poster Daisy said: “Climate grief is so crazy… the world I grew up in is just gone. I spend my summers bracing for hellish heat in a country that has no infrastructure for it.”
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The comments were filled with people from the UK and across the world who agreed with the sentiment – “my kids have never experienced a snow day,” one reads. Other replies came from the US, Germany, Poland, the Netherlands, and more.”
Here, HuffPost UK spoke to 19-year-old German student Emilia Werth (who commented on Daisy’s video), Alison Kirkman from Greenpeace UK, and psychologist Dr Candice O’Neil about the phenomenon.
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What is “climate grief”?
Dr O’Neil said, ”[Climate grief is] a deeply existential concern and links heavily with fears around mortality, death and dying – the ambiguity of all that we know about the world around us changing and evolving beyond our control.”
It’s “especially prevalent with younger generations who are thought to be more conscious and proactive about… our climate.”
Maybe you’ve begun to miss the sense of certainty that used to come with changing seasons and holidays, or are worried you’ll never experience the autumn and winter you loved as a child again.
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Kirkman said that for her, “Summer swifts feel fewer where I live this year. I find myself searching for them, every day willing more to come, but lack of insects have seen some bird numbers plummet to record lows.
“Grass verges and hedgerows no longer buzz with clouds of butterflies and bees and wildflowers are increasingly absent – often shaded out by grasses and other dominant greenery as fertilisers seep into soils at field edges.
“For younger generations especially, there is a painful sense that parts of the natural world are being lost before they’ve had the chance to know them.”
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Werth said she began feeling “climate grief” aged around 10.
“I was aware of climate change before, but realizing us humans are the direct cause of it deeply troubled me, I think. I often feel helpless,” she told HuffPost UK.
“I… feel like it doesn’t matter what I do as an individual, it will never be enough. In general, I feel a kind of Weltschmerz (pain for the world/what’s happening in the world).
“It makes me anxious to the point where I am terrified of… any kind of heat.”
How can we live with “climate grief”?
We asked environmental campaigning group Greenpeace how they handle “climate grief”.
Kirkman said: “Giving space to climate and nature grief matters because it can easily turn into numbness or despair. But it’s also a powerful reminder of the things we love and turning our grief into action is one of the best ways of finding hope again.”
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For instance, she said, wildlife loss is not inevitable.
“Nature will bounce back if we let it, so by speaking up together… we can turn our grief into the kind of pressure ministers can’t ignore.”
Dr O’Neil had similar advice.
“Seek to join online or in-person groups with a shared mission” to help the climate, she wrote.
“Other ways of coping might be discussing concerns in the hopes of educating and influencing friends and loved ones to adapt habits which keep us conscious and mindful of our climate.”
This can help you to reframe issues from ”‘I’m not doing enough to protect the climate’ to ‘I am actively working to protect the climate, my choices reflect my purpose-driven goal to live with an awareness and committed action towards this,’” she ended.
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