Back in 2019, the Oxford Dictionaries’ word of the year was “Climate Emergency”. Two words, but one meaning: “a situation in which urgent action is required to reduce or halt climate change and avoid potentially irreversible environmental damage resulting from it.”
The words used in that definition are frightening. How does “potentially irreversible environmental damage” make you feel? Now throw in other stuff that you may know, think, and believe. The number of habitats and species already lost, decisions affecting communities, and nature, taken by Governments and businesses around the world, your neighbourhood. Finally – the realisation about what you can do.
It is surely understandable that eco-anxiety is on the rise. With six in 10 of young people feeling “very worried” about the climate crisis, according to a 2021 global survey, and the health service in the UK taking it seriously (as evidenced by the British Medical Association back in 2021). Growing climate anxiety poses a significant threat to individuals and society– we all need to think seriously about what we can do to manage our own feelings and to help others too.