By Heidi Schlumpf, Reprinted by permission of NCR Publishing
Company-EarthBeat www.NCROnline.org; first published for
Earthbeat March 6, 2024- https://www.ncronline.org/earthbeat/faith/you-are-not-alone-community-young-people-find-antidotes-climate-anxiety
NCR Editor's note: This story has been supported by the
Solutions Journalism Network, a nonprofit organization dedicated to rigorous
and compelling reporting about responses to social problems.
Mary Rittle says she experiences climate anxiety every
single day. It may be a 55-degree January day in Chicago, when she notices that
birds that should have migrated are still around. Or it could be after reading
about how melting polar ice caps are endangering people around the world. Even
her environmental activism can trigger anxiety because it reminds her of the
urgent need for such work.
"This overwhelming sense of worry and fear and
helplessness is very easy to get caught up in," says Rittle, who is a
freshman at Loyola University Chicago. "I sometimes feel like, what could
I possibly do? Why is no one taking this seriously? Why are lawmakers and
corporations not taking this seriously?"
But Rittle's activism also helps relieve her anxiety, as
does spending time in nature. Another anxiety-buster is having a community of
like-minded students at Loyola University Chicago, where she is active in the
Restoration Club and a new group, called "Eco-Warriors."
Eco-Warriors was founded last year specifically to address
climate anxiety among students, especially those in the School of Environmental
Sustainability. Jesuit Br. Mark Mackey heard students in his eco-spirituality
course talk about feeling overwhelmed, not being able to get out of bed or
deciding against having children because of their fears about the climate
crisis.
So he gathered some students together for weekly meetings.
"It helps just hearing that you're not alone in these worries and having a
place to vent and get out your frustrations," Mackey told EarthBeat.
Now in its second year, the group's success is evident from
student interest. It has attracted nearly 30 people and would likely appeal to
more, but Mackey does not advertise in an effort to maintain the small-group
feel.
At the group's first meeting, Mackey wrote
"Eco-Worriers" on the board, only to have a student change
"Worriers" to "Warriors." It has become a ritual that
begins each meeting, and underlines how action can transform anxiety.
Climate anxiety — sometimes referred to as
"eco-anxiety" or "ecological distress" — goes beyond
concern for the environmental peril facing the planet because of global
warming. It manifests itself much like other anxieties, with intrusive
thoughts, sleeplessness, a racing heart or shortness of breath, and
interference with relationships, work or school. It can include a range of
feelings, from helplessness and sadness, to hopelessness and despair.
Experts say that distress is a normal human response to a
crisis. But for young people, climate anxiety can be compounded by social media
and other stressors.
While young people are resilient, their anxiety around
climate issues can be subtle, and those who work with them — teachers, school
counselors, campus ministers — should be educated and attuned to it, say those
involved in programs to address climate anxiety. The antidotes, they say,
include environmental activism, community support and spiritual sustenance.
Young people who struggle with climate anxiety agree.
You are not alone
The poor air quality in Alexa Santana's lower-income
neighborhood worries her, as does the fact that several family members have
asthma. "I feel anxious for the state of our world," said the
sophomore at Fontbonne Academy in Boston.
She is not alone. A 2021 survey of young people, ages 16-25,
found that more than half (59%) were very or extremely worried about climate
change, and 84% were at least moderately worried. Nearly half (45%) said their
feelings about climate change negatively affected their daily life and
functioning.
Fontbonne theology teacher Stephen Michael Tumolo sees
climate anxiety as just another stressor on this generation. "It's part of
the anxiety of simply being a young person in America today," he said.
But the school's involvement in the Catholic Climate
Covenant's Youth Mobilization Program has helped build community and given
students a purpose in the climate movement — which has in turn relieved some of
that anxiety.
The project's national program manager, Kayla Jacobs, says
much of the anxiety she sees among high school students is extreme, something
she would describe as closer to despair.
Kayla
Jacobs attends a climate march in Chicago in 2019. (Provided photo)
"It's not just nervousness, but really affects their
decision-making and planning for the future," she said. She herself used
to suffer from insomnia because of her fears about the environment.
One of the Youth Mobilization Program's goals is to turn
anxiety into hope by community-building and action through regular meetings of
a student leadership team and a yearly Catholic Youth Climate Summit, with
workshops, speakers and action-planning. A recent summit in Boston was followed
by a lobbying day at the Massachusetts State House, in which students were
trained and matched for meetings with their local representatives to advocate
for several green bills. A similar summit took place in Chicago in February.
In debriefs after the summits, students told Jacobs that
before the program they felt scared and powerless. "By the end, they have
built that community and feel that they know what the next steps are,"
Jacobs said.
Taking action, she said, motivates students to continue to
work for change. "Whether it's a small win or a big win, at the school
level or federal level, it keeps the momentum going."
Santana says her activism helped her connect with others who
share her values — and her worries. "Advocating for climate change not
only helps others learn more but it helps you connect with other people who are
feeling the same way you do," she said. "If you find those people and
connect with them, you can feel some relief and feel more heard."
Jacobs also believes in intergenerational support, and
connects students with adult allies. She is encouraged that environmental
issues are less political among younger generations, whether they identify as
conservative or liberal.
"I definitely have hope with the future in their
hands," she said. "My job is to make sure we have a future to put
into their hands."
Sam King, director of integral ecology for the Marist
Brothers, also believes participatory action is the best antidote to climate
despair. Student "Green Teams" at Marist high schools across the
country are attracting a growing number of students who are involved in
projects such as building native plant sanctuaries and implementing circular
plastic waste programs.
"When we feel that we're part of something bigger than
ourselves, and when our spirituality nourishes our action, we feel a sense of
hope," King said. "These are the moments we're trying to lift up and
focus on."
Yet King also cautions against repressing all negative
emotions and warns about the dangers of "toxic positivity." He tries
to balance raising alarm and using positivity to bring people together.
"We need to honor the range of emotions that can arise
from climate anxiety," he said. "There is a certain amount of alarm
and dread that can be useful, and there is a place for righteous indignation
and fear. We need to hold space for these emotions and not just gloss over
them."
Spiritual sustenance
After doing grassroots ecological work in the Amazon for 11
years, Blair Nelsen went through a period of activism burnout. That's when she
started hearing about climate anxiety and became interested in the inner work
necessary for long-term movements for social change.
Now, as executive director of Waterspirit, which focuses on
water issues and spiritually grounded environmental action, Nelsen thinks of
herself as something of a "climate chaplain." One of her first
projects after joining Waterspirit in 2019 was to start its Eco-Anxiety Support
Group.
Blair Nelsen at a Sept 17, 2023, climate march
joined by her son, Noah Prata Nelsen (GSR photo/Chris Herlinger)
Waterspirit's program is based on the Good Grief Network's
"10 Steps to Personal Resilience and Empowerment in a Chaotic
Climate" method, which is in turn loosely based on Alcoholics Anonymous'
12 steps.
Although there are themes and resources as part of the
10-week support group, the real power comes from the conversations among the
group members, Nelsen said.
"Deep listening and authentic, vulnerable sharing does
a whole lot, especially when people are afraid of being seen as a 'Debbie
Downer,' " she said. "Having space for that and knowing that your
distress is a moral response to a society in crisis is incredibly affirming and
resilience-building."
Participants from the 11 groups Waterspirit has hosted
self-report in exit surveys that they see an overall improvement in their mood,
and experience feelings of agency, resilience and empowerment. They also report
feeling more connected and less alone, Nelsen said.
The small-group format of fewer than 15 participants,
however, limits how many people can be reached, and the need for more mental
health resources is urgent, Nelsen said. She also would like to see
environmental advocacy organizations and spiritual leaders pay more attention
to climate anxiety.
"I'm seeing an increasing openness to this, but there
is still a lot of work left to do," she said.
Waterspirit was founded by a Sister of St. Joseph of Peace,
but serves people of all beliefs. Similarly, programs at Catholics schools or
sponsored by the Catholic Climate Covenant do not assume that participants are
Catholic or practicing the faith.
Yet organizers say students are open and even hungry for
spiritual resources to help what can be an existential anxiety, and that
environmental spirituality and justice may be a point of connection with young
people who are otherwise turned off by institutional religion.
Jacobs of the Catholic Climate Covenant said she has been
surprised at young participants' openness, when other nonreligious options
exist. "These students don't have to do a program with a Catholic lens on
it," she said. "But we are offering something that they feel drawn to
— that's the theological virtues of faith, hope and love in a very active type
of way."
Yet young people are also very sensitive to hypocrisy and
notice when church institutions don't practice what they preach, she added.
Tumolo of Fontbonne Academy teaches Laudato Si', Pope
Francis' 2015 encyclical on the environment, and he sees students regularly
quoting it in their writing assignments. "They know the pope's on their
side, that he's pushing the system and trying to change things," Tumolo
said.
King, of the U.S. Marist school network, believes that faith
has much to offer those suffering from climate anxiety. "It can bring a
sense of deep connectedness, belovedness and being held at a time of
crisis," he said. "I think young people need that."
Faith can also nurture a sense of vocation as students
discern their own role in addressing climate change. But those who work with
youth have to be willing to meet them where they are, King said.
For many, their sense of "connectedness with the
more-than-human world" comes through nature. "An eco-spirituality can
be both a salve for the soul and a source of hope and catalyst for
action," King said.
So much of climate anxiety touches on our human finitude,
which traditionally has been the realm of religion, noted Mackey of Loyola's
Eco-Warriors group.
Mackey tries to bring a Christian spirit of hope to his
encounters with those suffering from climate anxiety, while still respecting
students' own spiritual paths. "An encounter with God is an antidote like
nothing else," he said.
Rittle, the Loyola freshman, also participated in the
Catholic Climate Covenant's Youth Mobilization program in high school and
presented on the topic of climate anxiety at last year's Ignatian Family
Teach-in for Justice. She urges those experiencing anxiety to find connection.
"For anyone else who is struggling with climate
anxiety, you are not alone," she said. "It's difficult, but there are
so many of us working in our communities and in our own ways to help the
situation. And I do believe things are going to change."
Heidi Schlumpf is NCR senior correspondent. Her email
address is hschlumpf@ncronline.org. Follow her on Twitter: @HeidiSchlumpf. Schlumpf was previously NCR's executive editor and a
national correspondent. As national correspondent, Schlumpf did in-depth
coverage on the influence of money in the church, sex abuse, politics, women's
issues, racism and young people in the church. She previously wrote an opinion
column for NCR for almost a decade. Schlumpf is based in Chicago, where she
lives with her husband, Edmund, and their two children, and where she is a
member of St. Gertrude Parish.
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