Eco-Anxiety

A growing number of clients are experiencing distress about climate change, environmental collapse, and ecological uncertainty. This distress, better known as eco-anxiety, often shows up as panic, grief, anger, or numbness. These articles help therapists identify and address eco-anxiety as a rational response to real threats. Clinicians will find language for exploring moral distress, fear, and activist burnout. Learn how to help clients stay emotionally engaged and connected--to others and to the planet--without tipping into helplessness or chronic overwhelm.

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More Articles on Eco-Anxiety

It’s a truism that climate change has become an existential crisis. Can a new book by a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist help mitigate ecological despair? Read more

An anthropologist’s daughter, I came of age on Upolu, Samoa, living by a turquoise lagoon in an indigenous village and kinship group that formally adopted my... Read more

In the following interview, ecotherapist Patricia Hasbach explains how practitioners can address the rise in eco-anxiety and depression. Read more

Dire climate reports and grim environmental realities are generating a new kind of eco-anxiety. What can therapists do? Read more

In this video clip from his 2015 Networker Symposium Keynote address, "Healing and Hope in the Human Age," psychiatrist and bestselling author Dan Siegel... Read more

Mary Pipher discusses the effects of climate change on clients with anxiety and depression. Read more

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