Climate
depression is for real. Just ask a scientist
By
Madeleine Thomas
28
October, 2014
Two years ago, Camille
Parmesan, a professor at Plymouth University and the University of
Texas at Austin, became so “professionally depressed” that she
questioned abandoning her research in climate change entirely.
Parmesan
has a pretty serious stake in the field. In 2007, she shared a Nobel
Peace Prize with Al Gore for her work as a lead author of the Third
Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
In 2009, The
Atlantic named
her one of 27 “Brave
Thinkers” for
her work on the impacts of climate change on species around the
globe. Barack Obama and Mark Zuckerberg were also on the list.
Despite the accolades,
she was fed up. “I felt like here was this huge signal I was
finding and no one was paying attention to it,” Parmesan says. “I
was really thinking, ‘Why am I doing this?’” She
ultimately packed up her life here in the States and moved to
her husband’s native United Kingdom.
“In
the U.S., [climate change] isn’t well-supported by the funding
system, and when I give public talks in the U.S., I have to devote
the first half of the talk to [the topic] that climate change is
really happening,” says Parmesan, now a professor at Plymouth
University in England.
Parmesan certainly isn’t
the first to experience some sort of climate-change blues. From
depression to substance abuse to suicide and post-traumatic stress
disorder, growing bodies of research in the relatively new field
of psychology of global warming suggest that climate change will take
a pretty heavy toll on the human psyche as storms become more
destructive and droughts more prolonged. For your everyday
environmentalist, the emotional stress suffered by a rapidly
changing Earth can result in some pretty substantial anxieties.
For scientists like
Parmesan on the front lines of trying to save the planet, the stakes
can be that much higher. The ability to process and understand dense
climatic data doesn’t necessarily translate to coping with that
data’s emotional ramifications. Turns out scientists are people,
too.
Climate scientists not
only wade knee-deep through doomsday research day in and day out, but
given the importance of their work, many also find themselves thrust
into a maelstrom of political, ideological, and social debate with
increasing frequency.
As
Naomi Klein writes in her most recent book, This
Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. The Climate,
“We probably shouldn’t be surprised that some climate scientists
are a little spooked by the radical implications of their own
research. Most of them were quietly measuring ice cores, running
global climate models, and studying ocean acidification, only to
discover, as Australian climate expert and author Clive Hamilton puts
it, that in breaking the news of the depth of our collective climate
failure, they were ‘unwittingly destabilizing the political and
social order.’” Talk about a lot of pressure.
“I
don’t know of a single scientist that’s not having an emotional
reaction to what is being lost,” Parmesan is quoted saying in the
National Wildlife Federation’s 2012 report, “The
Psychological Effects of Global Warming on the United States: And Why
the U.S. Mental Health Care System is Not Adequately Prepared.” “It’s
gotten to be so depressing that I’m not sure I’m going to go back
to this particular site again,” she says, referring to an ocean
reef she has studied since 2002, “because I just know I’m going
to see more and more of it dead, and bleached, and covered with brown
algae.”
Lise Van Susteren, a
forensic psychiatrist based in Washington, D.C. — and
co-author of the National Wildlife Federation’s report — calls
this emotional reaction “pre-traumatic stress disorder,” a term
she coined to describe the mental anguish that results from preparing
for the worst, before it actually happens.
“It’s
an intense preoccupation with thoughts we cannot get out of our
minds,” Van Susteren says. And for some, it’s a preoccupation
that extends well outside of the office. “Everyday irritations as
parents and spouses have their place, they’re legitimate,” she
says. “But when you’re talking about thousands of years of
impacts and species, giving a shit about whether you’re going to
get the right soccer equipment or whether you forgot something at
school is pretty tough.”
What’s
even more deflating for a climate scientist is when sounding the
alarm on climatic catastrophes seems to fall on deaf ears. “How
would that make you feel? You take this information to someone and
they say they don’t believe you, as if it’s a question of
beliefs,” says Jeffrey Kiehl, senior scientist for climate change
research at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder.
“I’m not talking about religion here, I’m talking about facts.
It’s equivalent to a doctor doing extremely detailed observations
on someone and concluding that someone needed to have an operation,
and the person looks at the doctor and says, ‘I don’t believe
you.’ How would a doctor feel in that moment, not think,
but feel in
that moment?”
Even
if scientists did bring a little emotion to their findings — which
raises questions about the importance of objectivity in the sciences
— Kiehl worries that such honesty would just provide even more
fodder for climate
deniers.
“I
could imagine that if scientists start to talk about how they’re
feeling about the issue and how emotional they’re feeling about the
issue, those who are critical about climate change would seize that
information and use it in any way they could to say that we should
reject their science,” he says.
It’s
only natural then that many climate scientists and activists often
feel an extreme pressure to keep their emotions in check, even when
out of the spotlight. For activists like Mike Tidwell —
founder of the nonprofit Chesapeake Climate Action Network and author
of The
Ravaging Tide: Strange Weather, Future Katrinas, and the Race to Save
America’s Coastal Cities —
part of being on the front lines means being outspoken and
passionate about the cause. But while activism may be a more
forgiving platform to express emotional stresses than within the
scientific community, the personal toll of the work goes largely
undiscussed.
“You
don’t just start talking about unbelievably fast sea-level rise at
a cocktail party at a friend’s house,” Tidwell says. “So having
to deny the emotional need to talk about what’s on your mind all
the time … those are some of the burdens that climate aware
scientists and activists have to endure. People talk about climate
change, openly talk about activism, and people even talk about how
scary it is, and about how screwed we are and unbelievable it is that
sea level is rising, and world governments still aren’t doing shit.
But nobody talks about how it makes them feel personally.”
So
how does a
climate scientist handle the stress? Van Susteren offers
several“climate
trauma survival tips” for
those in the field. Meditation and therapy are two, as are taking
particular care to reinforce boundaries between work and one’s
personal life. But she also says being honest is just as important.
“[Don’t] believe that you are invulnerable,” she writes. “In
fact, admitting what you are going through makes you more resilient.”
And
a dose of honesty may be more than just therapeutic. Some real talk
about how we’re all screwed may be just what the climate movement
needs. Back in March,Grist’s
Brentin Mock wrote that
in order to really drive
home the urgency of global warming and not just view “climate
change only as that thing that happened one year on television to
those poor communities in Brooklyn,” maybe it’s OK, when
appropriate, to ditch a very limited “just the facts”
vocabulary in favor of more emotional language. In other words, he
argues that scientists should start dropping F bombs. “Forgive my
language here, but if scientists are looking for a clearer language
to express the urgency of climate change, there’s no clearer word
that expresses that urgency than FUCK,” Mock writes. “We need
scientists to speak more of these non-hard science truths, no matter
how inconvenient or how dirty.”
Climate
deniers aren’t going away anytime soon. But with global
organizations like the IPCC reinforcing facts like the 95
percent certainty that humans are driving global warming,
the research is sticking. Perhaps it’s time for those deeply
involved in climate science to come forward about the emotional
struggle, or at the very least, for those in mental health
research and support to start exploring climate change psychology
with more fervor. And reaching out to scientists in particular
could be a huge opportunity to better explore the world of climate
psych, sayspsychologist psychosocial
researcher and consultant Renee Lertzman, a member of the
Climate Psychology Alliance.
“There’s
a taboo talking about it,” Lertzman says, adding that the
tight-lipped culture of the scientific community can be difficult to
bridge. “We’re just starting to piece that together. The field of
the psychology of climate change is still very, very young … I
believe there are profound and not well-recognized or understood
psychological implications of what I would call being a frontliner.
There needs to be a lot more attention given to frontliners and where
they’re given support.”
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