The
Great Grief: How To Cope with Losing Our World
In
order to respond adequately, first we may need to mourn
by
Per Espen Stoknes
14
May, 2015
Climate
scientists overwhelmingly say
that we will face unprecedented warming in the coming decades. Those
same scientists, just like you or I, struggle
with the emotions that
are evoked by these facts and dire projections. My children—who are
now 12 and 16—may live in a world warmer than at any time in the
previous 3
million years,
and may face challenges that we are only just beginning to
contemplate, and in many ways may be deprived of the rich, diverse
world we grew up in. How do we relate to – and live – with this
sad knowledge?
Across
different populations, psychological
researchers have
documented a long list ofmental
health consequences of
climate change: trauma, shock, stress, anxiety, depression,
complicated grief, strains on social relationships, substance abuse,
sense of hopelessness, fatalism, resignation, loss of autonomy and
sense of control, as well as a loss of personal and occupational
identity.
This
more-than-personal sadness is what I call the “Great Grief”—a
feeling that rises in us as if from the Earth itself. Perhaps bears
and dolphins, clear-cut forests, fouled rivers, and the acidifying,
plastic-laden oceans bear grief inside them, too, just as we do.
Every piece of climate news increasingly comes with a sense of dread:
is it too late to turn around? The notion that our individual grief
and emotional loss can actually be a reaction to the decline of our
air, water, and ecology rarely appears in conversation or the media.
It may crop up as fears about what kind of world our sons or
daughters will face. But where do we bring it? Some bring it
privately to a therapist. It is as if this topic is not supposed to
be publicly discussed.
This
Great Grief recently re-surfaced for me upon reading news about the
corals on the brink of death due to warming oceans as well as
overfishing of Patagonian toothfish in plastic laden oceans. Is this
a surging wave of grief arriving from the deep seas, from the
ruthlessness and sadness of the ongoing destruction? Or is it just a
personal whim? As a psychologist I’ve learned not to scoff at such
reactions, or movements in the soul, but to honor them.
A
growing body of research has brought evidence from focus groups and
interviews with people affected by droughts, floods, and coastal
erosion. When elicited, participants express deep distress over
losses that climate disruptions are bringing. It is also aggravated
by what they perceive as inadequate and fragmented local, national
and global responses. In a study by researcher Susanne Moser on
coastal communities, one typical participant reports: “And it
really sets in, the reality of what we're trying to hold back here.
And it does seem almost futile, with all the government agencies that
get in the way, the sheer cost of doing something like that – it
seems hopeless. And that's kind of depressing, because I love this
area.” In another study by sociologist Kari Norgaard, one
participant living by a river exclaims: “It’s like, you want to
be a proud person and if you draw your identity from the river and
when the river is degraded, that reflects on you.” Another
informant experiencing extended drought explained to professor Glenn
Albrecht’s team that even if “you’ve got a pool there – but
you don’t really want to go outside, it’s really yucky outside,
you don’t want to go out.”
A
recent climate survey by the Yale Project on Climate Change
Communication and the George Mason University Center for Climate
Change Communication had this startling statistic: “Most Americans
(74%) say they only ‘rarely’ or ‘never’ discuss global
warming with family and friends, a number
that has grown substantially since
2008 (60%).” Emphasis mine.
These
quotes and statistics underscore the reality that many prefer to
avoid or not dwell in—this Mordor-esque land of eco-anxiety, anger,
despair, and depression. One of denial’s essential life-enhancing
functions is to keep us more comfortable by blotting out this inner,
wintry darkness.
The
climate survey, however, also has this encouraging finding:
“Americans are nine times more likely to lean toward the view that
it is people’s responsibility to care for the Earth and its
resources (62%) than toward the belief that it is our right to use
the Earth and its resources for our own benefit (7%).”
So,
what if instead of continuing to avoid this hurt and grief and
despair, or only blaming them—the corporations, politicians,
agrobusinesses, loggers, or corrupt bureaucrats—for it, we could
try to lean into, and accept such feelings. We could acknowledge them
for what they are rather than dismissing them as wrong, as a personal
weakness or somebody else’s fault. It seems, somehow, important to
persist and get in touch with the despair itself, as it arises from
the degradation of the natural world. As a culture we may uncover
some truths hinted at by feelings we tend to discredit as depressive.
These truths include that theyaccurately
reflect the state of ecology in our world.
More than half of all animals gone in the last forty years, according
to the Living Planet Index. Most ecosystems are being degraded or
used unsustainably, according to Millennium Assessment Report. We’re
living inside a mass extinction event, says many biologists, but
without hardly consciously noticing.
In
order to respond adequately, we may need to mourn these losses.
Insufficient mourning keeps us numb or stuck in anger at them,
which only feeds the cultural polarization. But for this to happen,
the presence of supportive voices and models are needed. It is far
harder to get acceptance of our difficulty and despair, and to mourn
without someone else’s explicit affirmation and empathy.
Contact
with the pain of the world, however, does not only bring grief but
can also open the heart to reach out to all things still living. It
holds the potential to break open the psychic numbing. Maybe there is
also community to be found among like-hearted people, among those who
also can admit they’ve been touched by this “Great Grief,”
feeling the Earth’s sorrow, each in their own way. Not just
individual mourning is needed, but a shared process that leads
onwards to public re-engagement in cultural solutions. Working out
our own answers as honestly as we can, as individuals and as
communities, is rapidly becoming a
requirement for psychological health.
To
cope with losing our world requires us to descend through the anger
into mourning and sadness, not speedily bypass them to jump onto the
optimism bandwagon or escape into indifference. And with this
deepening, an extended caring and gratitude may open us to what is
still here, and finally, to acting accordingly.
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