
The emotional toll of climate change is broad-ranging, especially for young people
Anxiety, grief, anger, fear, helplessness. The emotional toll of climate change is broad-ranging, especially for young people.
Many worry about what the future holds, and a daily grind of climate anxiety and distress can lead to sleeplessness, an inability to focus and worse. Some young people wonder whether it's moral to bring children into the world. Many people grieve for the natural world.
Activists, climate psychologists and others in the fight against climate change have a range of ways to build resilience and help manage emotions. Some ideas:
Get active in your community
Feeling isolated? Find ways to connect with like-minded people and help nature, said climate psychologist Laura Robinson in Ann Arbor, Michigan. There are many ways to get involved.
Work locally to convince more residents to give up grass lawns and increase biodiversity with native plants, for instance. Help establish new green spaces, join projects to protect water, develop wildlife corridors, or decrease pesticide use to save frogs, insects and birds. Work to get the word out on turning down nighttime lighting to help birds and lightning bugs.
'I see people struggling with these emotions across the age range,' said Robinson. 'I have parents who are themselves really struggling with their own feelings and really worried about their children in the future.'
Make a positivity sandwich
Climate news and the onslaught of disaster and mayhem in general has become heavy and overwhelming for many with the rise of social media and mobile phone use. Try scheduling breaks from notifications on your phone or stepping back from the news cycle in other ways.
Consider the idea of a 'positivity sandwich,' where you begin with a good piece of news, followed by a harder tidbit, then finish with a second feel-good story.
Model behaviors for your kids
Phoebe Yu, 39, gave up a cushy job in health technology to work on an MBA with a focus on sustainability. She started a business selling sponges made from the luffa gourd. And she does it all while raising her 6-year-old son with her husband in Fremont, California.
'I am generally a very happy person and I'm very optimistic. And I'm still that, but sometimes it becomes very difficult to manage. Like, what will happen and thinking about the long term,' she said. 'At points, I've regretted bringing a child into this world, knowing how things could get much, much worse.'
Part of managing her own emotions is trying to model sustainable behaviors for her son while educating him on the importance of helping the environment. The family drives an electric vehicle. They don't eat meat and have encouraged extended family to do the same. They recycle, compost and limit travel by air.
'I try to explain things to my son so he can at least have some understanding of how the world and the ecosystem works as a whole,' Yu said. 'I do think kids are able to absorb that and turn that into some level of action.'
Remember: We're all connected
Britnee Reid teaches middle school science for Gaston Virtual Academy, a K-12 virtual public school based in Gastonia, North Carolina.
Reid participated in a pilot project for a free teacher tool kit on climate put together by the National Environmental Education Foundation and the Climate Mental Health Network, a collective of community advocates working on the emotional impacts of climate change.
The kit is full of ways to help teachers support students' mental health and manage their own climate-related emotions. One of the exercises involves students documenting their interactions with the natural world in an environmental timeline. Laying it all out often stirs action, Reid said.
'They can be anxious, they can be angry, they can feel fearful, but they're like these go-getters of, 'I'm going to make the change in this world.' There's kind of two truths at once where they feel scared but they also feel like, you know, I can do something about this,' she said.
'The timelines," Reid said, "provided some good, rich conversations.'
Find the words to express your feelings
Psychotherapist Patricia Hasbach, just outside of Eugene, Oregon, has written several books on eco-psychology and eco-therapy and has taught graduate students on those topics.
'We incorporate nature into the healing process,' she said. 'And we address a person's relationship with the natural world. Certainly with climate change, eco-therapy has a huge role to play.'
One of her most important missions is helping people find their words to talk about climate change in pursuit of resilience.
'There have been some studies done that show an increased number of young people reporting concern, like 84% of young people in the U.S. reporting concern about climate change, but only like 59% of them think that other people are as concerned as they are,' Hasbach said.
That, she said, contributes to inaction and feelings of anxiety, depression or isolation.
You're not one. You're many
Climate scientist Kate Marvel, a physicist and author of the new book 'Human Nature: Nine Ways to Feel About our Changing Planet,' urges people to think differently about their place in preserving the environment.
'A lot of times, the anxiety and the hopelessness comes from a feeling of powerlessness. And I don't think any of us is powerless,' she said.
'I think collectively, we're incredibly powerful," Marvel said. "The atmosphere cares about what all of us together are doing, and I think you can have much more impact if you think of yourself as part of the collective.'
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Ahead of the summit, Trump had again raised doubts over whether the United States would defend its allies. Disruption in cellphone networks across the Netherlands Mobile networks are down across the Netherlands as the country hosts the summit of NATO leaders. The problem lies with a system of provider Odido, as well as several of its subsidiaries. The company says that its customers are experiencing widespread outages. Job Holzhauer, a spokesman for the Dutch National Cybersecurity Center, said the agency wasn't involved and that the primary responsibility for investigating the outage lies with the provider. He said the cybersecurity center would only get involved if the provider's investigation confirms a cyberattack. NATO chief opens summit in his hometown NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte has opened the annual summit of the alliance's leaders in his hometown of The Hague. Rutte, a former longtime Dutch prime minister, opened the meeting of 32 allies at a conference center that has been enveloped in the biggest security operation ever mounted in the Netherlands. Rutte said the meeting's central aim is for leaders to endorse a plan to boost military spending to 5% of their gross domestic product by 2035 and more fairly spread the cost of collective defense. 'For too long, one ally, the United States, carried too much of the burden of that commitment and that changes today,' Rutte said. Leaders who flew in from around Europe and North America are scheduled to talk behind closed doors for about two and a half hours before issuing a brief written statement. The significant spending boost from the current target of 2% of GDP has been pushed by U.S. President Donald Trump, who sat next to Rutte at the circular meeting table. But it has faced pushback from Spain, which says it can't afford the new target. NATO's Article 5 security guarantee On the eve of the NATO summit, U.S. President Donald Trump told reporters that his commitment to Article 5 'depends on your definition.' The comment raised questions about Washington's commitment to defend its allies should they come under attack from outside. Article 5 is the foundation stone on which the 32-member NATO alliance is built. It states that an armed attack against one or more of the members shall be considered an attack against all members. It also states that if such an armed attack occurs, each member would take, individually and in concert with others, 'such action as it deems necessary, including the use of armed force, to restore and maintain the security of the North Atlantic area.'' Trump says he'll meet with Zelenskyy U.S. President Donald Trump has confirmed that he will meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on the sidelines of the NATO summit. 'We'll discuss the obvious,' Trump said. 'We'll discuss his difficulties.' Trump added of Zelenskyy: 'Nice guy.' The two leaders were supposed to meet at the Group of Seven summit in Canada earlier this month, but Trump departed for Washington early to deal with the Middle East conflict. Hungary's leader says Russia not 'a real threat' Prime Minister Viktor Orbán doesn't believe, as other European countries do, that Russia could carry out an attack on NATO territory by the end of the decade. 'I think Russia is not strong enough to represent a real threat to us. We are far stronger,' said Orbán, fielding questions from reporters, leaning back with his hands thrust into his pockets. Orbán is considered Russian President Vladimir Putin's closest ally in Europe. German leader confident about spending boost German Chancellor Friedrich Merz says he's confident NATO members will decide on a drastic increase in defense spending 'not to do anyone a favor,' but because they are convinced that the threat level has changed. Merz said as he arrived at the NATO summit that he believes the decision to raise the alliance's spending target to a cumulative 5% of gross domestic product will be made 'in great harmony.' He said that allies agree that 'the threat situation has changed, and the threat is Russia in particular.' Merz added: 'I want to say expressly that we are making the decisions we are making not to do anyone a favor, but we are making these decisions out of … our own conviction that NATO as a whole, and this regards the European part of NATO above all, must do more in the coming years to secure its own defense capability.' Trump has breakfast with the king and queen President Donald Trump began his first — and only — full day at the NATO summit with a breakfast courtesy of the Dutch king and queen. Trump had stayed overnight at the Huis Ten Bosch palace at the invitation of Dutch King Willem-Alexander. Only a still photographer was allowed to witness the meal on behalf of the White House press corps. 'The day begins in the beautiful Netherlands,' Trump posted on his social media account later Wednesday morning. 'The King and Queen are beautiful and spectacular people. Our breakfast meeting was great! Now it's off to the very important NATO Meetings. The USA will be very well represented!' 'Birth of a new NATO' Those are the words of Finland's president about the 5% spending goal. While Spain says it can't commit to that increase, other countries closer to the borders of Russia and Ukraine say they can. 'This is a big win, I think, for both President Trump and I think it's also a big win for Europe,' Finnish President Alexander Stubb told reporters. 'We're witnessing the birth of a new NATO, which means a more balanced NATO.' More missiles for Ukraine Prime Minister Keir Starmer says the U.K. will provide 350 air defense missiles to Ukraine, funded by 70 million pounds ($95 million) raised from the interest on seized Russian assets. The announcement came as the U.K., along with other NATO members, pledges to increase spending on security to 5% of gross domestic product by 2035. The total includes 3.5% on defense and another 1.5% on broader security and resilience. UK boosting its nuclear arsenal Prime Minister Keir Starmer says the U.K. will buy 12 U.S.-made F35 fighter jets capable of carrying nuclear weapons and join NATO's shared airborne nuclear mission. The government says it is 'the biggest strengthening of the U.K.'s nuclear posture in a generation.' The U.K. phased out air-dropped atomic weapons after the end of the Cold War, so all of its atomic weapons are submarine-based missiles. The use of nuclear weapons by the U.K. as part of the mission would require the authorization of the alliance's nuclear planning group as well as the U.S. president and British prime minister. NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte welcomed the announcement, saying it was 'yet another robust British contribution to NATO.' NATO chief upbeat before summit NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte says he's looking forward to what he describes as a 'transformational' summit of NATO leaders as they seek to agree on a huge hike in defense spending. U.S. President Donald Trump was arriving at the summit later Wednesday after raising questions a day earlier about his commitment to NATO's cornerstone mutual defense guarantee. Trump spent the night at a royal palace in The Hague as a guest of Dutch King Willem-Alexander. Spurred by Trump's demands that NATO allies share the burden of defense spending more fairly, leaders are set to pledge to spend 5% of their economic output on defense by 2035, although Spain has said it will not meet that target. Trump insisted Tuesday that 'there's a problem with Spain. Spain is not agreeing, which is very unfair to the rest of them, frankly.'


Daily Mail
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- Daily Mail
RFK Jr's bonkers plan to fit every American with a tracking device as he hunts for causes of cancer, autism
Robert F Kennedy Jr wants to fit all Americans with a tracking device within the next four years. The Health and Human Services secretary revealed his plans during a House hearing yesterday, saying the devices — like Apple Watch, Fitbit, Whoop and Oura ring — were 'key to the MAHA agenda'. He said the technology could help people lose weight and exercise more regularly, as well as 'take control of their health' and encourage 'good judgements about their diets, about their physical activity, about the way that they live their lives.' In an effort to get a smartwatch, ring or monitor on every American, RFK Jr said he is planning to launch 'one of the biggest' advertising campaigns in history to encourage more people to wear the devices — which range from $99 to nearly $800. The health secretary said officials were 'exploring' how the government could pay for the devices for some Americans. It is the latest proposal in his Make America Healthy Again mission, and comes amid his vow to find the cause of - and solve - the rising rates of cancer, chronic disease and autism in young people. But some commentators called the move unusual for the health secretary, who has previously railed against a 'surveillance state'. RFK Jr revealed his plans to the Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee yesterday, saying: 'We think that wearables are a key to the MAHA agenda, Making America Healthy Again. 'It's a way people can take control over their own health... they can see what food is doing to their glucose levels, their heart rates and a number of other metrics as they eat. 'And they can begin to make good judgements about their diet, about their physical activity, about the way that they live their lives.' Asked about whether the federal government might fund the devices, he added: 'You know the Ozempic is costing $1,300 a month. 'If you can achieve the same thing with an $80 wearable, it's a lot better for the American people. 'We're exploring ways of making sure that those costs can be paid for.' Latest surveys suggest that more than 40 percent of American adults, equivalent to 103million people, already use a wearable device - about the same percentage of Americans struggling with obesity. There are more than 38 brands and hundreds of devices to choose from on the market, ranging from $99 to $800 as a one-time purchase to more than $200 per year on a subscription model. They include watches, rings, and glucose monitor devices that are injected into a user's skin and remain in place for up to 15 days. Many doctors heap praise on wearables, which can track exercise, heart rate, sleep and steps, saying they may help inspire people to take control of their health. Posting his idea on X, RFK Jr received mixed responses on the proposal. Some were supportive, calling it a 'great idea' and saying that it would 'not only save lives, it will continue to save countless dollars and preserve quality of life'. But others reacted angrily to the suggestion, with one writing: 'You used to rage about these very subjects — you even made money speaking against EMFs, biometric surveillance, 5G, health privacy and so on. 'Now you're wh***** for it as though having a wearable 5G biometric surveillance device strapped to our bodies at all times feeding data to God knows who is an amazing, healthy thing.' RFK Jr has previously claimed electromagnetic radiation — which is released by the devices in very lower levels — can cause 'neurological damage' and trigger 'cellular damage and even cancer,' though the FDA refutes these claims. Another public health official, Surgeon General Casey Means, has also praised wearables, calling them the 'most powerful technology for generating the data and awareness to rectify our bad energy crisis in the Western world'. Means is regularly pictured with a large gold ring on her index finger, which has a similar appearance to the Oura ring - a wearable that costs up to $549. She is also the co-founder of a company, Levels, that sells continuous glucose monitors and other wearable health trackers. Customers are asked to subscribe to the service for $199 per year to receive the trackers.