Climate Alarmists Deteriorating Mental Health

A few days ago the BBC ran an article on their website with the headline ‘Climate change is harming my mental health

I’m sure it is, but only if your mental state is fragile enough to be taken in by the climate scam in the first place.

Here is the article, interspersed with my own comments.

It reads:

Until two years ago Jennifer Newall was working at the forefront of climate change research.

Her PhD on melting ice sheets and changing sea levels had taken her to Antarctica, Scandinavia and the USA but it was while leading a workshop for primary school children in Glasgow that she began to question what she was doing.

“It dawned on me,” she says. “The physics behind this haven’t changed in my lifetime. They’re not going to change going forward.”

She’s absolutely right; the physics hasn’t changed, and it still shows there is no problem with the climate.

Jennifer says she realised action was needed urgently and she no longer had the passion or motivation to continue studying the effects.

She put her career on hold in order to take more direct action but she found the scale of the challenge overwhelming.

Don’t waste your time.

Jennifer is one of a growing number of people who have experienced “eco-anxiety” – a chronic sense of hopelessness and fear of environmental doom.

“It presented itself as depression and anxiety,” she says. She felt completely paralysed and often unable to get out of bed.

It was during what she describes as her “eco-grief” that 33-year-old Jennifer decided she could not have children.

She says: “I don’t feel like I can have children, because a) the world can’t cope and b) I would feel guilty bringing any child into this world.”

The world is coping just fine; food production had never been higher until the globalists started deliberately invoking policies to reduce food production.

Jennifer didn’t complete her PhD on the disappearing ice sheets – although she hopes to one day return to it.

She is now living in Perthshire with her mother and has found that mountain biking has helped her achieve some peace of mind.

Jennifer says she plans to set up a social enterprise project in Aberfeldy, called Soulful Adventures In Nature (Sain), to help people improve their mental health through outdoor activities.

She accepts that the climate situation will worsen – but has learned not to feel personal guilt for the circumstances.

“I had the sense of hopelessness and powerlessness. But, thankfully I chose to keep fighting to change that, and have a world that I do want to be a part of,” she says.

She is totally wrong. The climate will get more benign as the world warms.

There is a growing recognition that environmental change affects not just physical but also mental health – although there is still relatively little research into the cognitive impact of it.

In 2021, Bath University lecturer, psychotherapist and researcher Caroline Hickman and her colleagues examined data from 10,000 young people, aged 16 to 25, living in 10 different countries.

About half of those who took part in the survey reported feeling sad, anxious, angry, powerless, helpless or guilty.

The study, published in Lancet Planetary Health, found that while threats faced in different countries varied – from food insecurity to pollution or flooding – there were similar levels of anxiety.

“Over half think humanity is doomed, 56 percent worldwide, 51 percent in the UK, 73 percent in the Philippines,” Ms Hickman says.

“So there’s more closeness in relationship. Being at a distance from it physically doesn’t protect you from the emotional and cognitive impact.”

If fear of the weather is causing mental distress, those affected need to urgently seek psychiatric help for what is quite obviously a mental illness.

Ms Hickman believes that having an emotional response is good and that people should be concerned about the climate crisis.

“It’s healthy to be depressed, to feel grief, rage about this,” she says.

It’s healthy to be depressed is it? Not in the real world!

However, she says it is important not to get overwhelmed with these feelings.

Dr Bridget Bradley, a lecturer in social anthropology at St Andrews University, is another academic who has has been looking at eco-anxiety.

Her research asks whether this is a new and emerging mental health label and how it can affect family relationships.

Her first small-scale pilot study, in 2021, found it was not just young people who were affected, but also older activists who struggled to get their children or grandchildren to understand.

Her interest in eco-anxiety came partly from her own experience after the birth of her son.

“I was already quite aware of environmental issues and concerns, but having a child just made all of that explode in ways that I wasn’t prepared for,” she says.

Dr Bradley is correct if she believes eco-anxiety is a mental illness.

Student Kyle Downie, 22, was an avid climate activist but had to take a break from campaigning due to his mental health. He is now on anti-depressants.

His mental health started to worsen in March last year and while eco-anxiety was not the only cause, he believes it was a factor.

“It wasn’t because of eco-anxiety – but I think the eco-anxiety played a big part in being diagnosed with depression,” he says.

“I think that’s probably the case for a lot of people. Just because that feeling of hopelessness is always there, so it leads to depression.”

There is nothing to be depressed or feel hopeless about. The indoctrination obviously worked well here.

In 2021, he was heavily involved in COP26 and was a part of The Resilience Project, a group who help young people become more resilient to the climate emergency.

He was trained to run an eight-week support programme for other young people around eco-anxiety.

Kyle has also been part of the Fridays for Future protest movement but when he faced burnout, he knew it was time to step away.

Although being surrounded by fellow activists helped him, it wasn’t enough to stop him from feeling exhausted.

Oh dear, such a shame for the poor lad.

“When I get burnout, it’s usually if I’ve been throwing myself into activism, not taking enough me time and then it feels very hopeless.” he says.

Kyle feels that there isn’t any point in continuing his degree, if there is no hope for the future.

He comes from a big family and had previously thought he would want children, but like Jennifer he has now decided he doesn’t.

“It’s completely changed my thoughts on that from where, I really did want kids, to now I don’t because I’d feel too guilty bringing them into a world that is so bleak,” he says.

“The future is so bad.”

What colour is the sky in your world?

Shame on the BBC for peddling this sort of billhooks.

See more here bbc.co.uk

Header image: Jennifer Newall

About the author: Andy Rowlands is a university graduate in space science and British Principia Scientific International researcher, writer and editor who co-edited the new climate science book, ‘The Sky Dragon Slayers: Victory Lap

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Comments (6)

  • Avatar

    Howdy

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    Thanks Andy.

    May I suggest these people are pre-disposed to mental health problems? The fight is what gives them life, yet they have no discernment, which is an absolute must in this type of activity, otherwise one will get used by all and sundry, bbc included, as is the case with these people.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Tom

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    They suffer from Bidenitus and therefore come to the game already insane and quite clueless. All they need is some wacko mentor to turn them into ceaseless and mindless drones.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    James

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    One can suggest it; indeed the obsessive compulsive disorder is not unknown. Maybe somewhere in the Autisitic spectrum? Such people can be highly intelligent and articulate, and have great success in business – obsessions can be of many types. What is surprising is that we might have an obsession with CO2, which was a good thing in beer and champagne, but not with water, which causes lots of real damage when there’s either too much or too little, and covers 3/4 of Earth’s surface.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Carbon Bigfoot

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    The BIG Positive in this article is that these twerps won’t be breeding!!

    Reply

    • Avatar

      Andy Rowlands

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      That is a very good point 🙂

      Reply

  • Avatar

    Gary Ashe

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    Just be thankful they aren’t having children, and protect your children from them.
    They and their psychologically disturbed comrades will just die out eventually,

    Reply

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