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THE TIP OF THE SINKING ICEBERG

the climate crisis impacts mental health among youth

Photos by Lucian Himes | Photo illustration by Ali Levens | Model Haley Hoidal

THE TIP OF THE SINKING ICEBERG

the climate crisis impacts mental health among youth

by Liza Esquibias said Lauren Traitz, an associate marriage and family therapist from Angeles Psychology Group who considers The climate crisis manifests itself in the form of droughts, fires, floods and other natural disasters — herself to be "climate aware." As the climate crisis intensifies, Traitz said a sense of impending “doom” and anxiety — particularly among Gen Z and millennials — is a tornado of destruction that leads worsening. In a time when many to other forms of environmental ca- young people are trying to plan for tastrophes. their futures, Elsa Weinfeld, senior Yet, mental health is not usual- Psychology major and Sustainability ly correlated with the climate crisis, minor, said climate change weighs heavily on major life decisions other generations did not have to deal with.

“It’s like carrying other people’s burdens,” Weinfeld said. “It’s definitely not an easy thing to do, and it’s just part of the nature of being [passionate about] sustainability; it’s carrying these burdens that other people want to push aside.”

With an unpredictable future looming, students said they often reflect on how the Earth reached the state it is in today.

The Impact of the Past on the Future

As a millennial and therapist who works with college-aged students, Traitz said she understands the frustration of people who have their entire lives ahead of them but feel as though they lack freedom in their decision-making.

“There’s this feeling of certain choices being really deprived without the future being certain,” Traitz said.

PGM alumna Ivy Moore (’21) studied Journalism at Pepperdine, but she said she also chose to take Sustainability classes. She said these classes and professors provided her with an awareness about the climate crisis she would not have had otherwise, and that impacted the trajectory of her future.

Moore said since taking Sustainability courses, she has made a conscious effort to live an eco-friendly lifestyle — from the companies she works at to choices she makes in her personal life. As she begins to determine where to place her roots, Moore said the effects of climate change play a pivotal role in her thought process.

“I can’t imagine owning property [in California],” Moore said. “I don't know what the state of California is going to look like in 10 or 20 years.”

With a remote job, Moore said she has the freedom to move anywhere physically, but climate change stripped her of the emotional freedom to be happy in a time she said should be exciting to someone her age.

Moore said the West Coast experiences mudslides and droughts, but the South has flooding and the Midwest is going through tornadoes, so to her, there is no real “safe” space.

“Every place has its own set of problems, so now for me, it is picking out the lesser of all evils and what is least scary to me,” Moore said.

At times, Moore said she feels hopeless because it can feel like there is nowhere for her to go and feel relaxed. She said the instability climate change causes makes her feel unstable in other aspects of her life, too.

“I am in my 20s, and people are starting to think about, ‘Am I saving for a home or just saving to make moves throughout my life?’” Moore said.

Junior Political Science major Ethan Barragán said he shares Moore’s worries about settling his family in California. It is not about what he wants for his future anymore, but what he needs to do to preserve his future family’s lives. "I wanted to live where I grew up and call home," Barragán said. "However, that can change just due to just weather and knowing that we're in a drought. So yeah, there's a whole lot of environmental issues that make me not want to plant my root firmly in Los Angeles especially.”

Moore said it is hard for her to grapple with her resentment toward the generations who did not have to worry about climate change while simultaneously making it worse.

“Sometimes I get really frustrated when I realize so many issues that we're dealing with are not even our fault,” Moore said. “We have to be like, ‘OK, we have to survive and figure it out.’”

Barragán said he does not see tackling climate change as a choice for Gen Z. He said while past generations left Gen Z in crisis, it would not be fair for Gen Z to leave the future generations with the same, or an even worse, problem.

“It's a lot of weight to have on your shoulders,” Barragán said. “But I believe someone in our generation has to pick up the slack or it's basically kicking the can down the line. And I don't want this to fall along the lines of future generations because at that point it’ll be even more too late.”

Even though climate change impacts his generation greatly, that does not mean it did not impact past generations too, Barragán said. Growing up in Los Angeles, he said

EXPOSURE TO CLIMATE CHANGE CAN BE:

DIRECT:

The impact of acute climate disasters INDIRECT:

Secondary effects of longterm climate events

FOR EXAMPLE:

PTSD after a flood, wildfire or superstorm FOR EXAMPLE:

sea level rise, migration or displacement

Researchers found connections between:

Higher temperatures

Increased suicide rates, worsened sleep quality and increased conflict and violence Extreme weather and acute disaster

Increases in PTSD, depression, anxiety, substance use and suicidal risk Environmental pollution effects

Worsening of mental disorders with increased depression, anxiety and psychosis

x x x

Source: climatepsychiatry.org

his entire family developed asthma from the pollution in the air, and said he now understands that will be hard to escape if he wants to live in any big city.

“Asthma has always been something prevalent in my parents and grandparents lives,” Barragán said. “I know that, after doing some research, that that's something that is just by living in a large metropolitan area that has really bad air quality.”

Because of his asthma, Barragán said he feels he has to worry more about his health in the face of the climate crisis than others.

“I definitely want to be able to live in a place where I do have fresh air and clean water,” Barragán said. “I want to be able to start a family, to continue to live my life more prosperously and not have to deal with a lot of those things that not everyone deals with in life.”

Along with frustration, fear and pressure, young people also have to deal with loss — loss of control, loss of a sense of peace in nature and loss of a relationship with the environment.

Traitz said these factors cause anxiety. People often do not realize climate change disrupts the human urge to connect with the Earth, which is where the sense of both conscious and subconscious loss stems from.

“We often have developed — even if people aren’t conscious of it — some kind of relationship or sense of belonging to some natural environment,” Traitz said.

Weinfeld said her lack of control over climate change sparks anxiety. When she started to think about having children someday, Weinfeld said those fears escalated even more.

“That’s probably the main reason I went into Sustainability,” Weinfeld said. “I want to feel like I have even the slightest bit of control over the future, and be able to educate myself on what I can do to make sure my kids can live on an Earth that’s able to sustain itself.”

Weinfeld said she has always wanted to be a mom, and as she gets closer to the age where she would want to have children, her mind races with a mix of guilt for potentially contributing to the climate crisis and for the type of world she would bring children into.

“That’s a really scary thought for me, is that the planet is going to look completely different for my kids,” Weinfeld said. “Is it going to be safe? What kind of challenges are they going to have to deal with? That’s something that’s on my heart.”

Being an Advocate

Climate advocacy is when people work to find solutions to the climate crisis and educate those who do not understand the impact of climate change on the world, according to Aspen Institute.

Weinfeld said immersing herself in the climate crisis in school or work overflows into her personal life, as constantly thinking about the human impact on the planet brings a great sense of responsibility onto her shoulders.

“I think being in the Sustainability program is inherently overwhelming,” Weinfeld said. “You are going into class every day, learning about pretty much how people don’t really care about the direction Earth and climate is going. It is a very helpless feeling, and climate anxiety is definitely a real thing.”

After taking Sustainability classes and working at an environmental consulting company, Moore said she can relate to the isolating feeling of being an advocate against climate change.

“[We] see this doom and no one else sees it, and that’s a lot — it’s overwhelming,” Moore said.

Barragán said he interned at Change the Chamber during the spring 2022 academic semester. Change the Chamber is a group of youths who monitor the United States Chamber of Commerce’s actions and advocate for businesses and corporations to be more active in fighting the climate crisis, Barragán said.

In this program, Barragán said he was able to expand knowledge and act on what he learned about in his Political Science classes in a real-world setting. He said one of his most memorable days was when he protested in front of the Supreme Court during the EPA v. West Virginia court case.

“I had a really cool and unique experience,” Barragán said. “I really was able to get into the thick of things in terms of climate, and I feel like as an individual I wanted to, and I still try to do my part and live what I preach.”

Barragán said one way to contribute to major change falls above all others.

“You have to vote,” Barragán said. “I think voting is a key to the way in which we can get our point across. I know that there are younger candidates and candidates that are focusing on climate-related issues — whether it be Republican or Democratic representatives — so just participating in our democratic process.”

Personal Impact of Climate Anxiety

Since committing to climate advocacy, Weinfeld said she has felt such an overwhelming responsibility to prevent detrimental outcomes that it led to unhealthy consequences for her own wellbeing. For example, she said her interest in food sustainability led to an “enormous” sense of pressure around the ethicality of what she eats and where she buys her food.

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