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For all that's ever been said
about climate change,
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we haven't heard nearly enough
about the psychological impacts
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of living in a warming world.
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If you've heard the grim climate research
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that science communicators like me
weave into our books and documentaries,
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you've probably felt bouts of fear,
fatalism or hopelessness.
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If you've been impacted
by climate disaster,
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these feelings can set in much deeper,
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leading to shock, trauma,
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strange relationships, substance abuse,
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and the loss of personal
identity and control.
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Vital political and technological work
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is underway to moderate our climate chaos,
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but I'm here to evoke a feeling in you
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for why we also need
our actions and policies
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to reflect an understanding
of how our changing environments
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threaten our mental,
social and spiritual well-being.
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The anxiety, grief and depression
of climate scientists and activists
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have been reported on for years.
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Trends we've seen
after extreme weather events
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like hurricane Sandy or Katrina
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for increased PTSD and suicidality.
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And there are rich mental health data
from northern communities
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where warming is the fastest,
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like the Inuit in Labrador,
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who face existential distress
as they witness the ice,
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a big part of their identity,
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vanishing before their eyes.
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Now if that weren't enough,
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the American Psychological Association
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says that our psychological
responses to climate change,
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like conflict avoidance, helplessness
and resignation, are growing.
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This means that our conscious
and unconscious mental processes
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are holding us back
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from identifying the causes
of the problem for what they are,
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working on solutions and fostering
our own psychological resilience,
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but we need all those things
to take on what we've created.
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Lately, I've been studying a phenomenon
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that's just one example
of the emotional hardships
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that we're seeing.
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And it comes in the form of a question
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that a significant amount of people
in my generation are struggling to answer.
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That being,
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should I have a child
in the age of climate change?
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After all, any child born today
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will have to live in a world
where hurricanes, flooding, wildfires,
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what we used to call natural disasters,
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have become commonplace.
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The hottest 20 years on record
occurred within the last 22.
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The UN expects that two thirds
of the global population
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may face water shortages
only six years from now.
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The World Bank predicts that by 2050
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there's going to be
140 million climate refugees
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in Sub Saharan Africa,
Latin America and South Asia.
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And other estimates put that number
at over one billion.
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Mass migrations and resource scarcity
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increase the risk for violence,
war and political instability.
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The UN just reported that we are pushing
up to a million species to extinction,
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many within decades,
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and our emissions are still increasing,
even after the Paris Agreement.
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Over the last year and a half,
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I've been conducting
workshops and interviews
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with hundreds of people
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about parenting in the climate crisis.
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And I can tell you
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that people who are worried about
having kids because of climate change
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are not motivated by [unclear] pride.
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They're nerve-wrecked.
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There's even a movement
called BirthStrike,
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whose members have declared
they're not going to have kids
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because of the state
of the ecological crisis,
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and inaction from governments
to address this existential threat.
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And yes, other generations have also
faced their own apocalyptic dangers,
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but that is no reason to disregard
the very real threat to our survival now.
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Some feel that it's better
to adopt children.
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Or that it's unethical
to have more than one,
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especially three, four or more,
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because kids increase
green house gas emissions.
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Now, it is a really unfortunate
state of affairs
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when people who want kids
sacrifice their right to,
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because somehow, they have been told
that their lifestyle choices are to blame
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when the fault is far more systemic,
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but let's just unpack the logic here.
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So an oft cited study
shows that on average,
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having one less child
in an industrialized nation
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can save about 59 tons
of carbon dioxide per year.
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While in comparison,
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living car-free saves nearly 2.5 tons,
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avoiding a transatlantic flight --
and this is just one --
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saves about 1.5 tons,
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and eating a plant-based diet
can save almost one ton per year.
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And consider that a Bangladeshi child
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only adds 56 metric tons of carbon
to their parents' carbon legacy
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over their lifetime.
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While an American child, in comparison,
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adds 9441 to theirs.
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So this is why some people argue
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that it's parents from nations
with huge carbon footprints
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who should think the hardest
about how many kids they have.
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But the decision to have a child
and one's feelings about their future
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are deeply personal,
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and wrapped up
in all sorts of cultural norms,
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religious beliefs, socioeconomic status,
education levels and more.
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And so to some, this debate
about kids in the climate crisis
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can seem like it came from another planet.
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Many have more immediate threats
to their survival to think about,
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like, how they're going to put
food on the table,
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when they're a single mom
working three jobs,
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or they're HIV positive
or on the move in a migrant caravan.
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Tragically, though, climate change
is really great at intersectionality.
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It multiplies the stresses that
marginalized communities already face.
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A political scientist once said to me
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that a leading indicator that
climate change is starting to hit home,
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psychologically,
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would be an increase in the rate
of informed women
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deciding to not have children.
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Interesting.
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Is it hitting home with you,
psychologically?
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Are you perhaps someone
with climate-linked pre-traumatic stress?
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A climate psychiatrist coined that term,
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and that's a profession now, by the way,
shrinks for climate [unclear].
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They're getting work at a time
when some high schoolers
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don't want to apply
to university any longer,
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because they can't foresee
a future for themselves.
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And this brings me back to my main point.
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The growing concern about having kids
in the climate crisis
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is an urgent indicator
of how hard-pressed people are feeling.
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Right now, students around the world
are screaming for change
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in the piercing voice of despair.
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And the fact that we can see
how we contribute to this problem
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that makes us feel unsafe
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is crazy making in itself.
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Climate change is all-encompassing
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and so are the ways
that it messes with our minds.
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Many activists will tell you
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that the best antidote
to grief is activism.
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And some psychologists will tell you
the answer can be found in therapy.
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Others believe the key is to imagine
you're on your deathbed,
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reflecting back on what's mattered
the most in your life,
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so you can identify
what you should do more of now,
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with the time that you have left.
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We need all these ideas and more,
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to take care of our innermost selves
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as the environments we've known
become more punishing towards us.
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And whether you have children or not,
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we need to be honest
about what is happening,
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and what we owe one another.
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We cannot afford to treat
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as some afterthought,
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because the other issues of science,
technology and the politics and economy
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feel hard, while this somehow feels soft.
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Mental health needs to be an integral part
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of any climate change survival strategy,
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requiring funding,
and ethics of equity and care
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and widespread awareness.
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Because even if you're the most
emotionally avoidant person on the planet,
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there's no rug in the world
that's big enough to sweep this up under.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)