ATLANTIC ACTIVIST August 29, 2021 If you’re feeling off balance these days, or as though you’ve woken up in a dystopian future, you’re not alone. A recent article by Mitchell Beer talks about the “mental health minefield” stemming from the latest report by the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (aka the “code red for humanity” report). It’s normal not to feel okay after learning that we’re rapidly closing in on 1.5°C of warming and that the situation is about to get a lot worse unless we immediately put the brakes on greenhouse gas emissions. How are we supposed to go about our lives as usual, knowing there will be more towns like Lytton going up in flames or devastating floods like the one we saw in Germany this summer? Even if it isn’t happening in our backyard just yet, a simple trip to the grocery store and the sticker shock of rising prices reminds us that the climate crisis is coming. Perhaps you’ve wondered if you should be stocking up on food in anticipation of shortages brought on by extreme weather, including drought? Yet, somehow, fear of what lies ahead isn’t the most distressing part. What’s harder, I find, is the cognitive dissonance and gaslighting that goes with it. What do I mean by cognitive dissonance? Let me give you some examples: - News outlets only covering the “Code Red” IPCC report during a single 24-hour news cycle and dropping “the story” after that
- Politicians sticking with the “net-zero by 2050” mantra (or even 2030) after learning that the clock has run out for gradual emissions reductions (only drastic action can save us now)
- Parents telling their kids to study hard and do well in school, when deep down we know that most of what they’re learning won’t prepare them for this crisis
- TV weather forecasters cheerfully reporting on “unseasonably warm temperatures”
It’s enough to make you question your sanity: Is it possible I imagined the latest IPCC warnings? Was there a silver lining I missed? |