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“Knowing people who were affected was also quite confronting to think about.”
“My sister lives in LA and she’s had to evacuate [last month] and I just feel like these events are going to be more frequent and more severe, so it feels like anxiety and dread,” she says.
I really do believe that we’re probably going to be the generation who loses friends and family to climate change because of climate-related injuries, death, migration and so on.
A mental health crisis
Young Australians are also reporting high rates of distress about climate change.
“It’s a major issue for young people but also for lots of different people.”

Dr Chloe Watfern researches the effects of climate change on young people’s mental health. Source: SBS News /
As for any relationship between climate anxiety and clinical anxiety or depression, Watfern says there is some evidence to suggest the two are linked but it is still unclear how closely associated they are.
Carly Dober is a clinical psychologist and says she sees the distress the climate crisis is evoking in young people through her clinical work.

“I’m just not sure that all of the adults around them, all of the health professions around them, the policy-makers and decision-makers are really, really understanding that.”

Carly Dober is a psychologist and says adults may not be taking the climate distress of young people seriously enough. Credit: Supplied
While anxiety and distress may be more acute among young people who are likely to see the worst impacts of climate change, Dober says she too can feel overwhelmed by the “petrifying” possibilities.
I don’t know what kind of animals might be around in Australia or in the rest of the world when I’m in my 40s or 50s. I don’t know what kind of vegetables and fruits will be available.
“I don’t know how many days of the year I’ll need to wear a mask that prevents me from getting smoke inhalation.”

How climate anxiety is shaping people’s lives
Ruhee Meghani tells SBS News that at 34 years old she and her partner have made the decision to not have children. Her distress about climate change has been one of the biggest contributing factors.

Ruhee Meghani (left) says she has chosen to not have children because of her concern about climate change. Credit: Supplied
Meghani says she has watched human-made climate devastation unfolding in her home country, India, from afar and felt a lot of grief about the toll on its natural beauty.
“I know a lot of people are in the same boat as myself of feeling trepidation around the future and what sort of resources will be available for the kids.”
Listening to climate anxiety
“They want to be listened to, they want to be talked to more about the real problems facing us and not making the issue belittled or invalidated.
They just want more open conversations.
While there are some dedicated organisations that cater to this, such as climate cafes — places where people with climate anxiety are encouraged to speak about the climate crisis and action — Dober says the use of these groups and regularity of discussions hasn’t reached a “tipping point” yet.
Activism for mental health
While Watfern agrees activism can provide a productive outlet for many people gripped by this type of distress, she is also conscious of the burden it places on individuals — particularly young people.
The Climate Writers group rapidly ballooned from its initial sharehouse living room setting and has since moved to a community centre, with around 200 people regularly attending sessions.

Eezu Tan established the Climate Writers group to help cope with her feelings of climate anxiety. Credit: Supplied
Tan says establishing the group, which has sent upward of 400 personalised emails to state and federal MPs since it launched, has been beneficial for her mental health.
“I feel so much more spiritually invigorated because of it.”