How to Help Kids with Eco-Anxiety When 'Fire Season' Is A Thing

The world is on fire, and that’s not an understatement — with “fire season” being a thing in many parts of North America during warmer months. The climate crisis is evidentially worsening, exacerbating drought and fire conditions around the world, which means fires are not only burning earlier each year but also making “fire season” a real (and scary) thing. Not surprisingly, many of us are now experiencing a condition called “eco anxiety” and its effects are very real. A 2017 report released by the American Psychological Association (APA) found that climate change can take a significant toll on mental health, including inducing trauma-like symptoms and defines eco-anxiety as “a chronic fear of environmental doom.”

If you find the recent headlines of the state of our planet to be overwhelming, then, no doubt, your kids feel the same way.

“Kids hear the adults in their lives discussing these messages and they may not understand what it all means, but they do internalize the eco-anxiety that their loved ones are feeling,” Dr. Erica Dodds, CEO of the Foundation for Climate Restoration, tells SheKnows. “They understand that there are major concerns about what the future–their future–will look like.”

Growing up, climate activist Rohan Arora tells SheKnows, “I truly felt the world was ending. Every couple of months, some news report or article would come out indicating that we were one step closer to a state of ‘impending doom.’”

Arora says his experience is similar to what many young people are feeling today: “I was worried about my future, or potential lack thereof. And, sometimes it kept me up at night.”

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