5 Expert Tips for Coping With Eco-Anxiety

5 Expert Tips for Coping With Eco-Anxiety

5 Expert Tips for Coping With Eco-Anxiety
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If you’re deeply concerned about the state of the planet — to the point that your anxieties are affecting your life or relationships — you have plenty of company.

Increasingly, psychologists and other mental health experts are talking about “eco-anxiety,” which is a newish term for distress, fear, and other negative emotions brought on by thoughts of climate change and human inaction. Recent surveys of young people have found that more than 45 percent say negative feelings about climate change are impacting their daily life or functioning.

Eco-anxiety isn’t a diagnosable mental health condition, and it’s worth noting that its definition is still evolving in psychological literature. The researcher who coined the term, Glenn Albrecht, called it a persistent fear of environmental doom. Others have described it as “mental distress or anxiety associated with worsening environmental conditions” or “anxiety experienced in response to the ecological crisis.”

Caroline Hickman, PhD, a lecturer and eco-anxiety researcher at the University of Bath in England, notes that eco-anxiety can be mild or more severe.

In her experience, mild eco-anxiety involves feelings of distress that come and go. People in this state are still able to experience optimism about the future or in humankind’s ability to respond to the crisis. On the other end of the spectrum, people with severe eco-anxiety are nearly inconsolable and feel certain that the planet or the human species (or both) are headed for an unavoidable catastrophe. Their distress is so great that they struggle at times to function in day-to-day life, and they may even be suicidal.

Hickman has experience helping people cope with all forms of eco-anxiety. She and others say there are several helpful ways to lessen the burden of climate-related distress so that people can move forward with their lives and contribute in a positive way to the fight against climate change.

1. Don’t Try to Deny or Suppress Your Emotions

When it comes to anxiety disorders, a person’s fear or worry is often far greater than the actual threat. Therapy for these conditions involves trying to reframe the anxiety so that it’s brought down to its proper size.

 But when it comes to eco-anxiety, experts say these rules don’t really apply.

“In other types of anxiety, the anxiety response is seen as disproportionate to the situation,” says Liza Jachens, PhD, a psychologist and assistant professor at the University of Nottingham in London. “But for eco-anxiety, it may be argued to be a normal and rational response to a real climate emergency.”

Hickman agrees. “We’re not going to reduce a person’s anxiety by telling them this isn’t terrifying, because that’s a lie,” she says.

Rather than attempt to minimize someone’s feelings or concerns, she says it’s more helpful to embrace these emotions in a way that makes them more tolerable and less disruptive. “Mindfulness is brilliant for this,” she says. “It’s about learning to live with and tolerate and accept what you’re feeling so you can move forward in a positive way.”

In other words, you’re not trying to change your feelings or downplay the potentially serious impacts climate change could have — you’re learning to manage the distress they cause you. Researchers have found that mindfulness-based techniques are often helpful for a range of anxiety- and depression-related conditions, including climate anxiety.

2. Take Action

Anxiety is often closely wrapped up with feelings of uncertainty or a lack of control.

 Getting involved in the fight against climate change is a great way to alleviate these emotions. “Many people find it helpful to take action — to be a part of the change that needs to happen,” Dr. Jachens says.

Hickman endorses this advice. “Don’t just passively accept the situation,” she says. “Channeling anxiety into action can have a transformational effect.”

Getting involved could mean becoming politically active or volunteering in local efforts to combat climate change. You could also find work with nonprofits that are working against global warming. Any of these endeavors could be helpful in removing the feelings of helplessness that fuel eco-anxiety, she says.

3. Find the Right Professional Help

Most therapists are not trained to help people manage climate-related distress. While an anxiety specialist may be able to help you, it may be beneficial to seek out someone who has experience with eco-anxiety.

“There are many types of therapy that could be useful, but it is important to identify a therapist who has some experience in treating eco-anxiety,” Jachens says. “It is a newly emerging mental health issue, and the literature is scarce on what treatments work best.”

Some eco-anxiety researchers have argued, for instance, that therapeutic techniques that work well for other forms of anxiety — such as some forms of cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) — may not be optimal when it comes to managing eco-anxiety.

 Someone with clinical eco-anxiety experience may be more likely to provide appropriate guidance, Jachens says.

Professionals who have developed expertise in helping people cope with these issues sometimes refer to themselves as being “climate-aware,” says Panu Pihkala, PhD, an adjunct professor of environmental theology at the University of Helsinki in Finland.

The Climate Psychology Alliance is an organization dedicated to addressing the psychological aspects of the climate emergency. The organization’s website has several resources for individuals looking for support, available virtually or via other means globally.

It may also be helpful to Google “climate aware” when looking for a therapist in your area.

4. Connect With Others Who Share Your Concerns

Interacting with like-minded people — those who, like you, are deeply upset about climate change and want to make a difference — can reduce feelings of loneliness or isolation, which can be therapeutic, Jachens says.

Some of her research has found that participation in an eco-anxiety support group can help reduce the distress and other negative emotions that people experience.

Others second this advice. “You’re not alone,” Dr. Pihkala says. “Don’t remain alone.” Online or in-person meetups, sometimes called “climate cafes,” can be helpful. Check out the Climate Psychology Alliance’s Climate Café Online list to locate a gathering you can take part in.

5. Spend Time in Nature

Getting out and being with the thing you’re worried about — the natural world — can also be therapeutic. “Interventions focused on connecting with nature are helpful in the healing process,” Jachens says.

Some research has found that going for walks in nature (without technology) or meditating in nature can be beneficial for people with eco-anxiety.

 Gardening, planting trees, or other activities that foster a sense of connectedness with the natural world can also be helpful in boosting mood and mental health.

The big takeaway here is that there are ways to manage your eco-anxiety and also to channel it in positive directions. “Out of trauma there’s this transformational possibility where you live your life more fully and you don’t passively accept the situation,” Hickman says.

The Takeaway

  • Eco-anxiety stems from distress and fear about climate change and can impact daily functioning, particularly in young individuals.
  • Learning to manage, rather than deny, these feelings with mindfulness techniques can help in coping and maintaining emotional equilibrium.
  • Engaging in positive actions like volunteering or joining climate initiatives can provide a sense of control and reduce anxiety.
  • If eco-anxiety significantly affects your quality of life, consider seeking help from a climate-aware mental health professional for specialized support.
EDITORIAL SOURCES
Everyday Health follows strict sourcing guidelines to ensure the accuracy of its content, outlined in our editorial policy. We use only trustworthy sources, including peer-reviewed studies, board-certified medical experts, patients with lived experience, and information from top institutions.
Resources
  1. Hickman C et al. Climate Anxiety in Children and Young People and Their Beliefs About Government Responses to Climate Change: A Global Survey. The Lancet Planetary Health. December 2021.
  2. Coffey Y et al. Understanding Eco-Anxiety: A Systematic Scoping Review of Current Literature and Identified Knowledge Gaps. The Journal of Climate Change and Health. August 2021.
  3. Hickman C. Eco-Anxiety in Children and Young People — A Rational Response, Irreconcilable Despair, or Both? The Psychoanalytic Study of the Child. January 24, 2024.
  4. Anxiety Disorders. Mayo Clinic. July 29, 2025.
  5. Wullencord M et al. Climate Anxiety — Impairment and/or Activation? Exploring the Roles of Mindfulness and Emotion Regulation. Journal of Environmental Psychology. August 2025.
  6. Brown VM et al. Anxiety as a Disorder of Uncertainty: Implications for Understanding Maladaptive Anxiety, Anxious Avoidance, and Exposure Therapy. Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience. June 2023.
  7. Baudon P et al. A Scoping Review of Interventions for the Treatment of Eco-Anxiety. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. September 13, 2021.
  8. Pihkala P et al. Anxiety and the Ecological Crisis: An Analysis of Eco-Anxiety and Climate Anxiety. Sustainability. September 23, 2020.
  9. Ainamani HE et al. Gardening Activity and Its Relationship to Mental Health: Understudied and Untapped in Low- and Middle-Income Countries. Preventive Medicine Reports. October 2022.
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Seth Gillihan, PhD

Medical Reviewer
Seth Gillihan, PhD, is a licensed psychologist in private practice in Ardmore, Pennsylvania, who helps people find personal growth by making important changes in their thoughts and habits. His work includes books, podcasts, and one-on-one sessions. He is the the host of the Think Act Be podcast and author of multiple books on mindfulness and CBT, including Retrain Your Brain, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Made Simple, and Mindful Cognitive Behavioral Therapy.

He completed a doctorate in psychology at the University of Pennsylvania where he continued as a full-time faculty member from 2008 to 2012. He has been in private practice since 2012.

Markham Heid

Author
Markham Heid's work has appeared in The New York Times, the Financial Times, The Washington PostFood & Wine, and Time, as well as on Vox and Vice, among other media outlets. He is originally from Detroit but currently lives in southwest Germany.