Environment
The Psychology of Climate Change
Don’t let emotions stop us from saving the planet.
Posted July 7, 2023 Reviewed by Davia Sills
Key points
- The best way to deal with climate change anxiety is through environmental action.
- Feeling self-conscious about eco-friendly behavior can prevent people from taking action.
- Environmentally concerned people might need to confront their fear of being judged by others.
- Self-conscious emotions about environmentalism can be addressed through validation, openness, and flexibility.
Recently, I stopped by my town hall carrying a box of garbage. I was donating plastics to the Nex Trex Recycling Initiative, which uses disposables to create park benches. While some might think this was an ordinary errand, for me it required a dose of bravery. I had to go alone, with my hemp backpack in tow, and explain myself to the security guard with the quizzical look.
My motivation to help the environment is fueled by climate change anxiety, which has left me tossing and turning more nights than I would like to admit. While it’s a good thing that people respond to this kind of anxiety by engaging in environmental action, we should also consider how certain emotions might prevent us from following through with eco-friendly efforts.
People like me tend to have trouble coping with self-conscious emotions, which are those feelings that are affected by how we see ourselves and how we think others perceive us. Self-conscious emotions include embarrassment, shame, and guilt. Personally, there have been many times when embarrassment stopped me from acting in accordance with my environmental values. Like when the server at a fast-food restaurant wouldn’t fill my thermos, and I caved into buying coffee in a Styrofoam cup so as to not make a fuss.
One reason people don’t share environmental intentions with others is that they assume those people won’t agree with them. Ironically, it turns out that most people are probably making the same assumptions. According to research published in Nature Communications, while two-thirds of Americans worry about global warming and support policies to address it, most also don’t realize how widely shared their opinions are.
When it comes to acting in a way that shows I care about climate change, I also worry about being judged by others. I might not make an explicit point about why I want to walk instead of drive, but I don’t hesitate to show off my electric car or the solar panels on my roof. I guess on some level I feel society values consumerism, and therefore I am less concerned about being judged for stuff I bought. At the same time, research suggests that a cognitive bias known as the balancing heuristic leads people to believe they are compensating for the environmental damage they cause by purchasing goods labeled as “eco-friendly.”
We can address the impact of self-consciousness on sustainability by validating emotions related to global warming and by embracing different ways of thinking. This shift requires those of us who struggle with self-consciousness to stop worrying so much about what others think.
It also requires flexibility, including accepting that not every decision is going to be perfectly sustainable. In fact, rigid adherence to environmental values can be counterproductive. For example, re-routing to a coffee shop where a refillable thermos is acceptable might add emissions, while an un-caffeinated brain might lead to careless environmental errors. Also, given that collective actions have more impact, strengthening alliances is of utmost importance to the strength of the climate movement. This means we might have to go with the flow for the sake of strengthening relationships with others.
People who are environmentally concerned also need to talk more. There have been times when I didn’t express my environmental values to others, and my silence did more harm than good. For instance, I used to send my son to daycare with a re-usable plate, knowing that they served lunch on paper plates. I later learned that they doled out his food on a paper plate before transferring it to his re-usable plate. The daycare staff said they had no idea about my environmental intentions and had assumed that my son simply preferred eating off the re-usable plate.
Self-conscious emotions are baked into our DNA because they prevent us from breaking social norms that keep people safe. An unfortunate side effect of this is not being loud and proud enough about the climate crisis. By bringing self-conscious emotions out into the open, we can gain traction in the fight against this existential threat.
References
Schawrtz, S.E.O. Benoit, L., Clayton, S., Parnes, M.F., Swenson, L., & Lowe, S.R. (2022). Climate change
anxiety and mental health: Environmental activism as buffer. Climate Psychology.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12144-022-02735-6
Sörqvist, P. & Langeborg, L. (2019). Why people harm the environment although they try to treat it well:
An evolutionary-cognitive perspective on climate compensation. Frontiers in Psychology, 10.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.00348
Tracy, J.L. & Robins, R.W. (2004). Keeping the self in self-conscious emotions: Further arguments for a
theoretical model. Psychological Inquiry, 15 (2). DOI : https://doi.org/10.1207/s15327965pli1502_03
Trex Company, Inc. (2023). Nextrex. https://nextrex.com/
YCC Team (2023, June 21). Most americans underestimate the popularity of policies to protect the
climate. Yale Climate Connections.