Eco-Anxiety and Pastoral Care: Theoretical Considerations and Practical Suggestions
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Eco-Anxiety: Practical, Paralyzing, and Existential
3. The Role of the Caregivers
4. The Existential Depth of Eco-Anxiety
5. The Political Dimension and Justice Issues
6. Possibilities and Resources for Pastoral Care
7. In Conclusions: Pastoral Theology in the Era of Eco-Anxiety
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | There are several more research articles about eco-anxiety and existential issues currently either in press or in peer review. See, for example, the two forthcoming books edited by Douglas Vakoch and Sam Mickey, Climate Psychology in a Pandemic: Environmental Health in Lockdown and Eco-Anxiety and Planetary Hope: The Experience of COVID-19 and the Climate Crisis. |
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Possibilities and Learning Goals Related to Eco-Anxiety (Themes and Subthemes) | Examples of Sources That Discuss This Issue |
---|---|
Studying the various forms of eco-anxiety | (Pihkala 2020a; Clayton 2020) |
- Understanding that eco-anxiety can be both paralyzing and adaptive and learning about the empirical evidence | (Hickman et al. 2021; Wullenkord et al. 2021) |
- Learning about various socio-ecological dynamics which shape people’s eco-anxiety | (Crandon et al. 2022) |
Learning about the challenges of caregivers in relation to eco-anxiety | (Silva and Coburn 2022; LaMothe 2019) |
- Understanding dynamics related to identity, emotions, and psychosocial factors | (Silva and Coburn 2022) |
- Engaging with the possible disavowal by the caregiver | (Haseley 2019) |
- Practicing self-compassion | (Ray 2020; Brach 2019) |
Becoming acquainted with the various existential dimensions that can be linked with eco-anxiety | (Budziszewska and Jonsson 2021) |
- Understanding the crucial role of responsibility and guilt in relation to ecological issues | (Jensen 2019; Fredericks 2021) |
- Understanding how death anxiety may be linked with eco-anxiety | (Pihkala 2018b; Pienaar 2011) |
- Understanding the prevalence of various forms of sadness in relation to ecological changes | (Cunsolo Willox and Landman 2017) |
Thinking critically about the political dimensions of eco-anxiety and ecological issues | (LaMothe 2020, 2021a) |
- Understanding the need to personally reflect on one’s attitude towards ecological action and climate politics | (LaMothe 2016) |
- Being able to analyze political and social dynamics that shape various people’s experiences of eco-anxiety and their preferred language about it | (Barnwell et al. 2020; Ray 2021) |
- Understanding how factors related to gender, race, and colonialism may shape people’s eco-anxiety | (O’Dell-Chaib 2019; Whyte 2017) |
Learning about various possibilities and resources for encountering eco-anxiety more constructively | (Clinebell 1996; Weber 2020; Baudon and Jachens 2021) |
- Developing an emotion-positive attitude, seeking social support, and manifesting intention to work with eco-anxiety | (Greenspan 2004; McLaren 2010) |
- Understanding how many therapeutic and psychological approaches can be utilized for eco-anxiety work | (Doherty et al. 2021; Davenport 2017) |
- Learning about religious and Christian resources | (Pihkala 2018a; Christie 2013; Macy and Brown 2014) |
- Learning about emotion-focused methods | (Hamilton 2020; Greenspan 2004; McLaren 2020) |
- Learning about and utilizing eco-psychological methods and thinking about one’s environmental identity | (Rust 2020; Clinebell 1996) |
- Appreciating one’s body as the connecting element with the more-than-human world and using various embodied activities to encounter eco-anxiety | (Clinebell 1996; Davenport 2017; Weber 2020) |
- Applying dialectical thinking in relation to the difficult dynamics of the ecological crisis, such as the relationship between individual action and collective action for structural change | (Lewis et al. 2020) |
- Understanding how issues of hope, despair, and hopelessness are connected with eco-anxiety | (LaMothe 2021c; Pihkala 2017a) |
Understanding how eco-anxiety is connected with wider pastoral theology and ecological theology | (LaMothe 2021c; McCarroll 2020; Swain 2020) |
- Realizing the connections between ecological action and eco-anxiety and the need to develop emotional resilience in environmental activism | (Ray 2020; Weber 2020) |
- Understanding the ways in which rituals and spiritual practices may help in encountering eco-anxiety | (Chase 2011a; Malcolm 2020a, 2020b; Pihkala 2021) |
- Encountering eco-anxiety in education and formation of pastoral care providers | (Calder and Morgan 2016; cf. Pihkala 2020b) |
- Launching and supporting organizational developments such as the integration of eco-anxiety teaching in seminaries and universities | (Clinebell 1996) |
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Pihkala, P. Eco-Anxiety and Pastoral Care: Theoretical Considerations and Practical Suggestions. Religions 2022, 13, 192. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13030192
Pihkala P. Eco-Anxiety and Pastoral Care: Theoretical Considerations and Practical Suggestions. Religions. 2022; 13(3):192. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13030192
Chicago/Turabian StylePihkala, Panu. 2022. "Eco-Anxiety and Pastoral Care: Theoretical Considerations and Practical Suggestions" Religions 13, no. 3: 192. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13030192
APA StylePihkala, P. (2022). Eco-Anxiety and Pastoral Care: Theoretical Considerations and Practical Suggestions. Religions, 13(3), 192. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13030192