From The Daily Mail

Sessions being held at the University of Derby by Dr Jamie Bird

They involve participants trying to express feelings through art and poetry

Student Claire Prowse felt she may not have a future because of climate crisis

By Harry Howard For Mailonline

Published: 09:45 EST, 24 January 2020 | Updated: 10:01 EST, 24 January 2020

Students and staff anxious about climate change are being offered therapy to tackle feelings of anger, guilt and grief.

University of Derby are running art therapy sessions for those suffering ‘eco-anxiety’ -an issue brought to the forefront of public attention by 17-year-old activist Greta Thunberg.

Participants are encouraged to express their feelings about climate change through ‘poetry and movement’.

One student attending the therapy sessions, Claire Prowse, said climate change makes her feel like she is ‘not going to have a future’.

She told the BBC: ‘It makes me very anxious because every time I look at the news I rarely see any good news about the environment.

‘It just makes me think I’m not going to have a future.’

Another attendee, Nicola Grigg, added that climate change made her feel ‘isolated and lonely’.

She said she felt ‘guilty’ because she does not have the power to ‘change’ the climate situation.

The academic behind the sessions, Dr Jamie Bird, said people suffer ‘climate grief’ when they see the environment being damaged.

Writing on a blog on the university’s website, Dr Bird, who is head of health and social care research at Derby, said: ‘This activity focuses on the here and now. It does not seek to solve problems or provide solutions.

‘It provides a safe space to express feelings in a compassionate environment.’

Eco-anxiety is described by Psychology Today as ‘a fairly recent psychological disorder afflicting an increasing number of individuals who worry about the environmental crisis’.

No stats are available on how widespread it is, but some experts said there is increased public anxiety around climate change.

In a 2017 report, Professor Susan Clayton at the College of Wooster, in Ohio, wrote: ‘We can say that a significant proportion of people are experiencing stress and worry about the potential impacts of climate change, and that the level of worry is almost certainly increasing.’

As well as being offered to students and staff, Derby University’s workshops have been held in towns nearby, with more planned in Derbyshire this year.

Dr Bird said: ‘More and more I think there’s this recognition that people are feeling not only anxious but also a sense of loss, or it might be a sense of anger or guilt or shame.

‘Helplessness underlines a lot of those feelings because it’s something we’ve never really had to face before and we don’t know how it’s going to pan out.’

He added that the sessions have been successful, with some finding that they feel less anxious or guilty when they leave.

Full story here.

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