We are no strangers to the losses brought about by climate change: landscapes that drastically change, animals that could not cope and have become endangered or extinct, coasts that have been eaten up by rising sea levels, croplands that have been scorched by draught or drowned in floods. And it is not only natural capital we are losing – we are also being cut off from the anchors of meaning, because we humans have cultivated meaning that are tied to the natural environment. No matter how much you love the internet, all culture is still anchored in place, in the natural world. Human-caused climate change is altering the natural world at rates so much faster than natural systems can say the ecological equivalent of "What the %*&%!$?" and cope to restore themselves. But it gets worse: science has also found that the loss has crept in even more intimately into our humanity. We seem to lose it when climates warm up.