Climate anxiety — 56% of Korean 20~30s, the "no future" feeling, 5 ways to separate science from helplessness, mental hygiene in the 1.5℃ era

Climate anxiety — 56% of Korean 20~30s, the "no future" feeling, 5 ways to separate science from helplessness, mental hygiene in the 1.5℃ era

56% of Korean 20~30s report "anxiety about the future due to climate change" (SNU 2022). 75% of adolescents "hesitate about having children". Climate anxiety is a rational reaction grounded in facts, but excess turns into daily paralysis or depression. 5 steps to separate science from helplessness: ① limit info intake to 1×/day ② focus on controllable domains (diet, transport, voting) ③ join groups / local action ④ accept the inefficiency of "my action alone" ⑤ separate the decision about children (current mental health vs. hypothetical future). Suicidal thoughts → 1577-0199.

TL;DR

Korean 20~30s 56% climate anxiety. Adolescents 75% "hesitate about having children". Rational ≠ limitless to amplify. Excessive climate anxiety = 2× depression risk. 5 steps: ① climate news 1×/day at fixed time ② put energy only on your controllable domains (diet, transport, consumption, voting) ③ join a group (individual → collective action) ④ accept the "one person's act is 0.0001%" limit ⑤ child decision = your values and current happiness, not hypothetical future. Activist burnout = common, therapy required.

Korean climate anxiety data

SNU Institute for Social Development 2022: 56% of Korean 20~30s report strong anxiety about the future due to climate change. 2023 survey of 14~19-year-olds (Korea Federation for Environmental Movement): 75% "hesitate about having children due to the climate crisis". The Lancet 2021 (10-country survey of 10,000 youth): Korean youth's "climate anxiety score" was 3rd highest after the Philippines and India. Climate anxiety is fact-based and rational — 1.5℃ has been pushed forward to the early 2030s, and Korea's heat-wave days have doubled compared to the 1990s.

Why Korea is hit harder

Korea is among the OECD's top per-capita carbon emitters and PM exposure. Meanwhile, four seasons have collapsed into "summer + winter", with spring and autumn vanishing. Every year brings record heat, floods, and landslides — directly felt. Farmers and fishermen face livelihood hits. City dwellers face outdoor-activity limits, power crunches, and food/electricity price pressure. The intuitive certainty that "things will get worse in my lifetime" is growing.

Climate anxiety ≠ pathological depression

Note: climate anxiety itself is not a "disease". WHO and APA both state that "appropriate concern about the climate crisis is not a mental illness". The problem starts when:

  • 1+ hours of daily climate news searches
  • Guilt over basic daily activities (dining out, travel, consumption)
  • Birth, marriage, career decisions 100% driven by climate
  • 2+ weeks of helplessness / depression
  • "If I just died, carbon would go down" thoughts

This stage = psychiatric evaluation needed. Climate anxiety often co-occurs with depressive or anxiety disorders.

5 separation strategies

① Info 1×/day at a fixed time: climate news is true but infinite daily exposure amplifies helplessness. Cap at 1×/day (e.g., 20 min at lunch). Turn off SNS climate alerts. One book/month builds deeper understanding than daily news.

② Controllable domains only: things you control = diet (less meat, local food), transport (transit, bike), consumption (buy less, secondhand), voting, donation. Uncontrollable = Chinese factories, US policy, corporate strategy. Don't rage at uncontrollable → act on controllable. Separate "caring" from "acting".

③ Group / local action: individual action is 0.0001% effective, but 100 people demanding policy change = 1%. 10,000 = political change possible. Join Korea Federation for Environmental Movement, Green Korea United, Youth Climate Emergency Action, etc. Anger alone → depression risk; collective action ↓ that risk.

④ Accept "my limit": a Korean's per-capita carbon = 0.000001% globally. Even if you're 100% perfect, the planet barely changes. Accepting this limit releases you from the "I'm not doing enough" guilt. Drop perfectionism → just do what you can.

⑤ Separate the child decision: "no kids due to climate" is rational but shouldn't be 100% climate-driven. Prioritize your values, current happiness, partner agreement. You don't control the future. Having or not having a child are both ethical — both can do climate action.

Daily mental hygiene (the 1.5℃ era)

  • Nature exposure: 30 min nature walks (park, riverside) 2×/week. Verified: ↓ climate anxiety + ↓ depression.
  • No perfectionism: don't demand 100% vegan / 0% car. 80% effort is enough.
  • Don't track footprint daily: daily personal carbon calc = obsession. Monthly is enough.
  • Hope narratives: also read about renewables growth, EV adoption, international agreements. Not only doom narratives.
  • Talking with kids: don't tell children "the world is ending" — say "there's a problem and we act". A child's climate anxiety is 80% determined by parental framing.

Emergency signs — go to psychiatry now

  • All-day helplessness for 2+ weeks
  • "If I died, carbon ↓" thoughts
  • Functional paralysis (can't work, eat, hygiene)
  • Rage explosions or emotional numbness
  • Alcohol / drug avoidance

Call 1577-0199. Depression caused by climate anxiety is treated like any depression — SSRI, CBT. The facts don't change, but your resilience can.

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Frequently asked questions

Is choosing not to have kids due to climate selfish?

Not selfish. Childbirth is the most personal decision. Climate, economy, psychology, values — all rational grounds. Caveat: a "100% climate-only" decision can lead to regret. Weigh your values, partner, finances, mental health together. You can do climate action with or without a child — neither is more ethical. If you feel a strong guilt of "I want kids but can't due to climate", therapy is recommended to clarify.

I'm a climate activist and severely burned out

Activist burnout is common (60%+ in international studies). Core causes: slow results, political setbacks, peer conflict. 3 responses: ① take a 6-month break without guilt — you'll come back stronger and last longer. ② activist-focused therapy (some Korean orgs offer free sessions). ③ change your activism domain (street protest → policy analysis, education, writing). Stepping away forever ≠ a short rest. PHQ-9 ≥9 = combine with psychiatry.

My child is struggling with climate anxiety

Common — 75% of Korean adolescents. 5 parent responses: ① validate ("your anxiety is legitimate, fact-based"). ② show action ("our family acts" — recycling, diet, voting). ③ watch climate news together but cap at 1×/week. ④ concrete action: tree planting, beach cleanup, joining a youth division of a civic org. ⑤ 2+ weeks of school refusal / insomnia / self-harm thoughts = adolescent psychiatry. Parents must not say "the world is ending" — child anxiety is 80% shaped by parental framing.

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