This mural, painted by Jody Thomas is located in Bristol. It is licenced for public use and has Greta Thunberg’s approval.
This mural, painted by Jody Thomas is located in Bristol. It is licenced for public use and has Greta Thunberg’s approval.

Children and the Climate Crisis

Working with their Anxiety, Anger, Grief and Hope

Recorded Friday 21 January 2022

With keynote speakers Caroline Hickman and Sally Weintrobe, Judith Anderson, Jay Griffiths, Anna Harvey, and more...

CPD Credits: 6 hours

Bringing together voices from many backgrounds, this conference aims to provide meaningful insights into the emotional states which are evoked in young people by the environmental crisis. We will explore how the complexity and depth of their feelings – their anger, fear, and sense of abandonment – can be more effectively heard, understood, and responded to by adults.

We will aim to recognise how the current ecological crisis is showing up in their behaviour, preoccupations, dreams, and sense of a future, and to understand their struggle to navigate the tension between hope, despair, action, and nihilism.

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FULL PROGRAMME

Artist Sonia Shomalzadeh will be creating live art reflecting the themes of the day.

Jay Griffiths
A Reading

Caroline Hickman
Listening to the Wisdom of Children’s Voices in the Climate and Biodiversity Crisis
“We saw online that people in Iceland had a funeral for a glacier, but we will be underwater soon because of rising sea levels, and the world doesn’t seem to care about this, or about us, who will have a funeral for us?” – Child from The Maldives

As future generations, children and young people have the largest stake in finding solutions to the climate and biodiversity emergency, but so often the narrative around climate crisis communication and related psychological trauma can split between protecting children from the facts or terrifying them by telling them too much. But maybe we need to hold this tension of opposites. Can we find ways to protect children whilst validating and acknowledging their fears? As children take to the streets and the law courts to express their pain, frustration, and despair, do we, the “adults”, need to examine our defences and learn to really listen to them more honestly, to tolerate their distress, to face our guilt, grief and shame and find ways to navigate the new world that is emerging together?

Sally Weintrobe
Did We Care When Birds and Animals Died During the Sixth Extinction?
Children are naturally close to and fascinated by animals. They are, as Vaclav Havel put it, “pre-political”, meaning not yet so influenced by culture. The pre-political is deeply political. aSally sees our prevailing culture of un-care as working to break links between humans and other species and to invite us to treat them as distanced others. How are we facing the Sixth Mass Extinction? Can children help adults repair their inner representations of the natural world and our place in it?

Q&A

Climate Activists Elouise Mayall & Jennifer Uchendu in discussion with Human Rights Lawyer Natasa Mavronicola chaired by Caroline Hickman
Young climate activists will discuss what it is like to be growing up with climate emergency awareness, intergenerational conflict, intersectional awareness and climate crisis as social injustice.

Q&A

Judith Anderson in Conversation with Anna Harvey, Catriona Mellor, and Jocelyne Quennell
Clinical Discussion: What are the clinical issues for counsellors and psychotherapists working with children and families in the context of the climate crisis?

When the facts are terrifying, adults or parents may not be able to change them in order to reassure their children. Adults may feel powerless, and children may feel that their parents don’t know how to help them. What is the work of psychotherapy and eco-therapy here? How do we work with these real environmental issues taking into account intrapsychic conflicts, interpersonal relationships, and the need for activism, doing something? How do we develop a climate crisis aware psychotherapy? What are the most thoughtful professional and clinical responses to this?

Q&A

Panu Pihkala, Ph.D
Climate emotions and children
Emotions are a crucial dimension in relation to climate crisis and children. People of all ages experience many different climate emotions, but children may feel them exceptionally strongly because of their young age and political powerlessness. On the other hand, many adults who wish to help children sometimes struggle with their own difficult emotions. In this workshop, we will explore various climate emotions and discuss ways to encounter them constructively.

Jo McAndrews
Deep resilience and embodiment
Meeting life as we have never known it with strength, flexibility and resourcefulness.
Climate change is bringing us an ongoing and evolving emergency. How can we develop the capacity to meet it in a sane and purposeful way? Research from the fields of Neurobiology, Attachment, Trauma and Resilience offer us wisdom and clear practices. They show how childhood is central to everything. This workshop offers a combination of theory, reflection and experience to equip you with common sense practical actions you can take to deepen your resilience in your work with children, your personal life, relationships and the communities you belong to.

Q&A with Panu Pihkala and Jo McAndrews

Caroline Hickman
Playing with the move from therapeutic dyad (between therapist & child) to the therapeutic triad (between therapist, child, and the planet)
Encounters with the climate and ecological crisis in the therapeutic space may be overt, subtle, or symbolic. This workshop will discuss developing a practice-oriented climate & bio-diversity crisis lens through which you and your practice can respond to these emerging concerns.

We will examine a range of techniques we can use in the therapy room, at home, in school and outdoor classroom to support children and young people to explore their thoughts and feelings about the climate and biodiversity crisis. We will look at a range of practical and imaginal approaches including art, storytelling, play and personification.

Implications for Trainings and the Role of the Professional Bodies
Judith Anderson in conversation with Tree Staunton UKCP, Kate Robertson, Chair for the ACP, Jocelyne Quennell, Fellow of the UKCP Child Faculty and Director of Wellbeing at the Institute for Arts in Therapy and Education, and Bernadka Dubicka, Honorary Professor University of Manchester; Editor in Chief Journal of Child and Adolescent Mental Health, Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist; recent CAP chair RCPsych

Q&A

Louisa Adjoa Parker
Poetry Reading: Land and Self

Sonia’s Painting

FEES

Includes: 1 year’s access, test and CPD Certificate of Attendance, subtitles and transcript

INDIVIDUAL

£60 (or £48 Confer member)

GROUP RATE

£50pp in groups of over 10 (please apply to accounts@confer.uk.com)

CPD

Continuing Professional Development (CPD) credits for 6 hours are available as part of the course fee. You will need to fill out an evaluation form and pass a multiple choice questionnaire related to the content in order to receive your certificate. You can submit this test up to a maximum of 5 times.

SCHEDULE

00:10:12
Jay Griffiths

00:28:48
Caroline Hickman

00:57:55
Sally Weintrobe

01:21:31
Q&A

01:57:59
Climate Activists Elouise Mayall & Jennifer Uchendu in discussion with Human Rights Lawyer Natasa Mavronicola chaired by Caroline Hickman

02:33:52
Q&A

03:01:01
Judith Anderson in Conversation with Anna Harvey, Catriona Mellor, and Jocelyne Quennell

03:21:38
Q&A

03:57:50
Panu Pihkala, Ph.D

04:22:57
Jo McAndrews

04:41:43
Q&A with Panu Pihkala and Jo McAndrews

04:56:56
Caroline Hickman

05:15:42
Implications for Trainings and the Role of the Professional Bodies

05:39:39
Q&A

05:53:20
Louisa Adjoa Parker

06:02:36
Sonia’s Painting

06:09:53
End