The fate of the world worries me

Our agony aunt, Mary Fenwick, offers a new perspective on whatever is troubling you

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The fate of the world worries me

Q. I am generally quite a cheerful person, but I find myself becoming overwhelmed by world events. I am scared about the future of the planet; about global warming; I am scared that there will be a war; that this country is going bankrupt. I am 19 and feel as if I am stepping out into a ruined world. Iโ€™m finding it difficult to cope. Name supplied

A. My first instinct is to apologise to you. I feel responsible on at least two levels โ€“ as a journalist, and as someone who has been on this planet for a longer time than you have.

My second impulse is to thank you โ€“ for being cheerful, and also for articulating your fears. Every time you raise someone elseโ€™s spirits, or admit your own vulnerability, thatโ€™s making a human connection.

My third thought is perhaps more random. I was having a conversation last week about writerโ€™s block. I believe that feeling comes when we have too many ideas, and they form a bit of a logjam in our minds. I wonder if you feeling overwhelmed is similar: there are so many things to change, itโ€™s difficult to know where to start.

I suggest that this is actually a brilliant thing. You were born into a world that really needs you. Although you havenโ€™t exactly asked me a question, I guess it is: โ€˜What can I do?โ€™ The short answer is: start where you are. Have a conversation about your worries with a like-minded friend and go to a local meeting (almost any meeting with the purpose of improving or changing something in the world); sign up for newsletters from a number of political parties or charities and see if any of their suggestions strike a chord.

There is a lot of academic research into what constitutes hope. Itโ€™s not simply an airy-fairy mist that descends on our lives, itโ€™s a crucial survival mechanism that helps us to persevere with things. In one experiment, people who had been assessed as more hopeful were able to withstand pain for longer. I also discovered it is particularly motivating to have a valuable goal โ€“ but one with an uncertain outcome. I think the future of the planet fits that description.

While I had your question at the back of my mind, I listened to a programme about Hannah Arendt, a philosopher interested in how mankind might fight the possible rise of future dictators. She invented a word, โ€˜natalityโ€™, which means being born into society is a second birth, during which we take our place in the world outside our home, and communicate and argue with others. That opportunity beckons you now.

In short: be active; be kind (including to yourself). The world is full of good people but, if you canโ€™t find one, be one.

Mary Fenwick is a business coach, journalist, fundraiser, mother, divorcรฉe and widow. Follow Mary on Twitter @MJFenwick. Got a question for Mary? Email mary@psychologies.co.uk, with โ€˜MARYโ€™ in the subject line.

Photograph: iStock

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