转向我们想要离开的愿望:澳大利亚咨询行业背景下的气候否认

N.A. Azuri
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摘要

本文从澳大利亚咨询专业的角度考察了对气候变化的否认或半知半解。它认为,澳大利亚的这一领域尚未将气候变化作为一种专业的注意义务或道德问题。它还研究了在更广泛的社会中,对气候变化缺乏参与的否认所起的作用。它指出了目前由不承认气候变化引发的恶性循环,并引入了另一种良性循环。它认为,注意和遏制痛苦是进入良性循环的关键因素,并研究了关系、代理、认知和精神遏制的策略。承认气候困扰似乎在社区中处于显著水平,但在咨询环境中可能并不常见,它认为辅导员应该对可能的气候困扰更加敏感,而不是假设它的存在或不存在。对实践的启示包括需要持续的反思和接受我们自己对气候的否认。
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Turning Towards Our Desire to Turn Away: Climate Disavowal in the Context of the Australian Counselling Profession
This article examines disavowal, or half-knowing, of climate change from the standpoint of the Australian counselling profession. It argues that the field in Australia has yet to make climate change a professional duty of care or ethical issue. It also looks at the role of disavowal in the lack of engagement with climate change in society more broadly. Mapping out the existing vicious cycle that disavowal triggers in relation to climate change, it introduces an alternative, virtuous cycle. It argues that noticing and containment of distress are key ingredients to shifting into a virtuous cycle, and examines strategies for relational, agentic, cognitive, and spiritual containment. Acknowledging that climate distress appears to be at significant levels in the community, but may not be seen so often in counselling contexts, it argues for counsellors to be more sensitive to possible climate distress without presuming its presence or absence. Implications for practice include a need for ongoing reflexivity and an acceptance of our own climate disavowal.
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