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Susan Bodnar PhD

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What Are We Doing?

June 22, 2011 by Susan Bodnar 3 Comments

(The first in a series about the convergence of psychological and environmental health) News from the natural world continues to haunt and this report from ISPO (international program on the state of the ocean) warns of a mass extinction in our lifetime. And Al Gore is assailing the Obama administration for its failure to take […]

Filed Under: climate change, ecopsychcology, personal environmentalism, series convergence of psychological and environmental health Tagged With: convergence of psychological and environmental health, corporate sustainability, ecopsychology, educational sustainability, family sustainability, Glenn Albrecht, ocean extinction, personal environmentalism, pschological aspects of climate change, psychoanalysis and the environment, psychological sustainability, psychology and the environment, Renee Lertzman

The Changing Climate Changes Me

May 26, 2011 by Susan Bodnar Leave a Comment

     Do human beings continue to adapt  to their environments? Are some of those changes psychological? Are humans experiencing subtle alterations in their emotional and cognitive organization in response to climate change? While we ponder these questions with regard to humans, we are noticing suh chnages in other mammals. Antarctic Penguins are being driven […]

Filed Under: climate change, ecopsychcology, personal environmentalism Tagged With: climate change, ecological unconscious, ecopsychology, human relationship to nature, Nick Totton, personal environmentalism, pschological aspects of climate change, psychoanalysis, psychoanalysis and climate change, psychoanalysis and the environment, psychology and climate change, psychology and the environment

Psychoanalysis, Psychology and the Environment

May 28, 2010 by Susan Bodnar 4 Comments

Begininng Tuesday June 1 – Friday June 25th IARPP will be hosting an online seminar: Psychoanalysis, Psychology and the Environment: A Dialogue.  Given what has transpired in the Gulf Coast, this topic couldn’t be more timely.  The seminar ($10.00 fee) is open to all IARPP members ($135.00 membership fee).  During that time period this blog […]

Filed Under: climate change, ecopsychcology, environmental disaster, global warming, personal environmentalism Tagged With: andrew samuels, ecopsychology, Ecopsychology UK, ecospsychology Australia, Glenn Albrecht, Gulf Coast oil spill, Nick Totton, Paul Hoggett, pschological aspects of climate change, psychoanalysis and the environment, psychological comments on Gulf oil crisis, psychological response to Gulf Coast oil spill, psychology and the environment, R.D. Hinshelwood, Renee Lertzman, rosemary Randalls, Sally weintrobe, solastalgia, Thomas Doherty

Gulf Oil Spill #2

May 4, 2010 by Susan Bodnar 2 Comments

Read this.  Krugman echoes comments by Glenn Albrecht.  The surprising issue is that given the severity of this disaster, so few people seem as upset as I might expect, at least here in NYC. I venture to say, however, that unless you live along the Gulf coast or work in it waters, the implications of […]

Filed Under: ecopsychcology, environmental disaster, human interaction, personal environmentalism, politics, Uncategorized Tagged With: apathy Gulf Coast oil spill, Gulf Coast oil spill, pschological aspects of climate change, psychological response to Gulf Coast oil spill

People Don’t Always Act in their Best Interest

March 9, 2010 by Susan Bodnar Leave a Comment

Some people have been debating whether or not scientists should become climate change activists or if they should stick to the data. The concern is that the general population seems less worried about environmental issues.  Given our culture’s typical reliance on external solutions to problems, it doesn’t surprise me that journalists and pundits are looking […]

Filed Under: climate change, ecopsychcology, human interaction, personal environmentalism, relationships, Uncategorized Tagged With: climate change, ecoloical unconscious, environment, ground up environmental change, human relationship to nature, human relationships, mind nature relationship, personal environmentalism, pschological aspects of climate change

We the People: A Response to Evan Thomas and Al Gore

March 2, 2010 by Susan Bodnar Leave a Comment

An adolescent with whom I work discussed the complexity of privilege.  “My parents paid just over $12,000.00 for our family to go on a 5-day wilderness backpacking trip, with a service that provides the gear, the food, a plane to transport you there and a guide. I loved it and it changed me, like any […]

Filed Under: climate change, ecopsychcology, human animal interaction, personal environmentalism Tagged With: AL Gore NYT, climate change, ecological unconscious. human relationship to nature, Evan Thomas Newsweeek, excess living, ground up environmental change, human relationship to nature, personal environmentalism, pschological aspects of climate change, sustainability

Copenhagen

December 11, 2009 by Susan Bodnar Leave a Comment

The news from Copenhagen is mixed.  Josh Marshall is downright gloomy, and concerned.  The talk is all politics and few seem to recognize that global warming is happening to people now in the small scale universe of the human mind.  Climate change is a psychological problem as much as it is geological and meteorological. My […]

Filed Under: climate change, global warming, politics Tagged With: climate change, Copenhagen, environment, global warming, pschological aspects of climate change

Susan Bodnar, Ph.D

Relational Psychologist


(212) 721-0637
susanbodnarphd@gmail.com

7 West 81st Street
New York, NY 10024

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