Two and a half years after the Maui wildfires, the damage is still showing up in ways that are harder to see. Homes can be rebuilt over time, but fear, grief, and chronic stress do not disappear just because the smoke is gone.
According to Keerti Gopal at Inside Climate News, a new study found that depression and anxiety rose sharply not only for people inside the burn zone, but also for residents across Maui. That matters because it shows how a climate disaster can shake an entire community, not just the people whose houses burned.
The research found that housing instability and job loss explained more than half of the increase in mental distress. In other words, this was not only about trauma from one terrible day. It was also about what came after: scrambling for shelter, losing income, struggling to access care, and trying to keep going while life stayed uncertain.
That should change how we think about recovery. Too often, leaders focus on debris removal, roads, and construction. Those steps matter, of course, but so do stable homes, medical access, and long term counseling. Public health is tied to economic security, and climate resilience means investing in both.
The story also reflects a wider truth about the environment. As the planet heats up, communities will face more disasters with long emotional aftershocks. Recovery cannot just be physical. It has to be human, local, and rooted in care.
A safer future means protecting people, respecting land, and building communities around compassion, justice, and a more plant-based vision of living lightly on Earth.
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