I just finished "Psychological Roots of the Climate Crisis: Neoliberal Exceptionalism and the Culture of Uncare (Psychoanalytic Horizons)" by Sally Weintrobe. The reason for reading this book was the need that has been growing inside me to see whether I can bear the enormity of the terminal crises that are converging over most forms of life on earth. Or, more exactly, to listen to someone who might bring consolation before I fall into despair. I knew about the book in a Youtube recording of one of the many Zoom sessions organized around specialists in different aspects of the emergency and there was Sally reading a fragment of her new book that caught my full attention. Fortunately for me, the fragment was a good representative of her work. It exposed the basic elements of the human psyche that play before data that is hard to process. The book explains why some people reject the idea of elucidating the truth in favor of feeling safe and exempt of harm unlike everyone else alien to them. The Neoliberal ideology builds on this mental mechanisms reinforcing believes that contradict scientific conclusions. More importantly, those of us who are not indoctrinated into that ideology, are guided to recognize lights of the same feelings modeled by other emotions that associate with empathy and care, which allows us to accept our fate without surrender to powers that disproportionately exceed our possibilities. This admirable work is extremely well documented, with plenty of bibliographic references that support all of the insights it provides. The footnotes add context or detail to many reflections and the text is clear, absent from technical jargon, yet accurate and logic. We have to read more books like this one. Societies and technology have evolved too quickly for humans to adapt, to make sense of so many stimuli: networks, videos, podcasts, theories, courses, music, recipes, debates, shows, injustice, violence, war, jokes, science, technology, news, obscurantism. Our education has had no time to adjust, we are equipped with the same tools we had 40 years ago, and the world has changed dramatically, is much more complex and chaotic. Too many things to read, too many things to listen, too many to watch. No major institution has been able to accommodate to new realities: health (especially mental), universities, economy, politics, family, all seem obsolete, unable to cope. Too many reasons for confusion, too few clues for understanding, overwhelming urgencies to be humane. The book is like an oasis, it invites us to reflect, creating a space appropriate for thinking over