SOME WORDS

SOME WORDS •

climate, universe Zach Weismann climate, universe Zach Weismann

We are woefully underprepared for the climate reckoning that is coming (and already here).

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adapting to the floods

3/14/24

Each day we fail to take meaningful collective climate action, we only create a far worse more challenging, inequitable, disruptive future — that in turn gets here increasingly soon(er). It is indeed a vicious cycle.

Climate Change + Humans = A Cruel Problem

Photo by Jonathan Ford on Unsplash

It’s a cruel problem, it really is, that climate change. We as humans grow up aware of our own consciousness, aware not only of the global problem but also aware that we are in fact the cause of said problem.

Whoever smelt it dealt it really does apply here.

Pick whatever angle you want — denial, grief, anger, ignorance — we’ve used it all. But nature doesn’t care, the earth beats to a different drum. One of natural principles. Not one of human desires and needs, despite what we tell ourselves.

We have the science, we have the technology, we know we’ve caused it and we can argue about what the outcome may be, how severe it is, when it will be here, what the “end” of times mean but the reality is we just need to do the work necessary. All of us. And together. And quickly.

And we have heard this time and time again, we know the problem, we have the solutions, yet we seem to be unable as a species, as a country, as any real conglomerate of people to make the meaningful, necessary, rapid change. Heck, you can even make a lot of money in climate change at this point!! (DM me on the side for more on that topic…)

Why is this? Why can’t we still make any meaningful action on climate change?

I think this is the case for 3 main reasons:

  1. We like villains

  2. We have been taught life is short

  3. And we are just fundamentally selfish creatures. Fighting climate change goes against our animalistic, survivalist tendencies.

Villians. Oh boy, isn’t it much easier to blame someone else, something else, than take any sort of responsibility? As a species we have done this time and time again. And a fear is rising that in response or perhaps in exchange of taking any meaningful action, we continue to villainize politicans, oil companies, the systems.

I’ve argued this in past articles, but it’s important to remember that WE ARE THE SYSTEM. Humans are the politicians, humans are the individuals who make up the oil companies, we are the capitalistic consumers. We have to realize we are actually the villain and we are at very best, an accomplice. Often the scariest villain is one you cannot see, and beyond that, the scariest villain might just be the one looking back at you in the mirror…

We’ve been taught life is so short. We must savor the moment, have fun, be present, put the devices down and live for the moment, because this life is in fact all we have. While of course this is true, we also know we live in an interconnected web, an interconnected ecosystem of life on a finite planet.

And boy, just how far removed so many of us have become from this. It is easy to think our cars and our houses and our stock markets are somehow removed from nature, natural systems, and natural capital…

I love the age old adage: try holding your breath while you count your money. A nice reminder that no matter how much money you have, clean air, clean water, food, shelter, are still, you know, kind of important…

Our selfish nature. We have human survival instincts. Built into our DNA. Many of us fight these daily, both consciously and unconsciously. Fight or flight. Adrenaline. Eyesight. Ears. You name it.

We are hard wired to have a physical, mental, emotional response to short term emergencies. While walking on a street, have a car dart out too close to you and you see how your body responds instinctively.

But where things get complicated is when the issue starts to become too big, too vague, not in our face enough to force our flight or fight response into action. This is climate change, for many around the world.

Mainly STILL really don’t feel the effects in their daily lives (for sure many in the west) and so we can still try to ignore it. Place false hope that somehow things will magically get better. And ignore the interconnectedness of it.

Or the effects are slow, gradual, a gradual demise that rears its head from time to time but resides just enough for us to retreat back into our silos, back into a false reality.

A small but poignant example. I live in Texas. On Feburary 28th it was 90 degrees. Broke a 117 year old record (which that alone gets people all fucked up but most aren’t even paying attention so we can ignore that for now). Many causal conversations I saw or was privy too.

“It’s so nice out! Let’s meet at the park!”

A few were aware that, oh no. This isn’t good. If Its 90 in february what on earth is it going to be like in August? But a few days later the temperature cooled to a more normal, yet still higher than average level, and everyone went back into the loop of discontinuity where they live. We have lives to lead and money to be made$ An effect, but not enough to cause the disruption truly needed for change.

At what cost?

And so this brings up a point. My fear is that for many to make the meaningful, necessary change, they need climate change they can feel, can breathe in, can disrupt and cause them damage.

Just like with health issues and health scares. We know these cause major life transformations, life altering views, scary enough to make us short-term humans change forever.

But with climate, the reality is the point at which enough people will FEEL the effects of climate change to make life altering changes, it will be too late on a global scale. The damage will be too far gone and the damage irreversible.

Oh climate change, you fickle beast, you.

Just look at this chart about where we are on planetary boundaries.

“These reports, endorsed by United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres, make the case that the combined effects of disasters, economic vulnerabilities, and overtaxing of ecosystems are creating “a dangerous tendency for the world to tend toward the Global Collapse scenario. This scenario presents a world where planetary boundaries have been extensively crossed, and if GCR events have not already occurred or are in the process of occurring, then their likelihood of doing so in the future is extreme … and total societal collapse is a possibility.”

We have crossed nearly 50% of planetary boundiers that put us at risk for global irreversible damage and one could argue MOST around the world are still not feeling the immediate, life altering affects of climate change.

So just how underprepared are we for what’s coming?

Just drive around America and I think you get a good glimpse.

Look at the mega houses being built, the new office parks, the new higher, dryer, more concrete infused overpasses and highways. I’m nearly 40 years old, lived in America most of my life, aside from a few stints abroad, and I cannot name one mass public transportation project that has come online, a new development, in my lifetime. Not one meaningful enough that I have ridden or taken as any major mode of transportation. Sure, a few light rails here and there but that’s about it. Its 2024…

We are adding more concrete, cutting down trees, building closer to water, have a dilapidated electrical grid, a wearing concrete infrastructure, and a worsening income inequality crises. Americans are moving into higher, at-risk states due to cost of living challenges.

Look, you can basically overlay the cities in the US with the highest climate risk with the fastest growing. That is a recipe for disaster.

Fastest Growing Cities in the US 2020–2025

Areas at most risk of unlivable heat conditions

A town in Maine spent half a million on a sand dune wall to prevent flooding and it was wiped away by the ocean in 3 days.

Cities aren’t investing enough in a disruptive future, our government isn’t investing enough, and our focus is still too short term, too profit driven.

We cut down trees to make room for more house, unaware that shade provides a natural cooling effect, and now these larger homes will need more energy, more cooling to keep tolerable in our Texas-sized heat waves.

What of any of that points to being anywhere close to what is coming in our short-term future?

The individualism, the capitalism, the consumerism, the every person out for themselves. Much has been written about the demise of the American community (look at our current political system as an indicator of that), but what we also seem to be failing to recognize is every day we punt climate change to someone else, ignore the science and reports, we are sabotaging our own future, and that of our kids.

This new reality isn’t just limited to the United States. Cities around the world are underprepared, underfunded, and not ready for the change that is already here.

And if you somehow believe you, or your family, or your money will somehow be spared from the effects of climate change, I suggest you think again.

Look at the covid pandemic for example. Boy, businesses supply chains were hit hard and quickly due to a dependance on China. Boy, those grocery store shelves became baren quickly. Our global health care systems pushed to breaking points. 25 million lives lost. And by most accounts, we got relatively LUCKY with covid.

So if you think you can continue to just focus on your own work, your own wealth accumulation, and your own family, I fear you truly just don’t understand how much of an interconnected world we now live in. We let globalization out of the box and its not something we will, nor should, try to put back into said box.

If people aren’t willing to make the necessary sacrifices to solve and adapt to climate change now, who on earth thinks more people will when they are even more hungry, forced to relocate, more financially stressed, hotter, and so on…

And now we have the pleasure of both mitigating and adapting to climate change.

Photo by Greg Rosenke on Unsplash

This is not me making the case for giving up hope. This is not me embracing doomerism.

But what it is, is the reality of the situation we now have presented ourselves with. Due to our failed efforts to really mitigate climate change in time, we now have to adapt to life on a changed (and still RAPIDLY changing) planet.

We must work tirelessly to mitigate the effects of climate change daily. This means reducing emissions, getting to global net zero, and phasing out fossil fuels all as fast as humanely possible (or heck, even faster). This means turning EVERY job, yes even yours, into a climate job.

We know this matters. We know every ounce of CO2, every tenth a degree matters.

And now we must also adapt to the here and now effects of climate change that our willing ignorance, selfishness, has caused. The rising sea levels, the increasing natural disasters, the displacement of people and animals, the food shortages, the flooding, the extreme heat. It is estimated that between 250 million to 1 billion people will be displaced due to climate change alone by 2050….

We have to invest in collective solutions, the movement of people, the weatherizing of grids and food supply chains, in the face of harsher conditions, more scaricity, increased vulnerabilities, resource depletion and so on.

It will not be easy. This is not an easy road.

But, if your house is on fire, it sure does make it that much harder to do the work of mitigating climate change…

Thanks for being here.

Z


 
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climate, universe Zach Weismann climate, universe Zach Weismann

What my mom dying taught me about climate change.

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9/14/23

At first glance, I never thought I’d put those two things — my mom dying and climate change — in the same sentence. Turns out there is so much connection between the two.

Nine years ago today my mom passed away from Stage 4 pancreatic cancer. In a matter of months, she went from a healthy active mom and business owner, to gone. Our family is still shook to this day.

Next year it will have been 10 years and that “marker” is already giving me quite a bit of anxiety… it feels so far, yet so real, so palpable. I did things no 28 year old should ever have to do and saw things that I will never be able to unsee.

So what does my mom dying have to do with climate change?

Turns out, quite a lot.

Our world is on fire.

I hope I am not the first one to tell you this, especially after a summer like this past one … but our world is in a load of hurt.

If you aren’t paying attention to or affected by this pain and suffering, you are willfully ignoring it.

If you think you can continue your day to day lives as normal, unaffected by what is going on in our natural world, you are misguided.

If you think you, your work, your family, your kids are somehow removed from nature, our natural worlds, and their interconnected webs and thus wrath, you might want to brush up on science.

If you think it’s just a bunch of crazy people sounding false alarms, think again.

(Until you have read an IPCC report, you can’t form a rationale argument against what is happening. Here ya go…you’re welcome)

As our planet warms, the destruction continues (just yesterday over 5,000 — and counting — people died in flooding in Libya).

And this ongoing destruction has fueled growing climate anxiety, or eco-anxiety.

This is defined as, “fundamental distress about climate change and its impacts on the landscape and human existence. That can manifest as intrusive thoughts or feelings of distress about future disasters or the long-term future of human existence and the world, including one’s own descendants”

It is estimated that 30% of Americans experience climate anxiety and has given rise to an entirely new field of psychology.

The anxiety, pain, fear, anger one feels towards the death of a loved one, what I felt during and after my mom’s passing, is exactly what many are feeling towards the loss of our habitable world, the loss of a stable eco-system, one that is not just deteriorating, but moving towards extinction.

The Grief Journey

The grief journey is never linear.

It can be suffocating, intoxicating, depressing, maddening, even motivating.

But what we know for sure is that one does not progress linearly through the stages of grief. Nor should one.

In the following months and years after my mom’s passing, I felt it all.

I was depressed. I considered taking my own life.

I felt angry, I felt sad, I felt hopeless. I felt I had lost not only my mom, but a best friend, someone that helped me make sense of all that was the world.

I felt isolated, I felt closer to others I hadn’t been close to in years. I leaned on friendships — some rose to the occasion, some surprised me with their kindness, support, and care.

I screamed at the top of my lungs on multiple occassions. I hit pillows with all the rage I had In my bones. I sang and danced like never before.

It wasn’t until numerous anxiety attacks (3 to be exact), a visit from the paramedics, a trip to the cardiologist, that I began to realize this grief was either going to be my downfall, or I could try to channel it into something more, motivation, something worth living for.

And this is what many around the world, myself included, are feeling with the affects of climate change.

The World As It Is

Many are going through their own grief journey with the state of the environment.

We feel angry at those not acting. We feel hatred towards oil company profits and government inaction.

We feel sad that our kids won’t inherent the same ecological stability that we were so fortunate to have.

We feel depressed at our collective inability to really give a shit — enough to create the action needed at every level, from self to global.

We feel stressed the F***K out about what to do with our kids futures, where to live, what to invest in, and how possibly it can feel like so many are willfully ignoring the truth…

We feel a growing sense of anger and find it harder and harder to keep that anger in check, to funnel it into proactive action.

I’ve been working in the climate space for the past 15 years and connected with folks around the world grappling with these emotions.

One of the most genuinely nicest people I’ve ever met, told me they were considering damaging trucks and gas guzzling cars in their neighborhood. These are not just “hippies” having these feelings and range of emotions.

These are real people. People that care enough to feel.

Your Feelings Are OK.

I learned many things in my own grief journey, subsequent group and individual therapy. But one that has stuck with me the most, resonated the most, and felt the most helpful is that your feelings are just that, YOUR feelings.

You are entitled to your feelings. You are OK to feel angry, depressed, sad, and mad. They are afteral, your feelings.

An analogy given to me during therapy was to think of yourself as the sky and your emotions as clouds/weather.

Severe storms form, cause destruction, come and go. There are sunny days. There are cold days. But the weather comes and goes, the weather does not define you, just as your emtions do not define who you are. After a rage of emotions comes and goes, you are still you. Perhaps altered, but just like the sky, still there.

What I see in the climate space is more and more individuals expressing their emotions, their anger, their frustration.

But I also see much discussion from within climate “circles” prescribing what and how to do with these emotions. That anger is not ok, that we must be above frustration. That we can’t ever let these emotions get the best of us.

But as someone who felt grief literally take me to my knees, I know these feelings are ok. We must give them space to breath, to course through our veins, to be processed, let out, and recognized.

Your frustrations around climate change, your anxiety, your anger at those not doing enough, are totally valid.

And you are not alone.

The Work Ahead

After deciding to do my best to let the grief and despair I felt from my mom’s death motivate and fuel me even more in my work and life, the real hard, challenging work began.

It has been incredibly difficult, not always easy, and with the support of many I felt I was slowly able to get on the right path. I’ve since gotten married, had two boys of my own, and launched my own company in my mom’s honor. And while I am proud of that path, it’s looked a lot like this:

my grief journey

And that is ok because it is my journey.

Your journey may look totally different and that is ok too.

So while we are here, I encourage you to let those emotions out. Lean into your climate anger, your climate anxiety.

Because it is in those emotions that two things will happen: You will find out who you truly are and you will be able to begin the work of healing, of motivation, of change.

Thanks for being here.

Z


 
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climate, universe Zach Weismann climate, universe Zach Weismann

Will we solve climate change? Are we alone in the universe? It doesn’t actually matter.

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1/17/24

But not in the way you might think…

Photo by NASA on Unsplash

My last article dove into why I am becoming more & more pessimistic about our ability to really curb climate change. I don’t think I articulated anything new per se, but framed it as a problem of two main components: a spending/excess mindset (as opposed to a less/enough mindset) and a problem of willingness. It seemed to resonate with quite a few folks.

The deeper I dive into the climate science, continue my own climate work, and read the latest news/reports, a few main questions about climate change keep reappearing:

  1. Are we doing too little, too late? (in short, yes.)

  2. Is climate change something we can solve? (not really, but solve might have always been the wrong goal…)

  3. Will climate change wipe out life as we know it? (maybe, but depends a lot on how and who you define as part of “life”…)

  4. Ok, so then are we alone in the universe?!? (well, I’m not sure this actually matters — even if the answer is yes or even if the answer is no)

  5. So if we’re all screwed, all alone, why do anything at all? (ah, now let’s discuss!)

The discourse is clearly growing around how the collective WE can handle hope and despair as it pertains to our future as a species on this planet. Questions are surfacing at an alarming rate such as:

  • Is hope the key to action and our ability to limit the damage?

  • What role does despair have in all of this?

  • Can you actually think its all screwed and still actively participate in living a full, meaningful life?

There is a lot of debate and discourse happening online, at dinner tables, in our own heads, and among climate activists, scientists, and reporters.

  • Can people actually handle the truth?

  • Will truth send them into spirals of depression and despair?

  • Is hope actually all we have?

There are two framings that I think offer us some guidance in these challenging times.

Whether or not we solve climate change, whether or not we are alone in the universe, actually doesn’t matter…You still do the work necessary.

Photo by Markus Spiske on Unsplash

This has been a big time, recent revelation for me.

Think of it this way: even though we know we are all going to die, we still have to live.

We’ve all heard the adage, “you gotta live each day as if its your last!” Fundamentally, we get it. Life is short, we are only here for a flash in the pan amount of time. So you gotta live! YOLO!

But in practice we know this advice to be pretty poor. I have to work for a living, I have two children under the age of 6, and I am happily married.

If you told me to live today because I was going to die tomorrow, I’d strip off all my clothes, run into an empty field and dance to Future Islands like you’ve never seen a middle-aged dad-bod dance before. (Don’t u dare me, I’ll do it!!)

Would that be fun and amazing? Absolutely. Is that a way to live every day? Absolutely not.

Because the reality is most of us don’t know when we are going to die, the majority of us don’t really know when our last day on this earth will be.

So we know the expression, live each day as if it is your last, is actually about priority setting, focusing on what matters, working against a million forces telling us otherwise (buy this, do this, be like this, etc), and actually choosing what f***s to give. EVEN in the face of utter uncertainty.

While we may not know when, we do know our fate. Each and everyone of us will die, that is for certain.

Yet we still wake up in the morning. We brush our teeth, get dressed, and we show up. (Now we can argue at length about what it means to actually show up and how most don’t really ever show up, but that’s another article ;).

We do things we like to do, we do things we have to do, we do things we don’t like to do but need to do (like sit in carpool drive through lines in the 112 degree heat… see: me in Dallas in August…but hey, what climate change!?)

But the point is we try. Even in the face of our gradual demise we show up. We do the next right thing. (or try to)

We know we can’t actually live like every day is our last, or that would actually be a pretty isolating, lonely, crazy sort of existence.

And in the end, whenever our individual time is up, we hope we can look back with fondness on how we showed up, what we cared about, and the life we led. We hope we can die with pride, proud of what we did.

This pride can exist even if we never solve climate change and it ends up being our demise. This pride can exist even if we are alone in the universe.

And this pride, I would argue, actually must exist. We did nothing to inherit this flash in the pan brilliance of existence gift of life we are given. It is our gift not to squander it but to use to our fullest capabilities. Because in the end, that’s all that really matters.

Losing A loved One Too Soon

I’ve written about this previously but when I was 28, my mom died from stage 4 pancreatic cancer. She had just turned 60.

She and I were incredibly close. She went from healthy & traveling to gone in less than 4 months.

In her final days, and in the years since her passing, its forced me to reflect quite a bit on life, its meaning, and our collective path forward.

The experience, the grief, literally and figuratively brought me to my knees.

When a loved one is sick, you know that this next dose of medicine, or this small conversation, or cold rag on a warm head, or this moment of joy holding hands listening to a song in bed, isn’t going to save that persons life. You know that this action is not going to change the fate of things.

Yet you still do it.

You know its the next right thing.

Despite an imminent outcome, we have to still lead with compassion, love, care, and tenderness.

Because it is someone, something we love.

Because we only get one drive forward through the tunnel of life. You can’t turn around, you can’t back up, you can’t speed up to see what’s waiting for you at the light at the end of the tunnel.

In her final weeks, I knew nothing I did was going to save my mom’s life. I wasn’t going to significantly change her fate, but I showed up. And I can tell you with the upmost certainty of almost any thing I’ve ever done in my life, boy am I glad I did. I am glad I and my family faced that challenge head on and were together for it.

Because if I had run from that togetherness time, due to a certain outcome I didn’t like or care for, I would have missed out on some of my most cherished times.

Even if climate change is going to be our demise, we still have to show up. We still have to lead with compassion, conduct ourselves in a way that helps improve an outcome, regardless if that outcome’s fate is sealed or not.

Because it’s all we’ve really got.

EVEN if you chose to adopt nihilism and build your bunker, so be it. But we’ve all seen Blast from the Past and it’s not a real quality way of life.

We still fundamentally need community, need one another, need nature, and need some semblance of quality of life, even if you determine your best quality of life to be alone in a bunker counting your cans of soup…

A second helpful framing is that of an athlete.

The athlete mentality and approach actually shows us how to handle hope and despair in the face of climate change.

This one also takes a bit to explain so bear with me.

Photo by Jannik Skorna on Unsplash

I was born extremely pigeon toed. The doctors told my parents it was either leg braces or wearing my shoes on tied together every night for a year (they chose the shoes tied together route).

Raised Jewish, I turned out to grow to 6’4 inches tall. Woo! Already a highlight in the Jewish community…

Born badly pigeon toed, Jewish, and white, I feel like excelling at High School basketball and playing four years of College Basketball really was me making the most of my given (or lack thereof) athletic abilities.

All jokes aside, I’ve often thought about how an athlete approach & mindset can help us navigate climate change.

If you’ve ever seriously trained, competed, either individually or on a team, what did you notice about that process?

I’m willing to bet it followed a process a bit like this:

  1. Train (both mentally and physically)

  2. Compete (in a season, in a match)

  3. Reflect (analyze how you did, what you accomplished, what you failed to accomplish)

  4. Rest / recuperate (absolutely vital because you realize you cannot physically do it without).

  5. Repeat steps 1–4 (for months, years, decades on end).

And within that high level of competition, you are faced with the competing realities of both hope and despair…

As an athlete you have to be hopeful, optimistic, that you can in fact climb that mountain, swim faster, beat a team that on paper appears to be much better than your team. But you know this hope only gets you so far…

If the hope becomes delusional, you won’t train as hard. You wont focus as clearly, you won’t prioritize rest.

You’ll be underprepared and probably all too cocky.

And yet despair is also a critical piece to athletics and competition.

We know we did our absolute best. We tried, we played, we trained, we ran. Yet we lost. We lost in soul-crushing fashion.

That despair is often used for motivation, for fuel.

If the despair becomes delusional, you won’t train as hard. You won’t focus as clearly, you won’t prioritize rest.

If I sat around in a permanent state of despair, I would have never even tried to compete. “That teams too fast, too athletic, too talented. We don’t stand a chance…”

I have already lost. You bet with that mindset I’d go out there and get my butt kicked.

At the same time, we all have seen teams and athletes with too much hubris. They are too cocky, too optimistic in their approach.

We must bring an athletic mindset and approach to climate change.

From a process perspective, those working on climate solutions have to train (mentally & physically), compete, reflect, and rest. And repeat. Or we’ll all burn out much quicker than our planet will burn up.

We have to remain hopeful, even if we don’t (or may never know the outcome) because hope enables us to show up. Hope enables us to fight. But just like in caring for a loved one, or facing your biggest competition yet, hope does not hinge on a desired outcome. Hope hinges on doing the work necessary to give it your best, to at the end of the day say you really tried, in the face of adversity.

(If surveyed privately, how would you actually answer the question are you doing all you can in your power to combat climate change? Most of us, myself included, would answer… no…)

And we are allowed to lean into our despair. We can feel the soul crushing weight of a loss, another forest fire, a tragic climate change loss. We are allowed to feel angry, down trotten, PISSED OFF. We know this is part of competition. But we can’t let the despair drown us or we’ll never compete again, too low to do the work necessary.

For what is life other than showing up, competing, giving it your all whether you win, lose or draw?

For in the end, the uncomfortable truth is you, nor I, will know how the human species shapes up against climate change. We probably won’t be around for the discovery (or the lack thereof) of life on another planet.

And yet, we do the work necessary.
We make the next best decision.
Because at the end of the day, it’s all we really have.

Thanks for being here.

Zach


 
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climate Zach Weismann climate Zach Weismann

What we are getting VERY wrong about climate change

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12/31/23

We are on the heels of the COP28 climate summit in Dubai. This year, there has actually been some positive news come out of the summit — most notably global leaders commitment to begin “moving away from fossil fuels.”

While it certainly could have been a lot worse (and these meetings have built a reputation of failing to deliver any significant climate agreement time and time again), there was at least some positive news, a step in the right direction if you will.

But the proverbial question remains in regards to climate change: are we doing too little, too late?

I want to be a climate optimist, I really do. Please believe me when I say that.

I’ve been working in the environmental and climate space for 15 years now. I want nothing more than to know we will have a (relatively) stable future so I can spend time enjoying our planet, in the blink-of-an-eye-time-here we all have. I want to know the air will be clean, the water, safe, and that we will continue to share this planet equitably with all the 8.7million other species of plants and animals.

Yet, I’ve had this deep down gut feeling climate change was not going to be ok — for quite some time. I think it probably goes back about 10 years. Back then it was this murmuring, nagging, easy to often put at bay feeling of, “Uhhh hello everyone? This seems really bad, why doesn’t anyone seem to care, like really care? Ok but back to regular life.”

Despite the agreement from COP28, the year that was 2023 confirmed just how bad the climate situation has become.

Perhaps your home town or country wasn’t affected by the raging heat waves, or the smoke filled air for weeks on end, or subject to another 1,000 year flood. If that was the case, consider yourself lucky.

The latest scientific evidence, reports, and information has shown us that our climate projections have become far worse off than what my tiny human brain could seem to wrap itself around...

See: here, here, and here.
(Side note: If you have never read an IPCC report, or at least the summary statements, I highly encourage you to do so. It will be eye opening. (Consider it the gold standard in terms of answering the question, “what the f*** is actually going on with the climate?”)

At the same time, climate solutions are growing. There are real success stories. Like this one.

But I continue to find myself more and more in the pessimistic camp (even if its shunned and apparently ‘frowned upon’ to give up hope). The day to day grind of working in climate, reading about worsening natural disasters, mounting inequities, and how just underprepared and underfunded our climate adaptation efforts really are, I find myself more and more planting my flag at Camp Pessimist.

Me planting my flag at camp pessimist, Photo by Debby Hudson on Unsplash

When I drill down into this pessimism, there are two main factors contributing to it, two things I think we are getting woefully wrong about climate change:

What We Are Getting Very Wrong About Climate Change

I’m fearful things are going to get way worse than they are already anticipated to get (which is way worse than most people think) because of two main reasons:

  1. We think we can spend our way out of climate disaster, and

  2. We don’t seem to be really willing to sacrifice.

1. We think we can spend our way out of climate disaster

Standing in the middle of the consumerism, capitalism, GDP polar vortex that is America, right in the middle of another holiday spending more than you have season, the prevailing thought often seems to be that if we just throw more money at climate solutions, we should be OK.

We need to throw more money at Direct Air Capture (DAC) solutions. We need to spend more money on reparations for poorer countries who are undoubtedly suffering the most affects of climate change while having contributed the least to the problem itself.

We need to just buy MORE ethically sourced clothing, shoes, and consumer goods. “This year, I’ll ditch fast fashion and just buy more sustainable clothes and goods,” we tell ourselves.

We need more tech solutions. We need more carbon accounting software, we need more “innovative products” and more “corporate sustainability.” We need more organizations to spend more on sustainability teams and departments.

We need more nonprofits to receive more funding to grow their programs and spend more in the fields and countries and issue areas they work in.

We need more conferences and events and more flying around to talk about how we are doing more to combat the problem. (I personally have loved seeing the LinkedIn humble brags from some of my fellow climate folks, “Upon returning from Dubai” “Just getting back from Dubai”…)

These are all fine endeavors. They are. Please don’t take this as abject criticism of those efforts. Many of these spaces are areas I’ve worked in for quite some time and met many people doing important work. And we know they are better than the alternatives: doing nothing or continuing doing mindless, soulless harm.

But these are all STILL down stream solutions.

What we really need is LESS.

Less of all of it.

That really is the uncomfortable truth. We don’t like to hear we “need less” of anything, but I think culturally we have the entirely wrong definition of what “less” really means.

Almost all current solutions to climate change are still down stream solutions. What do I mean by this?

By the time you need to suck carbon out of the air, there’s already too much carbon in the air (this we know).

By the time your company appears on stage to talk about all its recent sustainability clean up efforts to reduce waste, use less water, use less plastic, there’s already too much waste in the landfill, wasted water, and plastic in our oceans.

By the time you took funding from investors, institutions, that made their billions exploiting others, or exploiting nature for personal gain, there’s already been too much wealth accumulation on the heels of environmental degradation or personal exploitation.

These are a few examples of many. But when we think we can merely spend or consume our way out of climate change, we often forget just how far removed we have become from living in any sort of harmony or balance with nature.

We need our systems to be fundamentally less energy dependent.

We need our way of lives to be interconnected with nature in order to reconnect and need way less in terms of consumerism and capitalism.

We need less freedom to go wherever we want, whenever we want however we want. (Did he just say we need LESS FREEDOM??) Because only in some species constraint, will we truly appreciate the here and now.

We need less junk, mindless information, shit processed food, in order to remind us of what is truly important in life: spending time with family, spending time outside, enjoying the gift that is real, organic food.

(Don’t get me wrong, I am guilty of all of these things. But it is in collective sacrifice that the ecosystem of dependence and acceptance will be broken and the burden taken off of the individual and onto a shared collective path, together. A bit ironically, the more individual responsibility each individual takes, the less the group has to take.)

Think of the earth’s needs in terms of tech & productivity. For anyone (myself included) that’s gone down productivity or tech addiction rabbit holes, where do most all paths lead? To less. Doing less, focusing on less, using less, consuming less IN ORDER TO lead to more. More doing, more results, more important things.

Once you realize that wanting, needing less frees you up for so much MORE — more of the important things — then we are no longer afraid of less and begin to realize the myth of more we have been told, sold, and spoon fed.

And it is in this fundamental shift to less, we will free ourselves up for so much more. More of the really good, deep down we know good for us, stuff.

Less is more.

2. We don’t care enough to really sacrifice.

A second point that has landed me beginning to share in flag waving duty at Camp Pessimism is this notion of sacrifice.

Photo by Martin Castro on Unsplash

I’m always shushed, or criticized when I bring this point up with peers or others.

I don’t think as a society we really care. I don’t think we as humans really truly care enough to make meaningful sacrifices at scale.

That is always such a hard topic to broach, but it is in this truth seeking that I think we can actually free ourselves from pretending in order to begin the work that is really being done.

We love to tell ourselves (or others, truly) that we care about the planet. Time and time again we see statistics such as “80% of Democrats and 60% of Republicans care about the planet” or “75% of Gen Z says climate change is their number one concern.”

The shallow statistics are there. But at some point we have to understand perception and action and the disconnect between the two.

It is one thing to check a box on a questionnaire that says you care about the planet. I mean after all, who would want to be seen as not caring about the planet?

It is totally another aspect to take action on this concern. True, systems and feedback loop breaking action.

I’ll give two examples to illustrate this point:

There has without a doubt been a rise in “green” jobs, climate jobs, investment towards sustainable solutions. Yet still, in the US alone, in 2022 there were 1.45 million individuals working in green or green supporting jobs.

In 2022, there were 158 million Americans in some form of employment.

That means less than 1% of all eligible workers in the US work on in a climate or climate related field.

Less than 1%…. in 2023, the hottest year ever recorded in human history. When the issues AND solutions have both reached all-time highs (that translates to opportunity)

A second point is in regards to the oil companies.

Having been in the climate space for quite some time, its very common to continue to witness and hear and even participate in the vitriol directed at oil companies.

“They are to blame for our climate disasters!” climate activists and climate scientists will shout, tweet, write, time and time again.

And don’t get me wrong, there is a lot of truth in that. I myself have protested against the oil companies on many occasions in varying forms.

But the issue is that we, the common we, is in fact the customer of these oil companies. We, in fact, are the reason they have become so profitable in the first place.

67% of all oil used globally is for transportation. 2/3rds! To help move us, our junk, and our trash around. 67%!

How and For What Oil is Used

Put simply, we individuals, our movement, our goods, our services, our stuff to go into our other stuff, is responsible for 67% of the oil industry.

Why did global emissions drop so drastically during the covid19 pandemic? Why did the air and the water clear so quickly? We literally stopped moving. Of course that came with risk, death, restraint, etc due to the pandemic but the point was clear: so much of our pollution is from movement.

We often like to create a villain, some entity that is bigger than us, that is scary that we cant really see, that must be to blame for this mess.

Often, we label the oil and gas industry as such villain (and often deservedly so) but fail to remember they are in turn nothing more than a collection of individuals working for money, status, and power, entrenched in old thinking and deep pockets. And we, in turn, are their biggest customer.

A Final Note on Hope And Despair

It is for these two reasons, I’m fearful of our ability to truly curb or mitigate the effects of climate change. And with this fear, I am shifting much more of my time and energy and attention to how we can adapt to life on an already changed planet and what that means for our near-term future.

I recently came across a great read on Hope and Despair from an unlikely source, a book about productivity (yet it turned out to be way more than that…)

In Oliver Burkeman’s, Four Thousand Weeks, a book I absolutely loved reading, the Afterward articulates my feelings on despair in a way I could never begin to fully understand.

Oliver writes:

People sometimes ask Derrick Jensen, the environmentalist who cofounded the radical group Deep Green Resistance, how he manages to stay hopeful when everything seems so grim. But he tells them he doesn’t — and that he thinks that’s a good thing. Hope is supposed to be “our beacon in the dark,” Jensen notes. But in reality, it’s a curse. To hope for a given outcome is to place your faith in something outside yourself, and outside the current moment — the government, for example, or God, or the next generation of activists, or just “the future” — to make things all right in the end… it means disavowing your own capacity to change things — which in the context of “Jensen’s field, environmental activism, means surrendering your power to the very forces you were supposed to be fighting.

“Many people say they hope the dominant culture stops destroying the world,” as Jensen puts it, but by saying that, “they’ve assumed the destruction will continue, at least in the short term, and they’ve stepped away from their own ability to participate in stopping it.”

To give up hope, by contrast, is to re-inhabit the power that you actually have. At that point, Jensen goes on, “we no longer have to ‘hope’ at all. We simply do the work. We make sure salmon survive. We make sure prairie dogs survive. We make sure grizzlies survive … When we stop hoping that the awful situation we’re in will somehow resolve itself, when we stop hoping the situation will somehow not get worse, then we are finally free — truly free — to honestly start working to resolve it”

Excerpt From
Four Thousand Weeks : Time Management for Mortals (9780374715243)
Burkeman, Oliver
This material may be protected by copyright.

It’s time to break free. To start the hard work of fixing this mess.

And it begins with less.

And for now, you can connect with other change makers whether you are just getting started or well on your way at www.theimpactful.com

Until next time,

Zach Weismann


 
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