Dr. Who's Reading Room

I was absolutely riveted by this interview with Bill McKibben, who makes plain the most difficult problem of our age, not the concept of climate change itself, but the enormity of our task of response. I am edified by the witness of Wangari Maathi, not just her ideas, but the literal fingernail-dirtying work she led in the Greenbelt Movement. I think it is a testament to our humanity that in the midst of our self-imposed crises, we also seem to raise up visionary leaders like these.

speakingoffaith:

Hummingbirds and Outrage Fatigue

by Anne Breckbill, associate web developer

“I think there is such a thing as outrage fatigue. … Because statistics like that and numbers like that, scenarios like that, are as prone to make people throw up their hands and say, well, then, you know, I can’t do anything anyway.”

During her interview with Bill McKibben, Krista suggests that all the bad environmental news and surplus of data can be overwhelming. What a common human response to a challenge that seems insurmountable! Because we cannot do something big, we are tempted to not even take the small, manageable actions that are well within our power. We feel inconsequential, completely forgetting about the cumulative impact of each person who cares for the Earth. This headline from The Onion captures the poignancy of this sentiment: “‘How Bad for the Environment Can Throwing Away One Plastic Bottle Be?’ 30 Million People Wonder.”

Listening to “The Moral Math of Climate Change” also brought to mind the 2009 Sundance Award-winning film Dirt! and the optimistic parable of the hummingbird as told by Nobel laureate Wangari Maathai. Here’s hoping that the 30 million of us who wonder about the impact of one plastic bottle can adopt the tenacity and courage to be hummingbirds.