Hi Reader,
First, I just want to say thank you!
After publishing the “CS is Ending” newsletter, I heard from well over 200 people.
Thank you all for your outpouring of gratitude, well wishes, and for sharing your stories of what Crowdsourcing Sustainability has meant to you.
I’ve really been feeling the love since writing that and it means a lot to me :)
To the Crowdsourcing Sustainability Community - it has been my absolute pleasure to serve you as Community Weaver this past year. I am sad to not get to continue our journey together in this context, but I hope to stay connected with you and continue to be a resource for you on your climate journeys in whatever ways I can!
I’d like to thank Ryan for choosing me for this role and letting me into the CS world. As I look forward to finding new ways to heal the roots of the intersecting crises we face, I’ll carry this community with me. I hope you all continue seeking connection, resources, support, inspiration, imagination, and aligned action to co-create a just, vibrant, and regenerative world for all beings. I’ll be walking alongside you!
Please feel free to connect with me on LinkedIn, and perhaps I’ll see you in my Ecopsychology & Climate Action course in October! Wishing you strength, connection, and joy until next time.
-Rachel
(I should mention that Rachel is now on the lookout for a new and awesome climate job. So if you have any ideas, leads, or openings in program/project/community management or consulting definitely let her know!)
As CS comes to a close, I thought it may be interesting to reflect a bit on what’s changed in the world and climate space over the last 5+ years. There has been SO much change.
Right now, it feels like we’re so far from where we need to be. And that’s 100% true. We have a very long way to go to get to zero emissions and building a world that is safe, healthy, and just.
But if you asked me in February 2018 (when I started working on CS full time and things felt extremely bleak) if I’d take society being in the position we are in now in 2023, I think I may have taken it.
That’s because SO many more people have begun prioritizing climate and are stepping up to invest more time and energy into solving it. The money is finally starting to show some signs of beginning to flow in the right direction. There have been some major wins politically. Pockets of the print media have started to ramp up their coverage.
And, ultimately, I believe we are closing in on a social tipping point/paradigm shift toward accelerated climate action that is still hard for us to imagine being possible right now - but that felt much closer to impossible just 5 years ago.
Like I said we are still very far from where we need to be. But we’ve had some big wins and I believe we’re moving faster than most people think.
Here are some of the major developments over the last five years that stick out to me. Since early 2018:
Phew - that was a lot!
But I think it’s important to not only look at how far we have to go but, every so often, to look back and see how far we’ve come - and to be grateful for and get energy from that.
We are making progress. And in hindsight, it’s happening pretty rapidly.
This goes back to something I’ve said many times now:
We’re still not moving fast enough, but we are accelerating the implementation of climate solutions at a pretty good clip now. And it’s only going to get faster with more people power and shifting economics.
No matter what wins or losses happen month to month or year to year though, remember that there’s a vast difference between the best and worst-case scenarios.
And that the path we walk and the future we end up with is still mainly up to us.
We will, collectively, decide, with our actions, what future we end up with.
That means that what you do matters.
Every one of us has something valuable to contribute. We all have different ideas, experiences, resources, skills, connections, and spheres of influence that we can gear toward solving this problem.
And, on that note, here are some resources to help you :)
The Crowdsourcing Sustainability website with all 200+ newsletters and our podcast episodes will remain freely available for everyone.
That is of course a lot to parse through, however. So here are a few that you may find particularly useful:
For more, check out the Essential Ideas page on our site which has what I think are some of the most helpful things I’ve written over the last 5+ years.
You can also download the “Climate Journey Paths” resources if you’d like from our community site while it’s still up.
And if you are struggling with the psychological and emotional toll of living amidst multiple intersecting crises and existential threats, I’d encourage you to join Rachel’s Ecopsychology + Climate Action course starting late October! It’s an 8-week group learning journey that gives you support, resources, and community to engage with your internal experience of the climate crisis, build your emotional skill and resilience, and clarify your aligned, sustainable climate action.
Learn more and register! |
Finally, as our current community platform will be shut down in the coming months, here are some other awesome climate communities that you may appreciate checking out!
As I mentioned, this is not goodbye. You’ll hear from me again when I know what my next role in the climate movement is…and you may also receive a random newsletter at some point because there are still so many topics I want to dive into with y’all: the fossil fuel nonproliferation treaty, water and food systems/supplies, insurance, migration, the push to make ecocide a crime, our information ecosystem, resiliency…and some fun ones in my journal like “lessons for the climate movement from Ted Lasso” ;)
In the meantime, if you want to stay in touch, feel free to connect with me on LinkedIn or Twitter. I may also share sustainability info and thoughts on there occasionally.
Wise words
After hearing the news that CS was winding down, a partner and community member shared a beautiful and powerful metaphor with me that went something like this quote:
I’ve always thought of my work similarly to the way climate journalist Emily Atkin thinks of hers. She said that she thinks of her work not as “preaching to the choir”, but as “teaching the choir how to sing”.
I’ve spent the last five years working to help make the climate choir bigger and helping teach people how to sing.
Now I’m tired and need a break.
I trust that many of you will continue to sing while I take a breath.
I trust that others will join back in when you need a breath.
And I trust that, together, we will sustain this beautiful song of climate action for as long as we need.
Thank you again for being a part of this journey with me. I’m proud of our community’s collective action, impact, and spirit.
And I’m looking forward to seeing what we will all do together in the years to come to protect the people we love, the places we call home, and to build a better world where all life thrives.
Much love,
Ryan
P.S. Here's a fun collage of our team - so many wonderful humans!
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I am a HUGE sustainability nerd. And I work to educate, inspire, and empower people to act on climate :) Join 200,000 other people by signing up for the Crowdsourcing Sustainability Newsletter to stay up to date on the planetary crisis and, most importantly, what you can do about it to help make a difference.
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