How to Be a Better Human - How to turn climate anxiety into action (with Luisa Neubauer)
Episode Date: April 19, 2021Sometimes it feels like fighting climate change is all about dealing with the many little things we as individuals are doing wrong (hello single-use coffee cups, plastic bags, and eating dairy). While... these bad habits are important to address, are we losing focus on the bigger picture? Luisa Neubauer draws on her experience at the front lines of activism to strategically reframe the climate crisis and identify the unique ways we can make systemic change. Luisa Neubauer is a climate activist, author and leader of the "Fridays For Future" school strike movement. In 2018, Luisa Neubauer co-initiated the "Fridays for Future" school strike movement Germany, which was inspired by Swedish teen Greta Thunberg. In fear of growing up in a world of rising global temperatures, Neubauer is organizing mass action to urge governments to comply with the 2015 Paris Agreements. To learn more about "How to Be a Better Human," host Chris Duffy, or find footnotes and additional resources, please visit: go.ted.com/betterhuman Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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You know that old saying about the frog in the pot of boiling water?
How if you put him in a pot that's already boiling, he's going to hop right back out.
But if you put him in and warm it up slowly, he'll just be hanging out in his little froggy hot tub, relaxing, having a great time until it's too
late. Because when it comes to solving big societal problems, we humans, we seem to be
way better about getting upset and demanding change when it is an issue that arises all at
once. But if an issue creeps in slowly over time,
well, it's really hard to mobilize around those issues.
And it can be hard to feel like we as individuals really have any control at all.
So we often just sit back, enjoy the bubbles,
and watch as we all slowly become frog soup.
Today on How to Be a Better Human,
we're gonna talk about the climate crisis
and how we can jump out of that pot.
Today's guest, Louisa Neubauer, she helped catalyze a global intergenerational movement demanding systemic solutions to climate change.
That movement is called Fridays for Future.
And personally, one of the things that I find most powerful about Louisa's message and her work is that it focuses on systems instead of each tiny individual choice
that we make in our day-to-day lives.
Here's what Luisa had to say about that
in her 2019 talk at TEDx Youth at München.
We need to drastically reframe our understanding
of a climate activist,
our understanding of who can be the answer to this.
A climate activist isn't that one person
that has read every single study
and is now spending every afternoon handing out leaflets
about vegetarianism in shopping halls.
No.
A climate activist can be everyone.
Everyone who wants to join a movement of those
who intend to grow old on a planet that prioritizes protection of natural environments and happiness
and health for the many over the destruction of the climate and the wrecking of the planet
for the profits of the few.
I need you to get out of that zone of convenience, away from a business as usual that has no
tomorrow.
All of you here, you are either a friend or a family member,
you are a worker, a colleague, a student, a teacher,
or in many cases, a voter.
All of this comes along with a responsibility
that this crisis requires you to grow up to.
Leaving the dome of convenience works best when you join forces.
One person asking for inconvenient change is mostly inconvenient.
Two, five, ten, one hundred people asking for inconvenient change
are hard to ignore.
The more you are, the harder it gets for people to justify a system
that has no future.
Power is not something that you either have or don't have.
Power is something you either take or leave to others,
and it grows once you share it.
And this is probably the most important aspect of all of this.
I need you to start taking yourselves more seriously.
If there's one thing I've learned
during seven months of organizing climate action,
is that if you don't go for something,
chances are high that no one else will.
Okay.
Are you fired up?
I am so fired up.
I am ready to take myself seriously. So how do we make use of our collective power? How do we change these systems? How do we save our planet and our species from complete annihilation? Those are the answers we are going to try and get from Louisa Neubauer today. No pressure at all. But first, an ad.
first and add. Whether you're in your running era, Pilates era, or yoga era, dive into Peloton workouts that work with you. From meditating at your kid's game to mastering a strength program,
they've got everything you need to keep knocking down your goals. No pressure to be who you're not,
just workouts and classes to strengthen who you are. So no matter your era, make it your best with Peloton.
Find your push.
Find your power.
Peloton.
Visit Peloton at onepeloton.ca.
We're back.
Today's episode is all about climate activism.
Before the break, we heard a bit of Louisa Neubauer's talk.
And now we've got her here live to follow up on how anyone and everyone, yes, even you and even me, can play an active role.
I feel like for a long time, there's been this sense of like, if you want to help the environment, it's all things that you are doing wrong. Like you need to take shorter showers. You need to recycle more. You need to change where you buy things. And all of those are important, like you said. But I think that it kind of shifts responsibility away from big corporations and from governments
and from like these big institutional polluters that are actually making a huge mass of the
environment and onto individual people.
And I love that you have kind of shifted the focus back to like we as individuals can put
pressure on these systems and change these systems and use our political power as well
as our individual power.
It's not just about what you choose to buy.
It's also about who you choose to vote for and where you put your money and where you
put the pressure.
Yeah, you know, actually, it's something that is as soon as you think about it, it's
very obvious.
You know, you can tell people to cycle more often, but they won't do it unless there's
a good cycling infrastructure.
And suddenly we're on a systemic stage.
They won't do it unless there's a good cycling infrastructure.
And suddenly we're on a systemic stage.
And suddenly it's about the politics behind it,
the politics who are working in favor of automobile lobbyists and not in favor of cyclists, for instance.
That's a very paradoxical situation that is in.
And at the same time, 100 companies are causing 71% of emissions.
That is where we are at.
71% of emissions. That is where we are at. There's a disbalance between the magnitude of the problems we are facing. So, you know, just opening up yourself to the reality we're facing through
this crisis is kind of overwhelming. And just absorbing the facts and the science, that's tough.
It takes energy from you. But at at the same time we don't have
that many answers on how to deal with that so we are really good in and you know in communicating
natural science but we are rubbish in social science so what does it do to your to your mind
to your body to your understanding to your understanding of life and your meaning of life
and I think it's really that second part. So what is the appropriate answer to the
problems we are facing and how do we communicate that to people and going on to people and say,
hey, we are in an existential crisis and it's complex and it's devastating and now go and buy
tofu. That doesn't make sense. And it doesn't that doesn't level up. And people know that
that's why they're so critical about this. And that's a good reason for that.
Yeah, it's funny.
It's like if you were trying to tell people that they had to be more cautious when they buy children's toys so that some of their toys weren't completely filled with poison that would kill the child.
You would say like, no, no, no.
That shouldn't be on what toy I choose to buy.
That should just be that the poison filled toy is illegal.
We shouldn't sell the poison filled toy anymore.
Exactly.
It's kind of the exact same thing here.
So for you personally, what was the turning point where you personally said, like, I have to
be an activist? I have to actually take this on. So oftentimes when I'm being asked this question,
I think people kind of expect this like really big report that I once read. And it said in there
that my future is going to be rubbish on a climate crisis planet. And I said, no, I didn't want that.
And then I woke up the next morning and I went out on the streets and I had this poster board with me and
I became a climate activist. Okay, you're telling me it's not going to be that?
That's not, sorry. Sorry to spoil it here, but that's not what happened.
I'm very disappointed. That was exactly what I was hoping for.
No, it's actually, I think it's not a turning point, but it's a turning process we're talking
about. And in this process, one aspect of this process is definitely it's not a turning point but it's a turning process we're talking about and in this process
one aspect of this process is definitely it's knowledge about what's going on so many people
do understand that there's a climate crisis but that's not enough because you know we know about
many things that go kind of wrong in the world and yet we don't really feel like it's our you know
our place to to fight that and to change that so there's a second aspect to that, and it has to do with understanding how bad it is.
So being able to differ between a crisis that we live through
and that just occurs in politics and the climate crisis,
which is much more of a fundamental crisis we are in.
You know, understanding how bad it is really what the
state is we are in how many species are dying every day how how dangerous this is getting for
us understanding it's not a climate crisis it's a crisis of humanity you know the climate will
be fine eventually just a question of how much human will be in there still and one other really
important aspect to this turning process is understanding there's no plan to change that.
You know, we're in a man-made crisis and yet we act like we can't change it, like humanity cannot change it anymore, which is obviously paradox, which doesn't add up.
We can't accept a crisis as man-made, as human-made, at the same time as we deny our human ability
to turn it around.
But that's effectively what we're doing right now.
And I think eventually, however,
we need to, in this process,
the moment that I changed my way
of thinking about the climate crisis
is when I understood
that nobody else will do this for us, that it is
up to us effectively.
There is no government in the world, or at least very, very few governments in the world
that have a reasonable plan to fight for 1.5 degrees, like to limit global warming to 1.5.
So the real question is, like, if we're in a crisis,
but nobody is acting like we're in a crisis,
who is going to make this change that we need?
And that is the point where I was like,
okay, you know what?
I never wanted to become a climate activist
and I don't feel like I'm the right person for that.
But, you know, considering that
obviously people are needed, everyone is needed,
I'm needed too. And I will just do this now. And that is what changed it for me.
Yeah. Well, so for, I imagine that for many people who are listening and for myself too,
sometimes we have that same feeling of like, this is really important, but I'm maybe not the right
person for this. I don't know how to be the leader, right? There's only one Greta Thunberg. There's only one Louisa Neubauer. So what about
for the rest of us? How do we become climate activists? How do we actually make a difference
in this if we don't feel like maybe we're perfectly suited for that? Well, I'm not perfectly
suited for that either. You know, before I hated the idea to go on a strike that I organized myself. I thought it was the most embarrassing thing that could happen in my life if I organized a strike and nobody would turn up. I was like, I was laying awake thinking about like, would anyone come? That's terrible.
you know when you're awake in bed and you think like oh my god what did I get into and then you think about like can I still get out of that and you just wish this day would pass and you wouldn't
have to think about it twice that very moment that is what it feels like when you leave your comfort
zone the good news here is there is no silver bullet and this is so good there's not one thing
and there's I'm not going to give you a list of three things that everyone can do I'm so sorry
because there is no such thing because people are, you know, we're all unique
and we all have something
different to offer.
Sometimes, you know,
it is organizing
and going on strikes.
I think actually going on strikes
is something,
at least when there's no pandemic,
you know, that's pretty much
suitable for lots of people.
But sometimes for people,
it's just, you know,
they work in an institution
and they suddenly start thinking about what kind of institution am I working in?
Are we on track to Paris?
There are people who are doing photography.
So are you taking photos of activists so they can be shared around the world to inspire others?
There are people who work with industries who are, you know, denying the climate crisis.
So are you telling them the truth of what we are in and what they're causing there?
So there are just like one trillion different things
that people can give to this,
that people can add to this crisis management that we need.
Yeah, and I think that even if,
one of the things that you say in your talk
that I find really resonates with me
is like even if you don't have a specific concrete skill, right? It's always also about learning. Like I learned to be a climate activist.
I had no idea how to register a strike somewhere or to organize a microphone or those things. You
know, I know now more about the electric infrastructure in central Berlin than I'd
ever thought I would because i know where to plug a
microphone that is something i learned because i had to so i think it's also you know when we
think about how can we you know deal with this crisis how can we become a climate activist we
think a lot about the status quo so what am i now and what can i do about it but we rarely think
about who will i be who am i becoming in this and what you know what does it
offer to me what what else is there that i can learn and you know pass on yeah it's beautiful
it's also you know characterizing the climate crisis in such a matching way so the the climate
crisis um it easily isolates.
So you suddenly find yourself in the supermarket and you just desperately want to buy something that's not really harmful for the planet.
And you understand it's really difficult to find.
It's possibly impossible to finance.
And then you kind of go home and you think about all the other products that are being bought by someone else.
And you feel like I'm not making a difference here because you know the plastic is up in the ocean anyhow the
plastic is being produced anyhow whether i buy it or not and that's isolating and it's um it's
depressing experience of things over and over again um yet when you're on those on the strikes
when you're you know on a on a climate strike or on a mass demonstration that is really demanding,
you know, political powers to act accordingly. It matches somehow. It's turning this collective
crisis into a collective experience that we are making there together with everyone else.
I think about that, what you're describing in the grocery store. To me, I think about that
as the peanut butter problem. It's like I'm done with the jar of're describing in the grocery store. To me, I think about that as the peanut butter problem.
It's like I'm done with the jar of peanut butter and it's plastic and I know I should be recycling it, but it is so hard to clean the inside of it out.
And I'm doing the work on this and I'm like, there are so many people that aren't spending
20 minutes cleaning the inside of a peanut butter jar.
They just throw it away.
I wish I wasn't washing this peanut butter jar.
But then you go out and you realize it's not just me doing this.
It's not just me taking the minimal effort to try and clean things so I can recycle them. And also,
there's all these people who are making way bigger change. We're all together trying to
ask for bigger change than just scrubbing the inside of our peanut butter jars so they could
be recycled, which maybe they aren't even recycled. I don't even know.
Well, it's a really matching story. And I think that is also part of the problem that, you know, in a very neoliberalist setting, you tell people, please go and wash your peanut butter glass.
It's not even a glass.
It's a plastic, you know, a little plastic jar, plastic thing.
I love how seriously you're taking my very bad metaphor, but it's a real experience I have. No, I'm joking. But it's like, you know, it's so inappropriate to individualize such a collective crisis to a
level that people, you know, wake up in the morning and they feel drained by the thought of,
you know, not being able again to act accordingly as you know it. And that is why it's important to
provide answers that are bigger, you know. And it's great if people, you know, start cleaning
and recycling and do all those things. Yet, if that is the act that is taking away your energy that you would need to
go to a strike, don't do it. Like, you know, it should give you energy. It's like cycling. It's
like eating healthy, meat-free, vegan, whatever food that should give you energy. It's something
that, you know, should enrich your life because, you know, you do something good for your body and the planet. And that should give you energy. And
that is the energy you should have to actually then fight for a ban of plastic in your town or
the extension of the infrastructure for cycling lanes or the end of fossil fuel subsidies,
those things. What's great about Louisa is that she doesn't just stop
at we should all be climate activists
and then rely on everybody
to figure out what that means
for them personally.
No, Louisa's movement is based on
the idea that there are concrete steps
that each of us need to take
according to our own abilities.
Here is Louisa's talk again.
The night before first strike,
I was so nervous I couldn't sleep.
I didn't know what to expect, but I expected the worst.
Maybe it was because we weren't the only ones
who had been longing to have a voice in a political environment
that had seemingly forgotten how to include young people's perspective
into decision-making.
Maybe.
But somehow, this worked out.
And from one day to the other,
we were all over the place,
and I, from one day to the other,
became a climate activist.
Usually,
in these kind of TED Talks,
I would now say how it's overly hopeful,
how we young people are going to get this sorted,
how we're going to save the future and the planet and everything else,
how we young people striking for the climate are going to fix this.
Usually.
But this is not how this works.
This is not how this crisis works.
Bad news first, if you thought I would hire you now to cycle more or eat less meat,
to fly less or to go second-hand shopping, sorry.
This is not that easy.
But here comes the good news.
You are more than consumers and shoppers,
even though the industry would like you to keep yourself limited to that.
No, me and you, we are all political beings
and we can all be part of this answer.
We can all be something
that many people call climate activists.
We're going to take a quick break,
but we will be right back
with more from Louisa Neubauer.
What happens when the global climate crisis meets a global pandemic and so much more.
We'll have that work with you. From meditating at your kid's game to
mastering a strength program, they've got everything you need to keep knocking down your goals.
No pressure to be who you're not, just workouts and classes to strengthen who you are.
So no matter your era, make it your best with Peloton. Find your push. Find your power.
Peloton. Visit Peloton at onepeloton.ca.
As you are getting ready for Earth Day this week, which is Thursday, April 22nd,
you can listen to more of Louisa's talk along with other incredible climate activists on the
TEDx Shorts feed. And now we are back with Louisa Neubauer herself. Okay, so you've been talking
about these mass demonstrations and these big movements where you really feel community with other people who are in the movement with you.
Obviously, COVID has affected that. So I wonder how the pandemic has affected your personal
approach to climate activism. Well, that was obviously a very interesting experience
because until COVID, the climate crisis, at least where I'm from, was considered to be the biggest present crisis there is.
And the way we kind of achieved that was by organizing mass marches.
And suddenly the most pressing crisis for many wasn't the climate crisis anymore, but the COVID crisis.
And then we changed our behavior because we were in a crisis. pressing crisis for many it wasn't the climate crisis anymore but the covid crisis and then
we changed our behavior because we were in a crisis and that is a really important lesson for
for many people if we want to we can take a crisis seriously and that also obviously shows that we
never took the climate crisis seriously on a governmental scale and the other thing is
obviously since we were in a corona crisis we we adapted as climate activists. So we moved to the internet a lot.
We did lots of digital campaigning.
We did lots of like background work, organizational work.
And that is also, you know, one way of dealing with a crisis.
It's, you know, managing what is there, managing the resources, and then, you know, focusing,
getting on with it, looking that everyone is good and healthy and
safe and then we just do the work because it needs to be done and in that sense I totally agree that
I think corona tells a bit of a very weird and I think surprising story about some very deep
edges of society where people engage in extraordinary conspiracy theories. That is the one story to that.
But obviously, yes, if we can take a crisis seriously
and we can act like we're in a crisis and we can solve crises,
however, I think for that, we need to accept that the corona pandemic is also a result of a very very mixed up awkward unhealthy relationship
between nature and human so the real cause why there is a pandemic and why it's so much more
likely that we have more pandemics coming up in the next decades and centuries that is a different
one and we haven't solved that one yet You've talked about possibleism as opposed to optimism. Can you explain what you mean by that?
So I'm asked a lot whether I'm an optimist, because I think people think that I necessarily
need to be an optimist because I do things. And that is obviously a very kind um understanding of like what motivates me but in fact i think
optimism and pessimism are both very passive so it's a very um passive understanding of what is
changing so either everything will be fine or everything will be good but you don't take part
in this things just happen so the active um the more engaged alternative towards that is um possibilism
which a swedish philanthropist um jakob von uxkul came up with and possibilists see what is possible
but we understand that we need to fight for the possible and that we need to make things possible
in order for them to become possible so that is know, putting us in the center of what is, you know, what can change.
And that for me is the much more hopeful, but also much more honest approach to this
because things don't just happen.
We make them happen, whether we, you know, let them happen or engage or so we are, you know, in the larger sense,
if it's systemic changes or, you know, smaller stuff happening around, though,
you play a part in that inherently. You know, there's been a lot of talk in the last couple
of months about this idea of doom scrolling, of like reading the news and just getting deeper
and deeper into this hopelessness and everything is so scary. Do you ever do that late at night?
Or I kind of imagine that like you start doom scrolling
and then you like throw your phone against the wall
and are like, I'm planning another protest.
So for six years now, I've been studying geography.
So I'm engaging with the science every day anyhow.
And then there's obviously the news,
which can be very um well threatening even
though we are also in a media crisis and um you know we have an issue with communicating the
climate crisis that's a side note but obviously i do i do scroll and i do read and i do you know
usually then call the people that wrote this article or that were interviewed and i said
can we talk about this quickly because that that sounds really bad. And then we talk about it. I do also feel
devastation at those moments. I do also feel overwhelmed and I do feel anxious about what I
read. But I think that is nothing bad. That is actually really good that we allow ourselves
to feel, to breathe this crisis to to let it touch us
that is so deeply human part of the crisis that we stop kind of feeling those things
and that we don't allow ourselves to feel the loss of the of the ecosystems that are dying
every day and we don't allow ourselves to feel sad about the devastation that we're causing
but that is the the starting point
from where on we kind of you know can take so much energy and power to change the things then
so i think i try to acknowledge this moment and i say okay luisa that's great because you're feeling
human and you have um you allow yourself to to to open up yourself to that to those informations
to that science and then i just leave leave it, you know, and sink in
and maybe I call a friend and then an hour later or a day later or a week later, you know, I think
about that and I think, you know what, we're going to do something about that. And then I go on and
I do something about it. So, well, one of the things you've done about it is Fridays for Future
and Fridays for Future, it started with students and with school walkouts.
But who else do you think is missing from the wider environmental movement?
Possibly the most important story of Fridays for Future is that the climate crisis is in fact not
a crisis of the climate, but of the people. And those are the front lines mostly and the young
generation, the children, the young young people and it's really easy to
ignore the icebergs on on the arctic which is melting and it's really easy to ignore the
forests that are currently burning but it's kind of impossible to ignore the future of your own
child or your grandchild and that is what opened up this whole potential of intergenerational change making. So I don't think there is someone like missing or so.
But I think obviously there's so much more potential of people getting engaged with this and understanding that it's now the time to get involved.
And if you ask this question about who's missing from the strikes on a geographical sense. Obviously, there are loads of parts of the world
where climate activism is much more edgy than it is here,
where it's really a mainstream thing to do.
Well, I'm actually, so maybe starting from the other side,
I think I'm so surprised and so overwhelmed in a positive way
by what is happening in many parts in Asia right now.
So there's so much mobilizing and organizing going on in Southeast Asia,
a lot in South America, in many, many African countries.
That is incredible.
And even in places like Russia and China,
where you would kind of think that demonstrations wouldn't be very possible,
they still do it and they get into trouble and
they do it because i think okay we need to do this it is obviously i think many people around the
world are how would you say irritated i think a bit by the role of the us in the climate arena
because you know there is so much climate crisis going on in that country that's you know
oftentimes when i talk about the climate crisis happening here now i refer to u.s america
and you know people see the flames in california and the the floods and louisiana and so on so
that is and it's interesting how people you know experience those extremes and then don't organize in a way I would expect
them to organize. I think effectively it just shows that we are really, you know, that we're
very able to ignore a reality, even if it's just in front of our eyes, if we don't like it.
And so that's, I think maybe behind that, yeah. Yeah, well, so I'm really curious about that.
So let's say that we are,
let's say that I'm someone,
I'm listening to you talk right now
and I'm convinced,
okay, I got to be a climate activist.
And how do I become a better climate activist?
What can I do to improve my activism
so that it is effective?
And I'm taking this unique, terrifying situation
that we're at in the
world and I see these things around me and I want to make urgent change.
What would you tell me?
So oftentimes I think it helps a lot when you talk about your reasons, your motivation
to, you know, to be concerned about the climate with people that you know, that you, your
friend, your family or so on.
And you, you know, use that situation to brainstorm about what you
want to do. What would you like to change? Where do you think you belong in that sense?
And I think it's something that makes it much easier for people to kind of get engaged is to
go somewhere where they're somewhat familiar. Is it your local community where you know people
already or you bring a friend or you work around something that you're really you
know you're already like really excited about I you know first got involved with divestment
because I read about it and I found a really interesting idea to divest from fossil fuels so
I started with a divestment group in the town where I studied back then and it was amazing
because I knew the concept so I was you So there was some familiar aspect to that.
But the first step is, I think the most important thing to do is the first step. And that is,
you ask yourself very honestly, how do I feel about this? And many people, when they are really allowing themselves to answer this honestly, they are concerned about the climate crisis.
And they are concerned about their own
future or the future of their children. We feel that we have that in us. And that next step,
you can ask yourself very honestly, okay, am I doing everything I can or am I doing anything I
can to change the situation? And we're having this discussion right now because many people
around the world have asked this question and they have made the decision that they want to make a change. That is Fridays for Future. That is how Fridays for Future happened.
turn up. And that's the third thing. Leave your comfort zone and turn up, whether it's an organization that already exists or one that you found, whether it's an ecological party or an
institution that you think does good work. Get out of the status quo and turn up. It's just
80% of things, good thing that's happening, are just about showing up.
Thank you so much for your time. Honestly, this has been an incredible conversation.
I've learned so much.
And thank you so much.
This was a pleasure to me.
Thank you so much for having me on your show.
Thanks so much for listening to this episode of How to Be a Better Human.
That is our show for today.
Thank you to our guest, Louisa Neubauer.
You can hear more on her podcast, 1.5 Degrees.
If you speak German, that is. The podcast is in German. Or if not, maybe it's a good way for you to our guest, Louisa Neubauer. You can hear more on her podcast, 1.5 Degrees. If you speak German, that is.
The podcast is in German.
Or if not, maybe it's a good way for you to learn German.
Either way, now you know.
As for this podcast, I am your host, Chris Duffy.
This show is produced by Abhimanyu Das,
Daniela Balarezo, Frederica Elizabeth Yosefov,
and Karen Newman at TED,
and Jocelyn Gonzalez and Sandra Lopez-Monsalve
from PRX Productions.
For more on how to be a better human, visit ideas.ted.com. We'll see you next week.
Whether you're in your running era, Pilates era, or yoga era, dive into Peloton workouts that work
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So no matter your era, make it your best with Peloton. Find your push, find your power.
Peloton. Visit Peloton at onepeloton.ca.