How to Be a Better Human - What if we get climate solutions right? (w/ Ayana Elizabeth Johnson)
Episode Date: April 21, 2025The future could be amazing, if we get it right. That’s so rarely how we think about it though. Ayana Elizabeth Johnson, marine biologist and author of the anthology What If We Get it Right?, is con...stantly collecting visions of the future and of climate solutions that are worth working towards together. Chris and Ayana talk about how to find your unique role in climate activism, the media’s responsibility in reporting climate-solution-focused news, and how to emphasize climate solutions rather than only catastrophizing the crisis. This is an episode all about what needs to be done, what you can do, and the world we could build together.FollowHost: Chris Duffy (@chrisiduffy | chrisduffycomedy.com)Guest: Ayana Elizabeth Johnson (Instagram: @ayanaeliza | LinkedIn: @ayanaelizabeth | ayanaelizabeth.com) Linksayanaelizabeth.substack.comGetitright.earthBookshop.org What If We Get It Right? urbanoceanlab.orgSubscribe to TED Instagram: @tedYouTube: @TEDTikTok: @tedtoksLinkedIn: @ted-conferencesWebsite: ted.comPodcasts: ted.com/podcastsFor the full text transcript, visit go.ted.com/BHTranscripts Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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I am your host Chris Duffy, and today on the show we have Ayanna Elizabeth Johnson.
Now, Ayanna is someone who has completely changed the way that I think about the climate
crisis.
And that's not because she convinced me that it's not a big deal.
It's also not because she convinced me that it is such a big deal that we are all completely
doomed and there's no way to possibly do anything about it.
No. What Ayanna has done for me is to get me to think about how much better and more incredible
our world would be if we make the changes that we're going to need to make. So often,
I've thought about climate change and climate action as just preventing a bad thing from
happening. But Ayanna really made me think about how it's also creating a good thing.
That we could be transforming our lives and our societies and our cities and our world
in a positive way.
That we would be building a safer, cleaner, more connected world while also addressing
these challenges.
Ayanna's book is called What If We Get It Right?
And it is a truly inspiring look at what climate action is necessary and what climate action could look like. But I'm actually getting ahead of myself.
Let's start at the beginning. This is a clip from Ayanna's TED Talk about what
we need to do and what it's gonna take.
People often ask me what they can do to help address the climate crisis. But what
they usually mean is what's one quick,
easy, simple thing they can do?
Well, that particular ship has sailed.
The climate challenge is gargantuan,
thanks largely to fossil fuel executives
and the PR firms and politicians doing their bidding.
We need to eliminate greenhouse gas emissions
from electricity, transportation, agriculture, industry and buildings.
We need to protect and restore ecosystems.
We need to change society, policy, economy and culture.
This is about transformation.
And the stakes for humanity are greater than my heart and mind can fully fathom.
So I find the best way to cope with this is to avoid dwelling on the terrifying scientific projections
and instead pivot quickly to solutions.
Now, the climate movement and the media
all too often ask each of us to do the same things,
to vote, protest, donate, spread the word, lower our carbon footprints.
That term, by the way, carbon footprint,
was popularized by fossil fuel corporations
in an attempt to put the blame on us as individuals.
But yes, it is good to do those things.
I do those things.
However, all too rarely are we asked to contribute
our special talents, our superpowers to climate solutions.
And what a failing for that would actually enable
the radical changes we need.
So, where do we each begin?
We are gonna try to answer that question
and so many more in this conversation.
Here's Ayanna.
Hello, my name is Ayanna Elizabeth Johnson.
I'm the author of the book, What If We Get It Right?
First of all, I loved What If We Get It Right.
My first question is, you know, they say not to judge a book by its cover, but I actually
feel like this cover is really unique and very intentional.
This does not have a cover that is like fancy,
intimidating, I am an expert cover.
Instead, it has like an artistic, mostly blank cover
that kind of looks like a kid could color on it
or something like that.
So tell me about like the design choice
that went into how you wanted this book to look
and how you wanted people to approach it at first glance.
This is an iteration of something I drew on the back of a napkin at an oyster bar.
So I was intimately involved with the crafting of the cover and trying to design something
that would be part of communicating the message of the book.
So I'm glad you picked up on that.
And the amount of white space is certainly intentional too.
Like you said, something a kid could pick up and color in.
The idea is that when we're asking big questions,
like what if we get it right, visions of climate futures,
it's an invitation to imagine.
This book is not like, here's how we get it right.
It's a question mark.
And so I wanted to make sure there was
enough blank space to invite people into that.
There were many different iterations of the cover
until we found the right designer to help us land this.
And that same sense also of primary colors
being an important way to go.
Also, I'm a marine biologist, so the Earth is like emphasizing oceans instead of land.
Yes, that's true.
You talk about how you had like as a child,
this dream that was first sparked when you saw
through a glass bottom boat, a coral reef,
of becoming a marine biologist,
which I think a lot of us had that dream, right?
Like I know that when I was in third and fourth grade,
if you'd asked me, I would have said,
I will be a marine biologist because one time-
Super common dream job.
And it's so incredible.
And then you have become a marine biologist.
You kept the dream job.
But the reason I ask that is you do this dream job
that you had as a kid and that a lot of people had as a kid.
But you also, when you're thinking about policy
and you're thinking about these really adult problems, you've talked about how one of the issues is that for a lot of
us, we kind of mute our love of nature as we get older. We feel like that's something
we have to lose a little bit. And for you, you've tried really hard to not mute the love
of nature, to keep it just as intense and as powerful as when you were a kid and decided
to do this in the first place. So I'm curious if you could talk about that a little bit.
Yeah, I'm really grateful to the scientist E.O. Wilson for giving us a word for that,
which is biophilia, that we have each of us this innate love of life, of nature. I think
that's important because why are we doing this if it's not for getting to live on this magnificent
planet that has like ants and fireflies and shooting stars and forests and like rocky
coastlines and octopuses and like just a bunch of cool stuff. Like I want to live on a living
planet with a lot of cool other species and with humans too, I guess. I mean, it's just a question of like what
motivates us, right? And for me, loving being a part of nature, loving ecosystems, feeling
like I'm a part of an ecosystem is integral to that. And as you mentioned, like this is
a sensibility that can get muted as we age, that we lose as we
get so caught up in our to-do lists and our inboxes and all of this stuff of modern life
that we forget, like that we are one of eight million plus species living on this planet.
And that's on this rock hurtling through space. And so I think it helps to also ground ourselves
and have a bit more humility about the context
within which we're trying to solve these problems
that humanity has also created for all these species.
I feel like for me personally,
maybe because I grew up in like a small apartment
in New York City and we didn't have a yard,
obviously there's parks and stuff,
but because my main interactions with like animals were rats and pigeons.
Now living in a place in Los Angeles where like a hummingbird just flies by.
Or when you go to the beach and you see a dolphin jump out of the water.
I am so shocked.
I'm flabbergasted all the time when nature comes by in a way that I think
a lot of other adults
that I spend time with are like,
yeah, that's actually kind of normal.
And I always feel like this is not normal.
This is unbelievable.
And reading your book, I got the sense of like,
it's good to believe that this is not normal.
Like we wanna keep this, that energy to power.
There's two sides of that, right?
Like it should be normal
because we should be interacting with nature regularly in such that it can always delight us, but it shouldn't surprise
us that these things exist. In fact, there's a phenomenon called shifting baselines, which
says that, like, we have essentially lowered expectations for what abundance and diversity
of life should be around us.
And that is a problem.
Because if we think seeing one bee a year is normal
and we get super excited about it,
then we've actually lost touch with what a healthy ecosystem
should look like, which means we're maybe
setting our standards too low in terms of policy or restoration
or protection as well.
So having some sense of what nature would be
if humans backed off is also really important.
You talk in the book about how you hate to be asked
about what makes you hopeful or what makes you optimistic,
that that is a terrible thing to ask,
especially when we're talking about
climate change and climate futures.
It's also presumptuous.
That you are hopeful. Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm not actually is the awkward answer to that, right?
Like I am determined.
I know that we have essentially all the solutions that we need.
I know that there are ways I can be part of making those solutions happen
in the world, but do I have like faith in humanity to get it together and implement
all these solutions with the urgency that the climate crisis requires? Like I do not
have this blind faith that it will all be okay in the end. And optimism, I'm like frequently
tagged as an optimist just because I think there's stuff we
could do to make the world better than it would otherwise be. But I don't actually assume that
it's all going to be okay. So that part of the definition doesn't apply to me. Now, the alternative
is to be like, whatever, it's all going to fall apart anyway, so I don't have to try. And I think that's absolute
nonsense. Like, giving up on the future of life on Earth, honestly, just seems dumb to me. And,
and like, who are all these quitters who are like, Oh, well, I guess it was nice to try,
to try living here on Earth. Because I feel like there's never a point where you get to give up
Because I feel like there's never a point where you get to give up on the future and on each other. And that's, to me, very, very sad that I think more and more people are just giving up.
And that's not part of my family history. That's not part of really any successful movement for change, right?
Like, I think back to the civil rights movement and if
people were just like, yeah, seems too hard to try to get rights, like let's just quit.
That's not the viable way forward. So instead of thinking about having hope or
not, if we just take the option of quitting off the table, then the question
just becomes what can I do to make things better than they would otherwise be?
That finding like where we can each contribute is the question, not do I feel hopeful or optimistic, but like, what's my part of this work?
You're a scientist, but you're really focused on practical ways that people can actually put this into place in their own lives.
And one of those things that I know you do at your live events and is in the book
is this idea of a climate action Venn diagram.
Can you walk us through that?
It's very simple.
It's three circles overlapping.
And the first circle is, what are you good at?
What are the skills, resources, networks, dollars
that you can bring to the table?
The second circle is, what is the work that needs doing?
So we have hundreds of climate and justice solutions
we could be working on.
So pick one or two.
There's also that we need to change culture and politics,
not just the technical solutions that people
think of about solar panels and electric cars, right?
And then there's what brings you joy,
because why would we choose to do something
that makes us miserable when there's
an endless number of things that need doing?
And that's what will keep us going in this work,
is finding joy in it.
Not like I sit around all day giggling while I answer emails.
Not that kind of joy, but these moments of satisfaction.
It can be so gratifying
to do this work. It can feel so good to be contributing to climate solutions and people
should be able to design their piece of this in a way that, and for me a big part of that is
who I do this work with, not just what I do, but who I do it with. So no jerks.
We're going to take a short break,
and then we will be right back.
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And we're back. I come at this as a comedian from the world of comedy
and I find that like-
The climate crisis is hilarious.
You have, and you have such a good sense of humor about it.
Well, there are funny, you know what I do,
I think it is in some ways, right?
I think it is in a bunch of different ways.
One, I feel like we absolutely need to figure out
how to take climate seriously without taking ourselves seriously.
Exactly.
Like, this is my entire vibe.
Like, homies, just stop being so serious about yourself
because that's not helping us.
So I feel like definitely more of this irreverence also,
especially when we think about who's causing the problem.
We didn't all equally cause this problem.
We should absolutely be roasting fossil fuel companies,
big ag executives, like PR executives, politicians
who are creating this fast track to hell for us all.
And so I feel like there's some roasting to be done,
some irreverence, some like plenty of room for goofiness
in how we talk about and engage people in solutions.
And as you saw in the book,
like lots of sassy footnotes for sure.
And one of the things in a non-sassy footnote,
and just an interesting footnote in your book,
is you talk about the story of the peach crayon
and how the color for the peach crayon
used to be called flesh-toned.
And then as a result of civil rights pressure,
the crayon color was changed to peach,
because that's actually not everyone's flesh tone.
That's only some people's flesh tone.
And it is peach color is the color
that it actually is all the time.
So, and you use that as an example
of how small changes in culture can lead
to big cultural shifts and big policy shifts as well.
Yeah, I mean, I brought that up because
as I was trying to figure out how to write
about my formative experiences with the ocean and nature, I was, the book opens with me describing seeing a
coral reef for the first time and these, seeing these colors, right?
These turquoise, teal, magenta, golden rod, fuchsia colors in the form of fish swimming
around.
I was like, wait, what? Nature can do this?
Tell me more, also, maybe this is my job.
But then also, thinking about that in the context
of my own family, my black Jamaican father,
my white Irish mother, and how their relationship
was essentially illegal in most states
when they found each other.
And how this is also the lens through which
I approach this work is just like who I am, right?
I'm this like biracial girl from Brooklyn, New York
who fell in love with the ocean in Florida,
who was just like, and worms in my backyard,
and autumn leaves and all of it.
There's a moment where you're having a conversation
about the role that cultural change can play
in climate futures with Franklin Leonard and Adam McKay
to people who are deeply involved and powerful in Hollywood.
And they talk about the scully effect, right?
The idea that like having a female scientist.
I've never seen the X-Files.
So I'm like, I'll take your word for it. Oh, but like having a strong female never seen the X-Files. So I'm like, I'll take your word for it.
Oh, but like having a strong female lead on the X-Files,
who was a scientist, that that actually
inspired thousands or millions of women to go into science.
This idea that cultural change precedes policy change
is so important.
It's something that people are familiar with when we think
about, say, like gay marriage, how there are all
these cultural touchstones,
these sitcoms that just showed us that gay people, gay partnerships were normal. This
was something that's happening. It's not a threat to anyone. And that those sorts of
shifts in pop culture preceded certainly the Supreme Court being like, okay, you guys can get married
now. And what does that kind of thing look like on climate? And we honestly like haven't
had the cultural saturation that we would need from Hollywood TV, music, art, showing
us not just the climate problem, but climate solutions. And that was my motivation for creating this book, this What If We Get It Right, this visioning of climate futures, and then of
course realizing that I couldn't write the book myself, I had to talk to all my
smart friends in all these different sectors. So the book is at its heart,
these 20 interviews. And this one that you point to about the role of Hollywood
was really interesting to me because Franklin and Adam
are explaining how hard it is to get anything made in Hollywood and that really it's about
like making the financial case that people will watch it. And so how do you create climate
content that people want to watch but also not to fall into this trap that it hasn't been made before. So clearly
it couldn't be successful. And that's why it hasn't been made this sort of like circular
logic. But the thing about that conversation that stuck with me the most is that they said,
well, Hollywood can't get it right until the news gets it right. Because until the executives in Hollywood
are seeing the kind of news that properly frames
our climate challenge and starts to talk about the solutions,
they're not going to bring that understanding and urgency
into their decision making when they're thinking about which
projects to green light.
And so it was based on that conversation with them
that I went back and added another interview to the book with a climate journalist, Kendra Pierre Lewis, who's so this book was really a process of me following my nose and
talking to all of these incredible people that I get to collaborate with, part of that
joy, part of my Venn diagram, and offering packaging up their wisdom for everyone else. So in a way, this book is like a 20 episode podcast season,
because the audio book,
you can hear everything in their own voices.
Even for a lot of people who are kind of bought in,
like I would consider myself to be someone who like,
I believe the science, I care about climate change,
I care about the future.
But before reading your book and before engaging with your work,
I actually don't think I had realized
how little I had like an image of what it looks like,
what it could look like in a good way.
I had an image of like, I want to avoid bad.
I don't want to die.
I don't want to have my house be on fire or underwater.
But I didn't have this vision of like,
you can work towards something that is amazing
and better than what we have now,
where it's full of these things that are full of joy
and beauty and connection.
And there's a reason to work for it,
not just against the worst,
but also like you can raise the ceiling
and not just the floor.
It's so hard to like muster the energy and like fortitude
to work on climate solutions if you can't imagine something
good coming out the other end, right?
And I think that's part of what's been holding us back
is a lot of the images, most of the images
we see in popular culture about climate
are terrifying and awful.
And there's good reason for that, right?
Those things are real.
But the question is then, OK, so what world do we want to create?
And I don't think there's really been enough
of a public conversation about that.
So if we agree that the status quo is not working
and continuing on the path that we status quo is not working and continuing
on the path that we're on is increasingly dangerous, what does the alternative look
like? What world do we want? And I think this was my attempt to offer, you know, offer something
to that conversation, a collective, some collective wisdom.
Okay, we are going to have much more in this conversation right after this, but first I
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And we are back with Ayanna Elizabeth Johnson,
author of What If We Get It Right?
You talk about many times in the book,
you frame this as problems versus possibilities.
So here are the problems, but there's also these incredible possibilities. I think that's a really helpful
way for listeners to think about this stuff and to think about it not just in the scared
way but the generative way.
And for people who are watching instead of listening to this, there's this like two-page
spread that opens every section of 10 problems and 10 possibilities. So like on nature and agriculture
or on design in the built environment or on policy.
I was the creative director for the book too, the art director.
So thinking about how to visually lay that out
in terms of never list the problems
without the possibilities.
So it's this literal centerfold,
this spread of showing those side by side.
On page 68, you have,
you've literally printed out an email exchange
from your mom in the book.
And it's just you saying,
why can't you ever send me a 10 minute video
as she sends you a link to an hour long video?
It's so good and so relatable.
It's just happening yesterday.
She's like, you should watch this three hour.
I'm like, is there an article about this?
Maybe we could summarize that somewhere.
I got things to do, mom.
I love that.
Your mom moved out of the city and started a homestead farm.
So your mom made a pretty dramatic life change
in line with thinking about what it means to be sustainable,
it means to be living in one of these positive climate futures.
It makes me wonder, how much do you think that the rest of us, the people who are listening and
watching, how much should we be thinking about those kinds of dramatic shifts in our lives,
versus how much are we thinking about shifts to our daily kind of status quo life?
Like changing the things at the edges
versus changing it from the ground up?
I think this is a time for transformation, right?
Little tweaks to the way that we exist
are not going to get us the kind of transformation
of our society, economy, culture, policy, politics
that we need in order to address the climate
crisis. So once we set the bar at transformation, I think that opens up all different types
of thinking. And there's an interview in the book with someone named Brian Donahue, which
is his imagining of what it would look like to have people in cities
start to repopulate small towns and rural areas. Because in the US, we have a lot of
small towns that are emptied out, right, because of any number of factors of industrialization
or globalization or, you know, consolidation of big box stores and that kind of thing.
And to improve our food system in terms of sustainability and food security, making sure
that we have a next generation of farmers is really important.
The average age of farmers in America is like in their 60s.
You know, we don't have a next generation of people who are eager to go into it,
or they don't have the money to buy farms because land is too expensive. And there's all these
barriers to getting it right in terms of agriculture. But one of them is just like,
we need more people living in rural areas again. And that would also start to rebalance some of
our political divide. And having people interacting with each other as
neighbors who don't share politics would actually be really helpful too. So he's written a whole
manifesto about this, which is brilliant and lovely. And I talked to him about that in our
interview and he's done a lot of work imagining what that would look like for New England.
So I think it's, yeah, for people who are like, I don't know about this Brooklyn life,
I think it's totally reasonable to think about where else we could live
in order to contribute to some of the societal changes that we want to see.
Whenever I'm reading a book, I try and pay close attention to word choices and to, you know,
words that stand out at me that maybe are used more frequently or less frequently than in other
books. And reading What if We Get This Right, the words that jumped out at me were adaptive
and maladaptive. I think what you're picking up on is that we need to change, right?
Because the world is changing.
And to just continue doing things the way we've been doing things as the world dramatically
changes around us, right?
As extreme weather events become more frequent and more intense, as wildfires and floods and hurricanes and droughts and all of these
sea level rise, etc. are all happening as our federal climate policy structure crumbles
to just be like, I'll just keep doing things the same way I've always done them, just
is absolutely maladaptive, right? Like the world has changed, so we need to change.
is absolutely maladaptive, right? Like the world has changed, so we need to change. It is a message of the book that something's got to give, right? The more we just try to
hold on and pretend that everything's more or less fine, that's maladaptive because it
diminishes, because it's out of touch with reality and diminishes our ability to even
think about visions of climate future that require transformation instead of like edits.
I also try to think about it as like just useful or not useful.
Okay, tell me about that.
The question that I ask myself repeatedly is, how can I be most useful?
And in the context of this climate action Venn diagram,
that answer is different for everybody.
And that's OK, right?
And that's why I needed to talk to all these different experts
to create this book.
And that's why I do what I do from the perspective
of a marine biologist, a policy nerd, a kid from Brooklyn
who's really enamored with design, who's practiced how
to communicate.
This set of things that I have to offer is, that's my set of things.
And so how can I offer those in service of climate solutions?
There's a poem in the book called To Be of Use.
It's one of my all time favorites, something that I come back to a lot because I think
that's the big question.
Like, how can we be of use in this moment in human history?
Going back to this question of hope and my relationship with it, I kind of sometimes
feel like hope is a very flimsy motivator because it's something, it's a feeling, right? And
we can't always feel hopeful and we can sometimes, and if hope become, if feeling hopeful is
a precursor to action, then we're screwed, to me. Because I don't feel hopeful a lot
of the time. But I can consistently try to be useful.
And to me, that feels so good, right?
To put it more simply,
instead of focusing on how to be hopeful,
I think we can just focus on how to be useful.
You have a part in the early part of your book
where you talk about the reality check,
and you just say one of the biggest questions
that people ask you is, how fucked are we?
Mm-hmm.
Oh, you want me to answer this?
Well, the answer is, like, pretty fucked,
but we don't have to be.
Right?
But there's a whole bunch of stuff
we could do to make it better.
And I think sometimes that sounds boring and incrementalist
to people.
But, you know, like, oh, well, if we
can't, like, solve climate change,
then what are we even doing?
And I think it's so important to remember
that there's actually a really big difference
between one foot and five feet of sea level rise.
There's a very big difference between three degrees
Fahrenheit and seven degrees Fahrenheit
of planetary warming, right?
There's a big difference between like having snow
in the future and not having snow in the future.
When the change is at this planetary magnitude, these increments become more important than ever.
So I don't say things like solve climate change because the climate has already changed. It's
continuing to change. Like we have changed the chemistry of the atmosphere and the ocean
because of all the fossil fuels we've burned. Like that is just a fact. How much more it changes
and how quickly that happens and if we adapt to those changes or not, that is still an open
question. Like the future is not fully written yet. And so every day I wake up and
I'm like, all right, how are we going to have the best possible future that's available
to us? Because hundreds of millions of lives hang in the balance. I mean, within the US
alone, we're talking about 13 million people having to relocate because of sea level rise
alone in the next few decades, hundreds of millions of people globally, right?
Like that's a big deal,
how much we can rein in sea level rise, for example,
as an ocean policy nerd,
this is the lens through which I see some of these things
as often oceany, salty examples.
I thought one of the most eye-opening parts of the book
for me was you walk through this idea for a policy change,
this blue new deal, and you go through this idea for a policy change, this Blue New Deal, and
you go through the nitty-gritty timeline of what does it actually take to get politicians
to pay attention to something, to put a policy through. And it's not a short timeline, and
it's not a straight line in any way.
Yeah. And this is a very different conversation to be having now than it was when I wrote
the book a year ago, right? Because we have a completely different conversation to be having now than it was when I wrote the book a year ago, right?
Because we have a completely different federal policy
context within which it seems like really challenging
to think of how to be constructive.
And so actually, a lot of my work on the policy side
right now is thinking about what cities and states can do.
Because cities and states are close to their constituents thinking about how this adaptation question, right? And a lot of people are
gonna have to relocate. There's all sorts of stuff that people can do at a local
level. If we're thinking about building codes for the future or zoning laws or
efficiency standards or public transit or food systems, right? What kind
of things are we supporting with our local tax dollars and how can town
councils, mayors, state representatives help to support more resilience in the
communities that they represent? There's so much room for productivity there.
But yeah, I mean, this idea of a Blue New Deal
was just how do we make sure the ocean is included
in federal climate policy?
That's a conversation that people were having in Congress
and in nonprofits and in communities
and in the scientific disciplines.
And so I teamed up with a bunch of colleagues
who I really find delightful to start to put this on paper, right?
Like me and the head of Surf Rider Foundation
and Ocean Seaweed and Oyster Farmer
and Apolisi Wonk who worked in Congress for dozens of years
were just like, what would it look like?
If the vision doesn't exist, what do we think it should be?
And how do we keep moving these ideas forward,
regardless of who's in office?
And what are all the different roles
to play in making that happen?
So these kinds of things are like lifetime projects.
What I realized doing the book is
that we need to be thinking more in terms of generations.
And there's this phrase from Martin Luther King
that comes into my mind a lot, which is, he said,
I may not get there with you.
He wasn't like, we're solving civil rights tomorrow.
It's going to be so great.
We're going to have a big party.
This is the work of generations.
This is a huge challenge to transform society in this way.
And the climate crisis requires a similar,
if not greater, level of transformation.
And so thinking about it in that context,
that longer arc, I think is also really helpful for me.
A part that I also found really moving is the story that you tell of your father as a black architect in New York City
and feeling like he hadn't maybe accomplished what you would have hoped for him to accomplish,
that he didn't have these skyscrapers in his name or in all of that stuff.
And then talking to a younger generation of a younger black architect
and realizing that
your father had actually paved the way in ways that you hadn't fully realized.
Yeah, that was such a powerful moment hearing that he knew about my father's firm, that he'd heard of him and he had in fact opened lots of doors and that I had been thinking about the whole thing
wrong, right? That it's not about the glory, it's about the ripples.
All of us can only hope to have our work make meaningful
ripples in the world.
The way we live make meaningful ripples in our communities.
Thank you so much.
I really appreciate you making time to be on the show.
This was so fantastic.
My pleasure.
Thanks for reading the book.
Oh, thanks for writing it.
That is it for this episode of How to Be a Better Human. Oh, my pleasure. Thanks for reading the book. Oh, thanks for writing it. Yeah.
That is it for this episode of How to Be a Better Human. Thank you so much for listening to the show.
Thank you to our guest, Ayanna Elizabeth Johnson.
Her book is called What If We Get It Right?
I am your host, Chris Duffy, and you can find more from me,
including my weekly newsletter and other projects
at chrisduffycomedy.com.
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How to Be a Better Human.
Thank you so much for listening, and take care.
Thanks so much for listening, and take care.
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