How to Talk to People - How to Age Up on a Warming Planet
Episode Date: May 12, 2025How should we think about aging when the impacts of climate change can make the future feel so uncertain? That’s a question Sarah Ray, professor and chair of environmental studies at Cal Poly Humbol...dt, has been helping her students consider. Though climate anxiety can cause some to feel overwhelmed, Ray has tips for how to minimize doom loops and inaction. How to Age Up co-hosts Yasmin Tayag and Natalie Brennan talk about how current climate concerns compare to the existential crises of previous generations, and how to practice hope during uncertain times. Here is a link to the full poem “The Low Road” by Marge Piercy. A passage is referenced in this episode. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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What did you want to be when you grew up?
Honestly, Tomb Raider.
Oh, I have to admit, I have no idea what that is.
Natalie!
The iconic video game Lara Croft Tomb Raider?
No.
Angelina Jolie's best movie role?
She's a hot archaeologist who travels around the world searching for
lost artifacts and fighting off enemies. I hope this is actually perfect for you.
The next logical step in your science supporting journey. It's still kind of my
dream job. Hey, I believe in you. I'm Yasmin Tayek, a staff writer with The
Atlantic. And I'm Natalie Bren a staff writer with The Atlantic.
And I'm Natalie Brennan, producer at The Atlantic.
This is How to Age Up.
Natalie, what was your dream job?
I don't know that growing up I had a dream job.
That's very Gen Z of you.
What do you mean, like in a I don't dream of labor way?
No, I've just been thinking a lot about how your generation struggles to imagine the future.
Yeah, I mean, can you blame us?
No, but it's something I think about with younger generations too.
Like, I worry about the future of my son Jaime a lot. Yeah, I mean, economically, politically, most of all because of climate change.
I was already worried about a lot of these things when I was a teen, and that feeling
has just become more intense as I've gotten older.
So yeah, I imagine that kids now who are constantly exposed to fears about the climate
from such a young age picture an even bleaker future.
Right.
But when you just rattled off that list, what happened to you?
What do you mean?
Like, how do I feel right now?
Yeah.
Oh, awful.
Like, frozen.
And who wouldn't be?
Psychiatrists have given what you're feeling a name.
It's called climate anxiety.
And in the same way in therapy, you may work through paralysis in regards to your personal anxiety.
Scientists are starting to think through psychologically how we could move through our climate anxiety.
Because I'm that weird person who's like, no, we don't need action.
We just need better thoughts. It's not about how 10 things you can do to save the planet.
There's a hundred million books out there.
This is like 10 things you can think about to save the planet.
Natalie, that's Dr. Sarah Ray.
She's a professor and chair of the environmental studies department at Cal Poly Humboldt, and
she studies how emotions play into our thinking
about the climate.
She wrote the book, A Field Guide to Climate Anxiety, and she pointed to one moment that
really launched her into action about all this.
I was trying to do an activity with my students where I kind of guided them through almost
a meditation, if you will, which was my first time ever doing anything weird like that.
I was like, this is going to be a little weird.
You got to just go with me on this.
And I had them kind of close their eyes
and visualize a future that they would desire.
A future that where everything that they had hoped for
and worked for in their life had come to manifest
and come to pass.
And I asked them to feel it and smell it
and taste it and all that.
And the whole thing is very embodied,
which is unusual for me at the time. feel it and smell it and taste it and all that. And the whole thing is very embodied,
which is unusual for me at the time.
And when the exercise ended, I expected them to come back.
After this trance, I'd put them in
and have all these visions of utopia to share.
And then of course, what we would do
is sort of backward design.
Okay, what's the very next step
to kind of get from here to there?
Now that you've visualized what you want,
let's start moving in that direction.
Instead of constantly being gripped by fear of a future
that they dread, right?
So with climate change and all of the things
that are happening, one of the things I noticed
with my students is that they didn't desire their future.
They were afraid of it.
And so they turned to me and they said,
Sarah, we couldn't really imagine a future. Oh BALDWIN-WELCH Oh my gosh.
KATE BOWEN We don't have any tools for imagining
what we would desire.
And all we could imagine was like either blankness
or the apocalypse that they had seen
in the most recent whatever video or film
or whatever that they'd seen or news, news, right?
And so that was a real moment, a wake-up call for me
that I thought, how can we expect these young people
to do all the work we want them to do
to fix all the problems that are out there
if they don't even want to exist in that future?
They don't even desire anything about that future.
It's just so grim.
It's really depressing.
It's really depressing.
Yeah, I cried.
That was the first moment I thought, this is really bad.
So what happened next?
So it wasn't just that they were living in a scary world.
It was that they were getting information
about a scary world in a very particular way.
This was maybe 10 or 12 years ago.
And the real shift towards all of us
getting our news through social media
and the real shift to making the algorithms reinforce negativity was really just beginning at that time.
So that was the first step of trying to peel apart the layers of the onion.
Are they going to be able to live on a planet and grow food and breathe air and drink water?
And why would they have children in this world?
And are they going to retire?
Can they have a job that doesn't just add to the problem?
And how will they pay the bills?
Why even go to college in this kind of world?
And that's something that, like, Greta Thunberg really brought
to the fore when she was like, I'm not going to go to school.
Because five years hence when I get my degree,
when I'm qualified to do anything about it,
our planet will be radically different.
And I don't want to wait around for that.
That kind of impatience was something
that I was really starting to detect in them.
One thing I hear so much in conversations about youth and climate dread is that, you
know, older people always say, oh, well, every generation had something to worry about.
We had the nuclear threat.
We had the wartime dread and so on.
Is climate dread different from those past experiences?
Yeah, I think that there's a yes and no answer to that. The yes part of that answer is it
is just the same as all those other really difficult generational traumas in that the
lessons that those folks learned by going through those experiences are things that
young people need to get caught up on pretty quick. So I think about civil rights, or I think about the Holocaust,
Vietnam War, all kinds of things that in the last few generations we've heard a lot about.
These people who have been activists or involved in resistance movements in
these spaces have had to overcome an incredible amount of stuff.
They've had to sacrifice a lot.
They've had to do the work without any evidence that it was going to come out the way it did.
The collective organizing skills, the kind of resilience and grit to do the work, the
sense that the little things that you do do matter a lot.
Those kinds of things are what I call a climate wisdom.
They're like wisdom that we get from the elders.
You know, like we should take these tools from our elders
who have gone through this stuff and ask them,
how do they get through?
How do they keep going?
On the other hand,
it is a qualitatively different problem.
And the reason why I would say so is because
the very functioning of the entire biosphere is at stake.
And so all of the systems that humans rely on are going to be challenged and might in
fact fall apart.
Nuclear war might be something similar, like the annihilation of all life in one fell swoop
feels scarier in a way than climate change, but it has the same kind of existential, you know,
the ability to grow food to work, the ability to get water in our bodies.
All of these things will be challenged.
Right.
Yeah, because the very capacity of the earth to produce the materials on which human civilization
relies to function is, could be undermined.
Is being undermined.
It's happening. It's being undermined. It's happening.
It's happening.
Yeah.
It's already on its path.
Natalie, when I was talking with Professor Ray,
that song, I Melt With You by Modern English,
it was totally in my head.
Do you know that one?
Remind me.
I'll stop the world and melt with you.
Of course. I just wanted to make you sing.
Well, it's actually about having sex when a nuclear bomb drops.
Oh, whoa.
Yeah, that's why they melt. And so the song came out in 1982 during the Cold War.
And I imagine that the band grew up being bombarded with all this messaging about the nuclear threat.
And so when I hear the song, it sounds to me like they just accepted total annihilation as a very real possibility.
I don't want to downplay in any way the threat of nuclear war.
But I do think that it's different. It's the threat
of a possibility. It's something that could happen.
—Whereas climate change is something that is happening.
—Is happening every day and feels like we're all walking around going about our days as
the red button gets pushed with no alarm. —Right. And you think that the psychological impact is different.
Yes. What is so different to me about the emotions of this moment is that people
are trying to make sense of what we rationally know to be true about climate
change and then there's anger and confusion about why we aren't doing more
to stop it.
Right. The anxiety and anger that comes with feeling like society has decided that we're
okay with our own destruction.
Exactly. And it feels sometimes like even if we were to do something, it would not be
enough.
Yeah. That in part is climate anxiety and action. There are things that people can do, have been doing,
to limit that cognitive dissonance,
to feel like their actions align with their beliefs.
And it's something Professor Ray and I spoke a lot about.
Well, as you can, you may be experienced as I was describing why this was qualitatively a unique threat,
it doesn't really land well with one's nervous system. Right? Like you take that information in, whether
or not that's the first time you've ever heard that stuff or you've been hearing
it for a long time, the nervous system in order to keep homeostasis and to feel
like it can function and keep going in the day doesn't take that in
very well. And we tend, we have particular patterns in our bodies
about what we want to do about that.
The obvious ones that you're probably most familiar with
are like fight, flight, or freeze.
And I think that when young people are taking
in this information and have been doing it for a long time,
they figure out how to move from the kind of shock of it
to integrating it, to figuring out how to do something
about it, and that is a whole series of things
that they have maybe gone through
by the time they were 15 or 16.
And then they try to translate this
to somebody who maybe has never thought about it.
And I think that that's where the stress of that amygdala
of those people they're talking to,
there's some empathy there, there's some grace there
around if this person's taking this in at all,
that's taking a lot of courage.
There's just nothing about this information cognitively
in terms of our neuroscience of our wiring in our brains
that can handle this.
So it is actually far more natural for our brains
to disavow, deny, put our heads in the sand.
Because if you square this information with your daily life,
there's a big cognitive dissonance, as they call it.
So what are the ways that we should be teaching young people
to acknowledge their feelings of dread and fear
in a healthy way?
One of the things that's happening
is that there's a whole movement of climate-aware therapists
to figure out new tools that they didn't have before.
Because it's one thing to say uncertainty in your family.
It's another thing to bring uncertainty of the planet into the therapy room.
I think a lot of my students, for example, will tell me that they brought this up in
therapy and had their therapist tell them to stop consuming the news and to not worry
about it.
So that's not helpful.
Right?
Like, oh, that's just being told that your feelings are irrational, right?
And that's never a good technique.
And also that you have to completely detach from literally everything.
That's not exactly feasible.
If the therapists themselves haven't figured out how to face this kind of stuff,
you can see why that would be happening.
But there is an alternative, right?
And that alternative is let's look clear-eyed about how bad things are,
and let's have that be a call to action.
Because it turns out that the kind of debilitating effects of climate
anxiety are assuaged most effectively, not when we do an action that solves
the problem, which is really what you'd think it would be like, this is a
problem that can't be solved by any one person's action.
So why should I even do anything?
That's what most young people feel.
Right?
Like I'm not even gonna try that
Particular assumption rests on the idea that if we did the action our climate anxiety would be assuaged by fixing it
It turns out that the psychologists have studied this show that this is not true and the act of being in a group is
Actually the thing that alleviates anxiety and makes us feel efficacious
Which is really an interesting
and important tool, especially I think in a culture that's so individualistic. So Bill
McKibben is sort of famous for saying, you know, people constantly ask me all the time,
you know, what's the most one most important effective thing I can do as an individual?
He always says, the one most important thing you can do is not be an individual, you know,
not think of individualism as the mechanism by which this is gonna get accomplished.
And it turns out from a psychology perspective, it's not just good for the
planet, that's actually good for our mental health. So that's really, I think
the key is how can we solve climate anxiety? Well yeah, it'd be great to solve
climate. That would be the main way, yeah, sure. But the fact that that feels
impossible actually causes that depression loop to get worse.
So I think when we're talking about how to teach young people
or how to bring this up to young people,
it's always with showing the models
of how people are solving the problem.
Always, always, always.
Because we're social creatures.
Psychologically, if we see other people doing things,
we're way more likely to do something.
And actually, it's an interesting piece of data
that psychologists have also proved
that the vast majority of Americans think
that only like 30 or 40% of other Americans
care about climate change,
when the number is more like 70 or 80%.
So that right there accounts for a lot of our inaction.
If we just think other people around us
and our neighbors don't care,
we're less likely to do stuff.
So I want to go back a tiny bit
because I wanted to tease out a bit more, you know,
the consequences of not correcting or not teaching people how to deal with their climate
feelings.
So what exactly happens from a psychological perspective when a person feels that an issue
is just too big to conquer? and, you know, how can
we make that feel smaller?
Psychologists often call this concept pseudo-inefficacy, and the definition of it is basically this.
The negative feeling of not being able to solve the whole problem outweighs the positive
feeling of being able to solve just a little part of it.
With climate change, we're talking about this big humongous intractable problem that no
one person could possibly touch. It's too big, I can't even face it, I'm gonna go
and binge Netflix, right? I mean that's that's how climate change is being
addressed right now. So there are sort of two solutions to this, right? One is to
frame the problem in smaller chunks. How do we break it up into small chunks that
any one person can feel like,
oh, I can get up in the morning
and have that sense of accomplishment
that I finished a task by the end of the day?
Because as we know from nudge psychology
that that creates a feedback loop of positive reinforcement,
we're more likely to get up the next morning
and do it again, do some more, it feels good.
Sometimes that means that the work that we're doing
has nothing to do with climate change.
It has to do with getting to know our neighbors. It has to do with building climate change. It has to do with getting to know our neighbors.
It has to do with building community trust.
It has to do with all kinds of things that are going to cumulatively add up
to building more resilience for what's coming.
So frame things in smaller pieces.
And you said there were two solutions.
Yeah.
The second dimension of solving this pseudo-infefficacy puzzle is to see ourselves as much bigger
than we actually are.
And so a lot of what happens with sort of the way young people are raised is that the
vast majority of what they're consuming is telling them that they don't have any power,
that they don't have political power.
And for the most part, unless they have a lot of money, they don't even have economic
power.
And so the sense of powerlessness,
some people talk about this as learned powerlessness
or manufactured powerlessness,
which is basically saying,
we give up our power before we've even tried to exert it.
And so what I try to do with young people
is to show all the places
that they do already have a lot of power.
And it's not just economics, it's not even just politics.
There's all kinds of social places
and cultural places that they have power.
They have power in being kind,
they have power in being a role model,
they have a power in throwing in
even the tiniest little bit of energy
into a larger movement.
When we are part of a larger movement
as part of a collective,
we are magnified way more than just individual people.
If you're feeling despair,
you might be suffering from individualism.
Because really the cure
is seeing yourself as part of a larger group.
So you know, once people feel like they have a little more agency, a little more power,
what's a tool for people to use when they're ready to start thinking about how to get involved?
What's a small step we can take?
People often think of action as like, oh, I'm going to ride my bike to work, or I'm
going to join this march, or I'm going to call my representatives. These are all
really important things and I'm not dismissing that,
but I am trying to break it down to even how to even get to the place where you
could do that. For me, my favorite one, the one I always
have as my lifeline, is as I'm consuming all this news, as I'm
trying to understand the lay of the land,
which is happening at a quick clip right now, I get really overwhelmed by the monster in the room.
And I think of all of the fear I have and my amygdala and my nervous system is just really agitated.
And I will say that I'm in that state, even talking to you right now. And so it's helpful for me to redirect my attention.
And it's also what neuroscientists will tell you to do in cognitive behavioral therapy,
which is to redirect my attention to the thing that I love.
Because it turns out the fear and the anger that I feel are secondary emotions for my
love, right?
They are signposts that are helping me figure out what I love.
And usually it's like, I love nature.
I love my children.
I love my students.
I love justice and health.
And the thing, the monster in the room is so upsetting to me because it's
threatening those things that I love.
Okay.
So instead of just fighting the monster, which I feel I do not have any power to
do, what I do have power to do is tend and nurture the things that I love so they grow. So, Adrienne Marie Brown
says, feed what you want to grow. And this is a beautiful mantra for me that I hold on
to when I'm feeling really overwhelmed. And that is very much about attention, really
at the scale of attention. This is not about taking shorter showers. This is about what
am I paying attention to? It's very micro scale.
Mm-hmm. And it's a reframing in itself, right?
Absolutely.
Let's not focus on the monster. Let's focus on tending the garden.
The garden, right? And in doing so, it, I guess, motivates you to fight the monster
so you can continue to tend the garden.
Yeah, and maybe you titrate. Maybe sometimes you have energy for fighting the monster,
and maybe when you're feeling the most depleted
and you don't even know what to put the next foot forward at,
you think, okay, I know I can nurture the thing I love.
Okay, so how do I do that?
And then the emotion of love turns out
to be way more sustaining in terms of our energy
and our resilience.
That means that we can generate that energy that we need to go back and fight the monster.
рмармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармармар But the way that I solve that practice, or the way that I heal around that practice, is that I immediately know that it's gonna leave me feeling really bad.
So I need to have a rescue thing.
And that thing is to turn right directly towards what I love.
So I always have, once I put my phone down,
I always have 15 things in front of me that I love.
I've got my dogs, I've got my children,
I've got my house, I've got my husband,
I got all this stuff that I know
that if I let the bad news get to me,
I will actually feel like not giving them love.
I will feel like withdrawing.
And the real problem with living in a story of apocalypse is that if we are not thoughtful
about it, it will make us want to withdraw even more.
And so we really have to actively intervene.
In my work life, this happens all
the time as well. I often look to administration or the people in charge and get despairing.
No shade on them. They're just in their structure doing the things they have to do. And I get
despairing and I think I can't control that thing. I cannot get into the president's head
and have them think differently.
And then I immediately think, why am I in this job?
I should just quit.
I hate this.
This sends me, just in the scale of my job,
sends me into cynicism and burnout.
The spare loop.
Yeah, the spare loop, right?
And I'm like, I'm in it, I'm in it, I'm in it.
So how do I then use the mantra, feed what you want
to grow to get out of that?
I immediately think, what gives me pleasure here?
If I really touch into that and I spend some time thinking about it, I know that
is a great, incredible vocation and calling I feel to have an effect on my
students. Okay.
So what I'm afraid of is that this scary monster in the room is going to destroy
my students' capacities and experiences.
How can I turn and use the position that I have,
the relative power that I do have,
to have an effect in that space?
And so I often have this turn to my students moment
where I'm like, remember that I'm here for the students.
OK, let's go back to that.
Because once I go back to that, my cup is always full.
I come away from my classes always feeling like,
oh, this is what I'm here for.
This is the juice. Yasmine, this conversation is so helpful because I feel so much shame whenever I get that feeling
that this is all too overwhelming and I just want to run away to our lavender farm.
Same.
But even the lavender farm
will be affected by climate change.
It's true.
Sorry.
But this instinct to want to run away or to isolate
when there's a threat is real, right?
Yeah.
I try to at least remind myself
that that's just how evolutionarily we're wired to react
to danger.
Yeah.
That reminds me of one review paper I read on the threat of nuclear war that found that
it made adults prone to fantasy and make believe, like, as a way to respond to the danger.
I just finished a fantasy book called Legends and Lattes. That was
a really nice temporary escape.
You really are such a nerd. I think fantasy is a great way to recharge. I mean, it's okay to take a break to get you back into the game.
That feels very different from avoidance or denial because the only way to truly push
through the overwhelming paralysis is to figure out what you need in order to be able to take
action after you've had that rest.
Exactly.
If it wasn't for legends and lattes, I wouldn't have had the will or brainpower to read that
review paper I mentioned.
But yes, addressing these issues head on is how to move through them.
The nuclear war study even actually said that parents shouldn't ignore their kids' anxieties
and misrepresent reality to them.
Kids who are more aware of the situation actually tended to be the most optimistic. I think that's definitely something we need to focus on now with climate change too.
I saw a survey that most teens learn about climate change from the internet.
And so when we're thinking about how an entire generation is aging up and learning about such a huge and existential issue, we want to
figure out how to facilitate those conversations, right? The same way we do
when we talk to children about death or divorce or illness. Learning about this
alone, on your own, on the, can make the problem a lot bigger and lonelier.
Yeah. I actually think the turning your attention toward love to break out of overwhelming thoughts or paralysis
is a practice that would be so helpful to teach children and teens to help them with so many aspects of aging.
Like, not just climate change.
Right, yeah, like with first heartbreak or puberty.
Yeah, applying to college.
Adolescence is just such an overwhelming part of aging, and the earlier you work on these
habits the better prepared you are for them when the overwhelm pops up in bigger ways.
We're going to take a short break, but when we come back.
You guys wanna go there. Yeah, hey, aging up is complicated
and we're willing to get into it.
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Learn more about Samsung Vision AI televisions at Samsung.com. So, Professor Ray, I'm curious.
Among your students, you know, what else are you noticing that affects them or
that they're thinking about when it comes to aging up in a very uncertain world?
Absolutely. The number one thing is economic precarity. Number one. In fact, I would say
that even overrides climate and then the climate stuff might come into focus more
through college classes. Or like the intersection of climate and
how climate change is going to exacerbate existing inequalities and
problems in the world. So climate change is often called the the great magnifier
right like all the inequalities exists and all the places where people are
already suffering are just gonna get much worse. So the you know main thing
that they've been taught as they're
growing up is economics, right? That going to college is really expensive.
This has really got to be worth it, right?
Yeah. I mean, a lot of younger people feel like they're worse off than their
parents' generation. I mean, I definitely do. Even if statistically, it still isn't
clear if we actually are. But I can see how that would play into questions about whether college is worth it,
you know, if it doesn't guarantee them a job.
Yeah, and that sense of maybe I can escape that problem individually myself, right,
with my own merit or my own hard work and my own degree.
And so there's the scarcity politics of that perpetuates that individualism,
perpetuates that fear,
perpetuates the cycle that you just talked about, the doom loop.
You know, so much of our conversation today has touched on this theme of individual versus collective action,
which is a theme that's come up a lot this season.
If we rely on a sense of being able to do this ourselves, we will always fall short.
We will always feel like we're failing.
And the feeling of failing, as we just discussed,
doesn't generate more engagement.
So that's a model that just can't work.
That can't work for where we're going.
There's all kinds of ways that people are trying to
create alternative models for how they would live. There's research
out there that says that the best investment you can make in making your home or yourself be safe
in a natural disaster is to have good neighborly trust, have good relationships with your neighbors.
That makes intuitive sense. These are the people who, like when all communication breaks down,
are going to be the people you rely on to like run across the yard, run across the
yard, help you with some extra water or whatever. And so it makes sense but it's
not it's not something that people are spending every day thinking about. How do
I build trust with my neighbors today? You know? But my one of my neighbors in
the last couple of months has decided once a month to have a bunch of people
she likes in the neighborhood over for tea on Sunday. And she did this because she just felt
desperate and alone. And then when I started to bring some of this research
in she was like, oh my gosh, I didn't realize I was doing this political action
by like attending to my aloneness in this particular way in that's actually
very functional, very
utilitarian, but also has a side effect of just feeling good.
Yeah.
I mean, bringing together neighbors, especially if they're from different backgrounds or life
experiences or ages, to discuss climate, that's totally a political action.
There's a lot of intersectionality at play in the groups who are most active in the climate movement. It's not just about young people and their climate anxiety. Can
you tell me more about the people who are showing up?
So there's all kinds of reasons that depending on your relative vulnerability, you might
care more about climate change. Queer communities care more about climate change than straight
communities. And so there's data also that shows that Latinx people care about the climate change more
than white people by doubles digits.
And like in sort of hierarchy of order, Latinx communities, then black communities, and then
white communities are like the bottom of the list.
Interesting.
The theory there is that the more vulnerable community is to climate change itself, and
the less faith they have that the government will help them because of historical structural
oppression, the more worried they'll be about it, right?
The vast majority of times when, especially people with power, experience fear around
environmental problems.
What often happens is not that they go about creating more just structures and distributing
wealth more equally and making sure people who are vulnerable are supported.
In fact, the opposite usually happens with people who are already in positions of power,
generally speaking, when they hear about climate change threats, they tend to hoard resources more.
They tend to actually enact violence against people who they think of as threatening those resources
or who are causing the problems in the first place.
So there's all this language around immigrants coming to America
and having a greater ecological footprint when they get to America,
and therefore that's why we shouldn't allow immigrants into America.
This kind of argument, which is often called ecofascism, can lead to some pretty, well,
racist ideas underwritten by climate change, falsely, and even violence.
That's really concerning.
The tendency by some to find scapegoats, to try and just evade personal responsibility.
That actually makes me think of another pretty extreme way of evading the climate crisis.
It's this idea that we should just escape Earth entirely.
Like Earth is screwed so let's just move to Mars.
It's obviously still a very moonshot idea, but it does come up.
And it gets a lot of investment from really wealthy billionaires like Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos.
They've both put a lot of money into exploring space.
What do you make of that?
Is that a valid way to be dealing with climate anxiety?
So the idea that we might be able to escape
the limitations of capitalism, of the planet's limits,
of resource limitations, that's really the fantasy here, right?
So when we hear about economists or fossil fuel folks saying,
the goal of the future is not to get rid of climate change,
it's to separate humans' dependence on the planet systems.
That's what they explicitly say is the goal.
So the next obvious conclusion to that, if you're one of those kind of tech bros who's
into that kind of stuff, is to think, well, the best way to do that is to find other planets.
Right?
Yeah.
And there's a fantasy of transcendence there, of transcending the messiness of human
life, using money to transcend the planet's limits, using money to transcend the muckiness
of inequality and the social movements that might arise from that.
We're seeing so much evidence of wanting that just to go away, all that stuff to just
go away.
Yeah.
It's, you know, the escape plan, that's a withdrawal in itself.
It puts the focus back on the individual and ensuring your own survival.
And I think that's the opposite of what we need.
Yeah, absolutely.
It's the opposite of what we need.
And I think that the nervous system solution there, right, like if you think about when
we perceive big threats, if we don't train our nervous system
culturally or individually, we don't have a process by which we train our nervous system
to respond to threats through social engagement, it's very possible that our response might be
flight or fight or freeze or some of these other maybe less constructive or less healing
responses that actually don't get to the root cause of the problem at all.
or less healing responses that actually don't get to the root cause of the problem at all. Escape is a real nervous system response. It's legitimate.
But it's not medicine for the planet's woes.
Well, Professor Ray, thank you so much for being here today.
Thanks so much.
Yes, ma'am. Thank you so much.
Yes, ma'am.
Thank you so much.
Yes, ma'am.
I feel like I am going to have Professor Ray's voice in my head reminding me that if you're
not thoughtful about it, apocalyptic living will lead you to withdraw for quite some time.
Apocalyptic living begets more apocalyptic living.
No, truly. I mean, we're now about five years out from the start of the pandemic.
And I only now feel like I'm at a place where I'm ready to start unlearning a lot of the
habits that I developed during that time, which led to a lot of isolation. I find that
I withdraw as default now.
Have you read Derek Thompson's Atlantic piece, The Antisocial Century?
You know, I really could have used hearing your interview with Professor Wray before
I read that piece because it definitely led to a lot of overwhelm. The piece does a beautiful job of outlining how American society is on an anti-social streak
and how solitude has almost been marketed to us as luxury.
Me time.
Right, me time.
Ordering takeout, meditating, going to work out, headphones in,
I've really bought into the idea that to recharge is to be alone.
And what we've been hearing throughout this season, again and again,
is that to live a healthy, long life is to instead find our way back to a social society.
Right. We set out to answer the question how to age up, and we heard a lot from experts
in vastly different fields about how to connect.
Totally. It's funny the lengths will go to try and figure out the secret to living longer when the answer, if there's to be anyone's
singular answer, is to think less about yourself as the main part of the equation.
I read something recently that really captures the sentiment on the vulnerability of being
an individual and the possibility and power in teaming up.
It acknowledged what so many of our experts have been saying.
Our ability to age up relies on pushing back against forces as huge as climate change,
ageism, housing insecurity, but you just can't do it alone.
It says the more you band together with others, first with one, then two, then even more people,
the better chances you have at succeeding.
Yasmin, are you quoting a poem to me?
The tables have turned.
To end the season, I'd love to read you part of a poem.
Is that okay?
Welcome, Devin.
This is a passage from the poem, The Low Road by Marge Piercy. With six you can rent a whole house,
eat pie for dinner with no seconds,
and hold a fundraising party.
A dozen make a demonstration, a hundred fill a hall.
And the poem goes on to drive home the point
that there's power in those numbers.
It goes on one at a time.
It starts when you care to act.
It starts when you do it again and they said no.
It starts when you say we and know who you mean.
And each day you mean one more.
That's all for this season of How to Age Up.
How to Age Up was hosted by me, Yasmin Tayag,
and co-hosted and produced by me, Natalie Brennan.
Our editors are Claudina Bade and Jocelyn Frank.
Fact check by Ena Alvarado.
Our engineer is Rob Smirziak.
Rob also composed some of the music for this show.
The executive producer of audio is Claudina Bade,
and the managing editor of audio is Andrea Valdez.
How To will be back with a new season very soon.