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Overwhelmed by climate change? I started by changing me.

Though I’ve long been motivated to steward the Earth, I was surprised to learn that my lifestyle wasn’t as sustainable as I had thought. I had underestimated how much I was contributing to climate change. I wanted to do my part to improve.

“This is the biggest, thorniest, scariest issue that I think humanity has ever confronted,” says The Nature Conservancy’s Rebecca Benner. But, she added, “If we change every person’s behavior, we change the world.”

Why We Wrote This

When monumental problems feel daunting, finding agency in our corner of the world helps us regain a sense of control. As our writer learned, a collective of people acting locally is powerful.

When I reflected on the changes in my life that have stuck, I saw a pattern. I took one habit and adjusted it; when that became my norm, I adopted another: switching to reusable bags, buying my clothes secondhand, using cloth diapers. 

As I see how I can continue to make changes, I don’t feel so hopeless. Getting one toy secondhand won’t save the planet, but it might continue to move the needle toward the lifestyle shift we need. I’ll be part of a collective of people who are adopting sustainable practices, one small change at a time.

From my earliest days, I’ve been encouraged to steward the Earth. In school, the familiar adage “reduce, reuse, recycle” was drilled in us. We planted trees on Earth Day. Every year we plodded through the 2-mile stretch of the highway my church adopted, filling our bags with takeout containers, old magazines, and other debris.

As the planet continued to heat up through my adolescence and young adulthood, I realized we were now facing a global crisis. As an adult, I was surprised to learn that my lifestyle wasn’t as sustainable as I had thought. The more I learned, the more I realized I had underestimated how much my way of life was contributing to climate change. I wanted to do my part to make it better, and as a journalist I had an excuse to call experts to see how I might make a difference.

Scott Wilson

“If we change every person’s behavior, we change the world,” says Rebecca Benner, managing director of climate programs at The Nature Conservancy.

Why We Wrote This

When monumental problems feel daunting, finding agency in our corner of the world helps us regain a sense of control. As our writer learned, a collective of people acting locally is powerful.

During our conversation, I told her about my desire to adopt more sustainable practices. The hardest part, I confided, is feeling that it’s never enough.

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