Opinion Advocates for ideas and draws conclusions based on the author/producerβs interpretation of facts and data.
Judging Your Climate Impact (and Mine)
Everyone hates the preachy envirotwerp. When someone annoying says you canβt eat steak or fly to Bora Bora or buy the double-decker limited edition Yeezy Hummer, the backlash effects are profound. Eco-Insufferables make you want to buy two tickets to Bora Bora (Bora Bora Bora Bora?) just to spite them. My fear of inciting this backlash as just such a smug preacher is so great I eschewed talking climate for ages, rather than have my friends or family hate me for thinking I was trying to take their steaks away.
But.
I think what I most feared in grade school is somewhat true. Back then I thought people could read my faceβthat they could see what I was thinking (that so and so was stupid or cute, that I had taken the cookies, that every embarrassing idea [dogs and cats are brothers and sisters] was visible on my countenance.)
Lately, Iβve been annoyed when I sense people projecting my imagined judgments upon them. The tiny asides by friends and loved ones: Sarah will think this is bad. I bristle because I donβt want to make people feel bad. I bristle because guilt is the worst way to get anyone to change their behavior. And most of all, I bristle because I am TOTALLY ABSOLUTELY NOT judging them.
Or maybe I am?
This has been my reckoning of the last few months. Iβve been lying to myself a bit (and also lying to myself that I am self-aware, I guess!). I donβt want friends and fam to feel bad about their choices. I donβt explicitly tote up my peersβ carbon footprints, because itβs ABOUT THE SYSTEM, and everyone just has to live their life and forge this transition for themselves. But also… deep down, if Iβm being honest with myself, I probably am judging them. Just as I judge myself for booking a flight or buying a bedazzled monster truck.
And I have to be OK with this perception of judgment. Because everyone can see it on my face. Each wrinkle marks a churlish appraisal.
I used to love travel and had always planned a future βround-the-world trek, in which Iβd take my kids to see and complain about it all. But so many of the places that Iβd planned to get to someday (, !) are places I now feel itβs pretty much unethical to visit. Itβs a harsh take, and one that can instantly make a would-be jet-setter hate me forever, while telling me how said locality absolutely NEEDS our tourism dollars (um, no). Which is why I pretty much keep it to myself, unless asked for my opinions on travel influencers while being held at gunpoint. But thereβs no point in hiding it if people sense Iβm a judgy ogre anyway. And if Iβm honest with myself, I do feel a pang of judginess when I see someoneβs Hawaiβi pics. Iβd really like to eat a shaved ice there with my kids, too.
What does it mean to own my judginess? Iβm still not sure. I fear that friends will hide their travel from me, or not talk to me about their wanderlust! Which I donβt want. I want to hear about these places and these desires, and live vicariously through my friendsβ adventures. And I want to think that itβs all still possible! I remember a time when travel was so rare that, when someone got back from a neat trip, weβd get out the slide projector to look at these images of places weβd only dream of going. Iβm… old? But it was beautiful (and occasionally tedious, depending on the skill of the photographer) to appreciate the infrequent and very special luxury of getting to transport yourself to a different part of the world. There was a reverence, too, because the traveler had thought long and hard about where they wanted to go.
I donβt want to go on a rant about how the very idea of carbon-intensive travel is new, and that the number of people with income enough to travel is just too great for the world to bear. I donβt want to tell people that low-carbon air travel is still a loooong way away, I donβt want to tell them that, by taking one flight, theyβve contributed more to the overheating of the planet than 99% of all humans in history. I donβt want to tell them that the travel they enjoy today means and a precarious future for my own children. I hate the person who says those things. Because those things suuuuuucccckkkk!!!! And, you know, I too dream of shaved ice in Hawaiβi someday.
I also donβt like this judginess because it falls into the arena. Telling people they have to give up things is the surest way to get them to tune out, and itβs also not always true. Tackling the climate crisis is NOT about reduced quality of life. Itβs just that the transitioning of hard-to-decarbonize sectors (like air travel) will take timeβ¦ and may require a modest change of lifestyle as we forge the alternative way. Weβre in that middle space.
So where does that leave it all? I donβt know. But as the planet heats up, I want to be as forthright as I can be. And this internal/external disconnect does nothing useful for anyone. So Iβm trying to own my judginess, and hoping that doing so doesnβt mean people Scarlet Letter me, avoiding me like the Bermuda Buzzkill that I am.
This Week:
Can people intuit your climate judgments? Let me know!
Last Week:
How you doinβ? I got lots of lovely notes from people . I hope everyone is coping, and caring, and resting, and grieving, and coming back at it restored, with all the vim that you can muster!
Whatβs Enough?
The latest issue of Πή³΅΄σΆΣ Magazine is all about the concept of enough, and I canβt get enough of it (which seems wrong). Hereβs my comic in which I posit that thereβs no good word in the English language for that feeling of perfect satiation. People threw loads of suggestions at me on IG, and I particularly love (thanks, dear Kate!)
People Dancing:
My mum and her sisters started the International Folk Dancing night on Mont Royal in Montreal 50 years ago, and . What a cool thing! And my mom still goes! Love you, Mom!
Thanks so much for reading. If you like this newsletter, please feel free to subscribe, and share it.
Hope you are safe, happy, and healthy. Have a lovely weekend,
Sarah
P.S. This is my newsletter for the week of August 27, 2021, published in partnership with Πή³΅΄σΆΣ Media. You can sign up to get Minimum Viable Planet newsletter emailed directly to you at .
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Sarah Lazarovic
is an award-winning artist, creative director, freelance animator and filmmaker, and journalist, covering news and cultural events in comic form. She is the author of A Bunch of Pretty Things I Did Not Buy.
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