It’s Monday, and the 2018 Climate Conference in Poland (COP24) is in full swing. Seems as good a day as any to talk about the Apocalypse. I’ve been hesitating on this writing, because I understand that a blog post about the world as we know it going down in flames is… a bummer of sorts. But I need to share some things with you.
I think we humans are trained to expect the Apocalypse to be beyond obvious. We are excellent at denial. Unless we can actually see a meteor hurtling towards us, or a tidal wave engulfing the Statue of Liberty, we will act like everything’s business as usual.
But seriously, isn’t it getting harder and harder to dismiss how badly we’ve f*cked things up, as a species? It’s biblically disastrous out there. The world is a fury of burning and flooding at the same time. Humanitarian crises are so ubiquitous and interminable that they become background news. Conscious bigotry has never been stronger. In the US, there are now so many guns that kids are getting killed by stray bullets, inside their own homes. And with all of our knowledge and progress, there are still innumerable humans who think we can afford to throw garbage around – both literally and figuratively.
This post has been brewing for a long time, but especially since October when I started working with my Grade 5/6 class on our Remembrance Day assembly contribution.
This class is a relatively small, calm group of kids who live in a nice, safe, pretty neighbourhood. The average income around here is very healthy, as is the proportion of highly educated parents. It’s a tight-knit community, very supportive. I’m lucky to teach at my school, and this group of Grade 5/6s is frankly lovely.
The sad part is that, as a group, they are not optimistic. They don’t think the future is rosy. They live their lives and have fun and get silly and run around, but they don’t see their adulthood as an exciting realm of possibilities. They’re not even sure how much adulthood they’re going to get. One girl has already sworn off of having children, because she doesn’t want to inflict the world on them.
These are 10- and 11-year-olds. They are smart, they think a lot, and they can see that we’re in dire straits.
We began talking about Remembrance Day from the perspective of why we commemorate it. Most of these kids have not experienced war first-hand, but they understand that they wouldn’t want to. They are grateful for sacrifices others have made – that their families, for the most part, have not had to make. They can imagine the awful things people have gone through. They want to show respect.
But… what has all the suffering been for? Has it earned us the peaceful world that so many humans have imagined and wished for?
Is the world at peace? I ask my students. No, obviously not, they reply. They know that wars are still happening all over the world. They also know that peace is about more than a lack of wars, and that even our part of the world cannot be called peaceful. Not right now.
We started writing about it. Here’s a list of things they worry about, in their words. (I’ve alphabetized for your convenience.)
Why the World is Not At Peace:
- abduction
- abuse
- animal abuse
- anxiety
- bad environments
- bullying
- cancer
- child abuse
- climate change
- corruption
- cyber bullying
- depression
- drugs
- drunk driving
- equity problems
- expensive child care
- food
- gun laws
- land
- littering
- low income rates
- hackers
- homelessness
- homophobia
- money
- no food
- no schooling
- North Korea
- not awareness
- not proper rights
- overpopulation
- people being mentally unstable
- people not believing you
- police getting off easy
- politics
- poverty
- racism
- rape/hiding it
- sexism
- shootings
- starvation
- suicide
- terrorists
- trash/pollution
- Trump
- violence
- war
- young marriage
It’s no wonder that anxiety and depression form the latest children’s health crisis in the western world. (And this list doesn’t even mention water supply, the issue I think is most likely to screw us all for good.)
When I was a kid in the 1980s, I worried about a lot of stuff too. (Most of the same stuff, actually. Things haven’t changed as much as I hoped.) I knew the world was dangerous and not within my power to fix. Sometimes this knowledge loomed large over me, and I struggled. But I never felt hopeless. I never stopped planning for a good – better – future.
Folks. IT IS NOT OKAY WHEN KIDS LOSE HOPE. They are built to be hopeful creatures, and they deserve to be. And we need them to be.
I think a lot of the problem stems from kids’ knowledge, confirmed every day on every branch of social media, that adults are not only human but A) a lot of them are assholes and/or idiots and B) they don’t know how to fix things. The whole role model situation is a total snafu. If you can’t esteem the available leaders, then nothing and no one is safe.
Although I was shocked at the cynicism of the discussion we had, I did my best to lift things up a bit. Yes, it all seems overwhelming and insurmountable. We talked about the value of attitude, of small steps in the right direction, of cumulative effort. When everything seems doomed, it’s better to do something than nothing.
Here are some ideas they came up with to improve things:
- be nice
- check in on people
- don’t litter
- don’t vote for Nestlé
- end war
- fix the government
- have a better attitude
- have better laws
- help people with no food
- help places with no good water
- kick out Trump from presidency
- LGBTQ+ President
- listen
- make a treaty
- meet in the middle and try to figure it out
- more homes for the homeless
- more school safety
- more women’s sports on TV
- no guns
- proper jail sentencing
- protest
- raise awareness
- raise incomes
- ride a bike
- stop bullying
- stop polluting
- vote for better candidates
- we can share the money
- woman president
I love how simply these things are put. Some of them truly are simple and feasible. And of course many of them are dauntingly complex and subject to infinite interpretation. Things like “fix the government” and “proper jail sentencing” could be debated until the end of the world.
Here’s one so meticulous it made me laugh:
- show people what they’ve done over the years in a slideshow but adding every little detail in public
And another that didn’t make me laugh at all, because I know it was seriously written:
- last resort leaving Earth and live on the Moon
As though we’d be any better behaved on the moon. Sigh.
Right now, Sir David Attenborough is doing his best to tell changemakers that THIS IS SERIOUS AND REAL, ALREADY. As did Mark Ruffalo and Cher and co. in the Liberatum film “In This Climate” and Leo DiCaprio in his film “Before the Flood.”
These UN climate change conferences have been going on since 1995 (hence “COP24” – 24 years of talking about this problem and watching it get worse). In October, the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) told us the outlook was considerably worse than previously thought… And we talked about that for a few days – and moved on.
It feels like forever that people have been saying We need to do something, we need to fix this as other people deny the whole thing… And here’s us, as a species, still squabbling about stupid stuff, as though selfishness and hatred were sustainable options.
This is not fair to the kids. Sean and I know that our children are taking in practically everything we say (when we’re having our own conversations – not when we’re asking them to do things) – and it’s a huge burden on them just knowing things about the state of the world. They fret and worry, and we try to say less when they can hear us. It’s not that we want them to be oblivious, but at six and nine, they need time to build up the good anticipation that will help them to persevere as the shit continues to hit the fan.
On the bright side, things we do to change the world for the better are often overlapping and symbiotic. They can improve many layers of a situation. As Rebecca Solnit pointed out ofter the IPCC’s announcement, climate action is human rights. There is still a worst-case scenario and a best-case scenario for our species on this planet, and we owe it to everybody to shoot for the latter.
I promise that my next post will be less depressing.
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All well said. The kind of thing I recently realized I have written about more than any other topic in my occasional opinion pieces for the Hamilton Spectator. But I’m not able to talk to kids the way you (and other teachers) are, and so much depends on whether children grow up thinking they can change things, and that they have to. I’m sorry your students are worried and depressed, but keep making those lists of ways to enact change and they may well become aware and motivated, a much more positive combination!
That is something I’ve read quite a bit about recently – the need and the ways to avoid paralysis in the face of the bad news and seeming hopelessness, especially about climate. If only we could have learned better, centuries ago, from Indigenous peoples who think seven generations ahead…
Besides the obvious downer feeling of this post, the thing that struck me most is that I didn’t even know COP24 was happening, because here in the US, our news cycle is currently obsessed with Trump messing up trade talks with China and with the fact that George H. W. Bush just died (and in DC, that’s messing up our traffic as they move his body from the plane to the Capitol, where he’s lying in state, and Wednesday they’ll be moving it to the National Cathedral for a service, then back to the plane).
We are somewhat obsessed with Trump here, too, though I can only imagine how much worse it must be on your side of the border. Sometimes I think he’s one big karmically-ordained distraction, to keep us all from noticing as we circle the drain. (Wait, did you say downer?? Haha.) GHWB’s death was more of a blip up here. (Though if it were affecting our traffic you can bet we’d pay attention! :P)
Your kids at home and at school are so fortunate to have you as an adult role model who is willing to gracefully tackle these tough conversations.
Thank you, Anna! I have to admit, those conversations and lessons where we dig deep are the most fascinating and engaging for me, as well as for them, so I guess that’s a win all around… 🙂 (As long as we work the French in there.)
I really liked the fact that after talking about the negative forces the world is dealing with in today’s time, you also touched upon the positives. I am still very optimistic about the future. In spite of US withdrawal from the Paris Agreement, things still look very bright. Many countries are working on a mission mode to switch rapidly to renewable and clean sources of energy. Every day some new city is banning plastic. Even in US, the government might not be concerned about the climate, but the people are much more enlighted. The success of Tesla’s various products is one of the great examples of that.
Thank you for reading Abby! You’re absolutely right, there are many, many people using their brilliant minds for the best possible outcomes for our species. It’s inspiring to read about them – and helps our mental health to focus on that progress.