BY KHADIJA KARIM
Okay, let’s be real—climate change is like that huge pile of laundry you keep ignoring. You know it’s there; you know you should do something about it, but every time you look at it, you just kinda…walk away.
Guess what? Paul Hawken, an environmentalist and a pretty smart guy, is here to tell us we’ve been looking at the problem with the wrong lens. According to him, we don’t actually have a climate crisis—we are the crisis. Yep. Us. Humans. The main characters in this whole disaster movie, I can picture the title “Earth: The Climate Change Catastrophe”. But don’t panic! There’s actually a way to fix it that doesn’t involve building an underground bunker.
Wait, What? We’re the problem?
Yep. Hawken explains that we’ve been blaming carbon like it’s some kind of evil villain, when really, it’s just doing its job. Carbon isn’t the bad guy—we are. We’re the ones who threw nature off balance—chopping down forests, burning fossil fuels like there’s no tomorrow, and treating the planet like a disposable movie set for our human drama. Instead of pointing fingers at the atmosphere, maybe we should take a quick look in a mirror.
““It’s not just about “fighting” climate change—it’s about changing the way we see the world.”
You know how we always talk about “fighting” climate change? Hawken says that’s the wrong mindset. Nature isn’t an enemy we need to battle—it’s literally where we come from. The way we talk about it—”combat,” “tackle,” “war on carbon”—makes it sound like something we need to defeat. Why are we acting like Earth is the villain when we’re the ones trashing our home?
So… what’s the fix?
Hawken has a much better approach: instead of waging war on nature, we should be working with it. His book, “Regeneration: Ending the Climate Crisis in One Generation,” isn’t just about stopping damage in climate change—it’s about taking a few steps back and creating more life. Sounds fancy, but it’s actually pretty simple.
For example, instead of just planting trees because it “looks good,” we should focus on restoring entire ecosystems. Instead of trying to control nature, we should let it do its thing—because, surprise surprise, it actually knows how to heal itself if we stop messing with it.
The best part? This isn’t just about big corporations and world leaders fixing things. We can all be part of the solution in small, but powerful ways—supporting local farms, eating more plants, wasting less, and even just reconnecting with nature instead of treating it like leftover food on your plate.
What it all comes down to
So, what’s the lesson here? It’s not just about “fighting” climate change—it’s about changing the way we see the world. Instead of treating nature like a separate thing we need to “fix,” we should actually start, you know, respecting it, you know, give it thought. Maybe give a tree a compliment. High-five a flower. Okay, maybe don’t do that, but you get the idea. The point is, we need to stop treating Earth like a rental car on vacation and more like our forever home.
Spoiler alert: it is.