Sunday, 26 April 2015

Avast, ye of avid apathy!

The 45th World Earth Day took place on Wednesday of this week, with this year’s theme “It’s Our Turn To Lead” encouraging people ahead of the Climate Change Summit in Paris to “redefine progress” and lead in the combat against climate change at a community level. My Instagram feed was full of photos of picturesque places around the world, with the captions commenting mainly on the beauty of nature and wishing all a #happyearthday. This was great to see – it truly is a breath-taking place, this world of ours, and we ought to stop and appreciate it more. I shared a similar photo myself. But as I did, I felt a pang of guilt. I recalled the words of Meghan Markle, speaking at the One Young World conference in Dublin last October about the “Bring Back Our Girls” photo campaign that began in response to the kidnapping of over 270 Nigerian school girls by Boko Haram in April 2014. Without criticising the campaign, she made the point that it’s all too easy for us these days to jump onto social media, share a photo or a video and then feel like we’ve done our part to help that cause. As I flicked through those photos, I wondered how many of those sharing them had heard of, read or signed the Earth Statement that launched that same day (http://earthstatement.org/), or whether many would feel that they had played a role in Earth Day just by sharing a photo. I’m not casting judgement on anyone – I’ve certainly been guilty of doing the same in the past – but this day, like John Cage faced with a life predicament, I was troubled.




As some of you may know, a couple of months ago I reverted back to an old habit of mine – vegetarianism. Not for health reasons, as you might assume - #eatclean #cleanliving #instahun - but because I’d been reading a lot about how reducing your meat intake vastly reduces your carbon footprint. I’ve always had some sort of an environmental conscience. I recycle. I walk when I can. I wash my clothes at 30 degrees. But I’ve been doing these things just because I know I should be. Global warming, and the ice caps melting, and all that jazz. Global warming is a bit like the wooden spoon of the Irish childhood. We’re cautioned that if we don’t stop what we are doing this instant, it will materialize and we shall suffer its wrath – but yet, we never actually see it, it’s not fully tangible, and therefore we question whether it really exists. I didn’t really believe in those seemingly insignificant actions, nor in the difference that they could make. It is only this year that the message about global warming, and our individual culpability and responsibility, hit home for me.

This is predominantly attributable to the monthly delivery of my subscription to the National Geographic, a birthday gift from an astute amigo of mine. This magazine is fantastic. I have learned more about the world from reading it over the past 6 months than I have over the last four years of college. I also took advantage of some great events that took place throughout this college year; the One Young World conference, as mentioned above, and smaller events organised by Trinity societies like Law Soc, TCD Environmental Society and Global Development Society, such as a panel discussion on Climate Justice and a talk from leader of the UN World Food Programme, Ertharin Cousins. The net result of all of this was the activation of my antennae of atmospheric awareness. Things are bad. Things do need to change. And we do need to act on an individual level. One of the ways I felt that I could improve my own carbon footprint was to become a vegetarian again. These are some pretty convincing results to be fair:

From the National Geographic, obvs.

I’m not going to sit here and preach facts about climate change to you – I probably can’t tell you anything you haven’t heard already, and besides I know from experience that it takes more than reading a few statistics to inspire people to action. The point I really want to make is that we are window-shopping our way through life’s calamities and injustices. We see a cause, maybe we’re slightly moved by it, or maybe we think it’s absolutely awful – but most of the time, that’s as far as it goes. We might write a status on it. We might share a photo. Yes, this raises awareness and that’s always great – but are we doing it purely because we care or in part because it alleviates the guilt we feel that we aren’t doing anything more? I am sick to the teeth with myself for feeling passionately about something and yet doing nothing proactive about it, except ruminating on it from time to time. Apathy is an affliction I am choosing to elude from now on.

As great as it would be if we all became vegetarians, I’m not going to come around snatching burgers out of your hands and stuffing my aubergines down your throat (unless I make a really good moussaka. Then y’all gonna want me to put that in your mouths). But if you have a passion about something, please – do something about it. Our mothers told us to pick our battles, but they left out the second half of the sentence. Pick your battles - and fight them. Whether it’s the environment, animal rights, refugees in Syria, the plight of the endangered Yangtze finless porpoise, whatever your passion may be – just don’t be the person left wishing they had done something more. 
Cmon, who wouldn't want to fight for this guy? He's fecking adorable.


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