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March 31, 2009

Why volunteer with The Climate Project?



I volunteer with The Climate Project, presenting the slideshow from Al Gore’s movie An Inconvenient Truth.

I went to Melbourne in September 2007 to train with Al Gore, along with one other Kiwi and approximately 100 Aussies. Since then, I have presented over 25 times, to a huge range of people. I have presented to elementary schools, middle schools, secondary schools, farmers groups, business leaders, women business leaders, recreational groups and youth leadership organizations. I even got to emcee Earth Hour in Christchurch, NZ last year!

I studied a bit about climate change in the late 1980s at university in New Jersey. We learnt that the way things were trending, we could expect major global changes within the next few decades. We learnt that species loss might accelerate in that time and sea levels might rise. The climate in my native New Zealand was expected to become warmer (and to a beach girl, it sounded vaguely like a good idea). I was in my 20s, and my 50s seemed an outrageously long way off -- my parents were only just in theirs).

I am nearing 45, and everything I thought was vaguely interesting then is now urgent.

I got just how urgent in early 2007.

I was in Hawaii for my brother’s wedding. He studied coral (and Fine Arts) at University, and loves to snorkel and swim in Hawaii’s gorgeous water. My daughter Grace was 6. She had never been snorkeling (the water around NZ is pretty chilly!), so Ted and I took her to a little bay and put the mask and snorkel on her.

At first it was miserable -- water up the nose etc. -- but soon I became entranced. Suddenly, I became aware of a little warm body snuggled up to mine. Face down. Delighted. Mesmerized. In awe of all that she could see. An entire universe had opened up to her just two yards from the beach. Her grin was priceless.

A few days later we were having our final swim at another beach before we flew out home to NZ. Right there, on a public beach off a main road, three turtles were hanging out. Grace and I grabbed our snorkels and tagged along a couple of yards behind them until she got tired some 30 minutes later.

I got out and surveyed the beach, feeling satisfied with life -- until I was struck by a terrible thought: one day, I might have to tell Grace's children that there used to be turtles.

Tears came to my eyes, and I realized I couldn’t wait another 20 years to do something. For the sake of those turtles, my daughter, and my as-yet-decades-off grandchildren, I had to take action now.

I volunteer because activism gives me hope. It also inspires my children, friends and family. I want children to know we are sorting it, and won’t leave it for them to deal with.

To book a presentation in your area go to www.theclimateproject.org, or in Australia/NZ go to www.acfonline.org and follow the Climate Change links.

What small step will you take today?

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