TLDR: Christiana Figueres argues that mother Earth, while simultaneously hurting and thriving, offers humanity a profound lesson in resilience. Rather than paralyzing ourselves with ecological despair, we can learn to hold grief and joy together, understand our interbeing with all life, and engage in mindful activism rooted in transformation rather than reactivity. The key is to let ecological pain break our hearts open—not break us down—so we act with both fierce responsibility and compassionate wisdom.
Why Do We Focus Only on Ecological Collapse?
Humans naturally default to negative information. Our frontal lobes are wired to detect threats, and our news feeds reinforce this bias by streaming constant warnings about planetary breakdown. We know that we have breached six or perhaps seven planetary boundaries, and the scientific evidence of ecological disaster is overwhelming. Yet Figueres invites a more complex perception: mother Earth is both hurting and thriving at the same time. We miss the second half of that truth because our neurological default pulls us toward the negative.
This bias toward darkness is understandable—the stakes are real. But it leaves us incomplete in our understanding. Figueres does not minimize the pain or hide from the reality of destruction. Instead, she contextualizes it within a larger frame: nature has a much broader bandwidth of adaptation and resilience capacity than humans do.
How Does Nature's Resilience Differ From Ours?
Human beings are among 8 million species on this planet, and we require very specific environmental conditions to thrive—a certain temperature, certain rhythms of hydrology, precise balances of atmosphere and water. We occupy a narrow "sweet spot" of conditions. If those conditions change too much, we suffer or perish.
Nature as a whole, by contrast, has been evolving for 4.5 billion years. She is not bound to any single species' survival. Over those billions of years, nature has adapted to volcanic winters, asteroid impacts, atmospheric shifts, and mass extinction events. Even as humans kill many species, nature continues to evolve new ones. Figueres notes: "Nature wants more life. Nature wants to thrive. Nature wants to support the interactions among all of its different pieces." This is nature's fundamental orientation, and it operates at a timescale and with a flexibility far beyond human comprehension.
The planet will continue to evolve even without us. This is not comfort for human complacency, but a call to humility. We have created very difficult conditions for ourselves through a belief in supremacy—the notion that we are separate from the web of life, that everything belongs to us, that we can extract without limits.
What Does It Mean That We Named an Entire Geological Era After Ourselves?
The geological era that began in the 1950s is called the Anthropocene—named after humans. Figueres calls this "the ultimate arrogance and sense of superiority." Every previous geological era was named for the conditions that defined it: the Jurassic for its distinct life forms, the Cambrian for its explosion of diversity. We have named an entire geological epoch after our own species while being in "constant interbeing with 8 million other species."
Yes, humans are the most active agents of change on the planet right now. That is true. But Figueres suggests we ask: Is it not also arrogant to center ourselves so completely when we are merely one thread in an vast web of life? This question is not meant to shame but to reorient. It is an invitation to remember that we are part of nature, not outside it; participants in a web of relationships, not rulers over it.
How Can Grief Transform Into Responsible Action?
Figueres describes her own stance as "both one of deep humility and reverence for nature, but also gratitude." She experiences pain for what humans are doing to the biosphere, and she experiences joy and gratitude for what nature continues to do despite that harm. The teaching she draws from nature is this: resilience is not the absence of pain, but the capacity to hold pain without being paralyzed by it.
She names two responses to ecological grief that she rejects: (1) turning away from the pain entirely, and (2) letting the pain paralyze or enclose us. Instead, she calls for a third path: "allow it to break us open, to break our hearts open. Not to break us down, but to break us open."
When our hearts break open—when we feel the full weight of what is being destroyed—we become more awake to our interbeing with all life. We recognize that we are not separate from the destruction; we participate in it through our consumption, our systems, our inherited beliefs. And precisely because we are interwoven with all life, we have a responsibility to act in ways that "create life" rather than diminish it. This is not guilt-driven action but love-driven action, rooted in the recognition of kinship.
What Is Mindful Activism?
Figueres broadens the definition of activism beyond street protest and organized campaigns. "We're all activists," she says. "We all choose how we engage with the world." Activism is any conscious choice about how we interact with the world—what we consume, what we support, what we refuse, how we speak, what we build, how we relate.
Mindful activism is grounded in awareness and transformation rather than reactivity. It holds two seemingly opposite truths at once: we can be "fierce and in pain and be compassionate at the same time." We can "recognize the urgency of what needs to be done and be wise about what we do both at the same time."
The crucial distinction Figueres makes is between acting on the basis of transformation versus acting on the basis of "just taking what is out there and making more of a reality out of it." When we act from fear, anger, or desperation alone, we often amplify the problem. We may fight the destruction of a forest so fiercely that we reinforce the narrative of scarcity and conflict. But when we act from an understanding of interconnection and a vision of what we want to create, our actions carry a different energy. They are not merely reactive—they are generative.
This begins internally. "First, how do we transform it in ourselves?" Figueres asks. Before we can transform the external reality of climate crisis and ecological breakdown, we must transform our own consciousness—our sense of separation, our fear, our despair. From that transformed consciousness, our engagement with the world becomes different. It is less about fighting against and more about nurturing toward. It is less about proving something and more about practicing something.
Where to Go From Here
Christiana Figueres's teaching invites several concrete practices. First, deliberately notice both the destruction and the thriving. When you hear ecological news, ask yourself: What else is true? Where is life still pushing forward? Where is adaptation happening? This is not denial but balance.
Second, practice sitting with your own grief about the state of the world without letting it immobilize you. Figueres suggests allowing it to "break your heart open," which requires feeling it fully, not numbing it or spiritually bypassing it.
Third, examine how you are an activist in your daily choices. What are you choosing to support through your attention, time, and resources? How might you make those choices from a place of transformation rather than fear?
Finally, notice where your activism—personal or collective—is coming from. Is it rooted in mindfulness, in love, in awareness of interconnection? Or is it reactive, punitive, rooted in a sense of separation? There is no judgment in asking; there is only the clarification that helps us act with both compassion and effectiveness.
Vietnamese Zen master, poet, and peace activist. Founded Plum Village in France and was central to the engaged Buddhism movement. His teachings on mindfulness, interbeing, and walk…
Figueres teaches that we can hold ecological grief and joy simultaneously, and let that grief 'break our hearts open' rather than break us down. Notice both the destruction and the thriving in nature; this balance helps shift from paralysis to purposeful action grounded in love rather than fear.
Yes, according to Figueres. Nature has 4.5 billion years of evolution and adaptation behind it. While humans are killing many species, nature continues to evolve new ones and is resilient across vastly longer timescales than human civilization. The planet will continue evolving even without human presence.
Mindful activism means choosing consciously how you engage with the world in everyday decisions—not just in organized campaigns. It means acting from awareness and a vision of what you want to create, rather than purely reacting to what you oppose. It holds both urgency and wisdom at once.
First, transform your consciousness internally—examine your sense of separation and fear. From that transformed awareness of interbeing with all life, your actions become generative rather than purely reactive. This allows you to be both fierce and compassionate, acting for life rather than against destruction.
The Anthropocene was named after humans because we are the most active agents of planetary change since the 1950s. Figueres calls this arrogant, as it centers one species among 8 million in constant relationship. It reflects a belief in human superiority that has driven ecological harm and needs to be questioned.
Unlike nature as a whole, humans require a narrow 'sweet spot' of environmental conditions—specific temperature ranges, certain rhythms of hydrology, and stable atmospheric balances. Nature adapts across much broader ranges; humans are uniquely dependent on these precise conditions to thrive.