Kris Carr

Wellness

How Courage Can Heal Your Body and the Planet

read all about it

Hiya Gorgeous,

I was recently watching the nightly news when I saw a heartbreaking story about a dying killer whale and her baby. It hurt so much that I almost changed the channel. But my inner activist whispered,

“Don’t turn away. Learn about these whales. They will teach you something about yourself.”

So today I want to share this story and my broader revelations with you. Don’t worry, they’re not graphic. And please don’t turn away because you too may learn something, just like I did.

Scientists near the South Pole were making house calls (so to speak) to check on the health of these majestic beings.

Using a drone, they were able to evaluate the whales’ conditions. What they saw was shocking. The mother and baby were wasting away, literally starving to death because they didn’t have enough food. Why? Climate change. The warming ocean temperatures have greatly diminished their food supply.

After the news segment, I faded into the sofa and slept for hours. It all just felt so big, depressing and out of control—familiar feelings for me around environmental stories. When my hubby asked if I was OK, I lied and told him that I had a tummy ache and was tired from a long work day—that I’d be fine. I just needed to sleep (with my comforting heating pad).

The next morning, I woke up and immediately thought about those whales. As tears poured down my cheeks, I went from wondering what happened to our world to questioning why we let it happen.

 

Ten years ago when I was pitching my film, Crazy Sexy Cancer, to TV networks, there seemed to be a popular resurgence of the environmental movement. “Green” was hot. The Sundance channel had a green station, Al Gore made a hit movie, there were many trendy eco blogs and news sites with dedicated green sections. It felt very hopeful. People had awakened to the seriousness of the situation and it seemed there was no turning back. Pretty soon we’d all be driving cooking oil fueled cars. I imagined pulling into McDonald’s instead of Citgo to filler’ up.

And then, like most bubbles, green burst. As if it was a fad—no more important than an outdated fashion trend.

Today, even though environmental issues are more critical than ever, they rarely get the coverage they deserve. And when they do, society doesn’t always seem to show interest.

One reason for this is because of a very deliberate effort to influence how we think about the issues. Special interest groups, lobbyists and corporations have done a banging job to undermine the credibility of science and reality itself to create a false narrative about the perils of climate change. So much so that standing up for the planet (our lifeline and future) is now often met with hostility and ridicule.

However, here’s what we know to be true: the science is real and irrefutable.

Humans are by far the number one cause of our rapidly warming planet. Do you know what else is true, despite what you may have heard? It’s absolutely possible to create jobs and care for the environment at the same time.

But politics aside, back to the question of why we (everyday citizens) don’t care. Perhaps we seemingly “don’t care” because many of us actually do care—deeply. Huh?

We are compassionate by nature—we’re wired that way. When one of us suffers, we all suffer. But when the pain of suffering is too great, it’s natural to shut down and even turn away. We feel powerless. The bigger the problem, the more powerless we feel—and there’s no bigger problem than climate change. So perhaps it’s this underlying feeling of helplessness that makes us shrink.

As Earth Day approaches, it’s the perfect time to reflect on how each of us actually does have the power to stop shrinking and start rising.

That’s why I don’t feel comfortable staying silent about issues that matter to me. At the top of my list: the environment. So I gotta be honest, I’m having a really hard time with our current administration. And while I’m willing to be patient and pray for their success, I’m also keeping a close eye on what they’re actually doing.

As a cancer patient, wellness advocate and animal rights activist, I know that the health of our planet is interconnected with the health of the individuals and species residing on it. In fact, each one of us is like a little mini-planet made in our mother’s image. We have rivers, streams and delicate terrains inside us. When our complex terrain is out of balance or polluted, we get sick.

Sometimes I think of my own illness like inner climate change. The ecosystem that is me is struggling, and I have a choice: I can ignore myself or I can take responsibility for how I care for myself.

That’s self-love. That’s also environmental activism. And that’s what it takes to get well, inside and out.

Now this doesn’t mean that genetics don’t play a factor in disease. It means that our choices also matter and the same wellness principles apply to the larger organism—our planet. Therefore, the rivers, streams, oceans, skies, trees, terrains and sentient beings that help us thrive deserve the same level of respect and protection.

Clearly, this is heavy stuff and it’s all well and good to philosophize, but what do we actually do if this conversation is important to us?

Apply a heaping dose of courage to the wound.

Courage is the only prescription that can heal our planet. Courage to look at the facts, the images and the beings affected. Courage to educate ourselves through credible sources outside of our various information bubbles. And courage to take action, to turn toward the suffering so we can actually do something about it.

Because it’s the doing something that makes a difference, that makes us feel better, that connects us to our community and the world at large. Even if the something is very, very small, it’s never insignificant.

It’s easy to think, “Why bother? I’ll never make a dent.” Not true. Simple actions can create a ripple effect of healing. We may not see a global transformation in our lifetimes, but we can find peace and pride knowing that we contributed to it.

I don’t know what to do about the mother and baby whale. But I do know that I can be more conscious about conservation in my own life. I have a voice, you have a voice and, today more than ever, we are called to use it.

So where can you start?

The first step is staying informed and focusing on an area that you’re passionate about. It might be national parks, clean air, our oceans or endangered species. It could be sustainable farming and eating a more conscious, plant-based diet. Whatever it is, take the time to learn more about it. Connect with organizations you can trust and do everything you can to support them. Also, get to know how your local representatives are voting on these issues. Let them know how you want them to vote and don’t back down.

Use this link to find your representatives and track how they vote.

These are some of the organizations I follow and support. Please add yours in the comments below and share ways you’d recommend getting involved.

Organizations:

Peace & planet,

Add a comment
  1. Nancy says:

    I loved your article! Thanks so much for speaking your Truth (our Truth). It can be so overwhelming the things that need to be addressed. One step at a time! Some days it’s my own backyard hugging a huge tree ? or nurturing my garden. I guess what I’m saying if we were all conscience of what is around us would be a good start. The environment will give back in spades.
    Keep learning and moving forward!
    In Peace and Light,
    Blessings to you for caring so much and voicing that care!
    The Earth ? loves you?
    Well done

  2. I was cleaning out my overflowing inbox and unsubscribing from those I tend to skip. I teetered as I thought of unsubscribing to yours (I know, it’s terrible to admit this to you). After all, I started drinking green drinks about five years ago because of you. I make them for everybody around me and each of them quickly become addicted because, well, who doesn’t want to feel energized and be healthy? But I already knew everything you represented, didn’t I? Well, I thought, maybe I’ll read this one last one blog about the dying mama and baby whale. Wow! It opened an entirely new window into the big heart of Kris Carr. Now I am going to re-post it on my Facebook page, “One Person Acted and Everything Changed”, from my book by the same name. Thank you for sharing this critically important message, that seems to be getting lost even on supposedly aware people everywhere. Time is of the essence, and we CAN fix climate change. That’s important to know. But it is going to take the kind of courage you spoke of, wherein people are willing to open their eyes and embrace the facts, and then act. Thank you Kris Carr, you are STILL my she-ro and I’ll never ponder unsubscribing again!

  3. Mylene says:

    I appreciate your post. As for myself, I tend to avoid news as much as possible throughout the day most of the time. I see so much information about the destruction of the natural world, and of animals and people too, and it feels like such a powerful force of destruction, and I don’t feel able to do anything to stop it, much less turn it around. Which is why I avoid the messenger. I want to do something besides signing online petitions, or donating financial support to candidates, which doesn’t make sense to my own budget or even in my mind, because I know Citizens United allows corporations and wealthy private donors to outspend every liberal in the world * 2. I want to help but I don’t know how, so I ignore the information when I need to, which is often. I’m overwhelmed by it, but can’t think of a solution.

  4. Melissa says:

    I struggle so much with all the cruelty and suffering in the world (animals and human). I wish I could lose myself in sleep but, instead, I spend a lot of sleepless nights with a brain that I can not turn off. As a 16 year survivor of cancer, I think my emotional health is as important as my physical health but it’s a challenge trying to remain positive and hopeful.

  5. jenny says:

    I agree with you wholeheartedly, Kris! Our environment should be our number one priority. Everything else…. while it may be important, means nothing if we destroy our earth. I don’t even know why there’s a controversy over whether or not our actions affect climate change; shouldn’t we strive to take care of the earth regardless? It’s our only home! Clean air and water is something that is vital to all of us.

    I strive to take of our planet in my own little way and speak up for the environment when I can. And I salute you for speaking up, too! Peace & love to you! <3

  6. Donna says:

    “Be the Change WE want to SEE” > RIGHT! Thank you for this Kris! I do little things to help but you have inspired me to go bigger and better! I’m on my 3rd year of B-School and hadn’t known what to do with it until this morning. My third eye is glaring with the word “EDUCATE”, volunteer, spread the word!

    • Edde says:

      as usual you are on the money it is a sad state of afairs that so many don’t get it! my comment to folks is maybe, if a polar bear floats on a piece of ice down the hudson river they might believe in global warming.
      I/ve seen beached dead seals in Ca. many. when big money dorsn’t care it is difficult.

  7. Linda says:

    I am a vegan and animal rights activist. I support many animal and environmental causes and constantly sign petitions etc. that are sent to government officials both here and around the world. Telling your representatives your feelings is a good way to help make a difference. Many of them will respond and let you know what they have done regarding the specific issue you are writing about . It only takes a few minutes of your time but it really can make a difference.

  8. Jaye says:

    The meat and dairy industry are rarely ever mentioned when the news and media bring up climate change as god knows what would happen if people had to give up their animal products!! People who go on and on about the environment, governments, the mining industries, etc and then sit down to a big steak for dinner are clueless as to the impact their meal has on the environment. The first place to start is your plate of food. We will never have peace on this planet as long as we are slaughtering animals and stealing their babies. Grass fed, free range etc are just terms to make humans feel less guilty about chowing down on their animal meals. There is no peaceful death and these animals are smarter and more instinctual than we give them credit for. Mother cows still cry for days when their babies are yanked away and they fall to their knees when they know they are heading to slaughter. The amount of natural resources that go into farming animals for human consumption is staggering.
    Simon Amstell has a brilliant mockumentary called Carnage. Highly recommended.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=930Xef1ri4M

  9. Beth Simon says:

    Kris, thank you for your passion and speaking up! You know, and I know, but many others may not know that the single most destructive activity humans do to the environment is a result of large scale industrial animal agriculture, which creates ginormous quantities of methane gas that releases into the atmosphere — far more then than from cars, trucks, buses! The one thing each and everyone one of us can do is to stop using animals. By choosing a vegan lifestyle, we not only save the planet, but we do the morally right thing by ending animal suffering!

  10. Kara says:

    I just recently finished an article about the effects of single-use plastics on our environment and particularly our oceans. I have commited myself and encouraged my (small amount of) followers to reduce or eliminate the use of these plastics. As Kris says, it seems small and insignificant but I need to keep reminding myself that if we all do something small that positively effects the environment, we can make a large impact. I’m constantly reminding people that we can ‘vote with our wallets’ so to speak,and dramatically reduce the demand for single use plastics or factory farmed meat, genetically modified crops, or whatever cause you support. No market = no money, and that’s where it hits them the hardest. Thanks, Kris!

  11. Susan says:

    Thank you Kris for speaking up. Recently I joined a book club where I work and the topic was climate change. These books were the most depressing thing for me to read, but it really resolved me to do my small part. In one of the books (The Sixth Extinction) it talks about hyperobjects which refers to the whole subject of why people can’t understand climate change. Hyperobjects such as climate change are so vast and large and span multiple human generations. Since it is hard to see the end and it stretchs so far into the future, humans only witness aspects of them at the present time. This is why people can’t see what climate change and humans are doing to the environment. I try to remember this when I get frustrated with the people who deny or don’t care. I try to make it smaller and more personal for them and always hope for the best with everyone. Your are right we need to do our small part and it will make a difference.

  12. Lysa says:

    I was also lamenting on earth friendly movements from the 80’s and my confidence at the time in a cleaner eco-conscious future that sadly never was realized. . Thank you so much Kris for using your far reaching audience to bring up such valid reasons for the disconnect – I struggle with those feelings too. What baffles me is how the unfortunate situation on United Air caused stock to plummet almost immediately, but we don’t do the same when it comes to bad practices in food, environment and other toxic offenders. There is so much power behind the decisions of what we purchase. We may not agree or even have a voice within with our current political environment but we most certainly can band together in making a statement by how we choose to spend our money. Of course the causes are many, but we can make a difference if we really want to. Someone simply needs to step up and lead the way…hint, hint!

  13. Kathy says:

    Thankyou

  14. I would add “Sea Shepherd” to the list! According to the book “Power vs. Force”, courage is the energetic state right in the middle between the energies that bring us down and the ones that are positive. Courage is the place where something clicks. So if you feel down don’t necessarily strive for joy and love and such beautiful states that can feel inaccessible, strive for courage and from there build up. Love you Kris, I feel like you are waking up even more than before to what you really believe in and I am so happy you are. It inspires me to do the same!
    Love from France,
    Cécile

  15. Erin White says:

    I am involved with the Sierra Club and Greenpeace but all I really do is read their emails and sign their petitions. I know I could do more and you have inspired me to get more involved. I don’t know how yet, but I’ll figure it out. Thanks!

  16. Anjala V says:

    The big interest groups aka the bankers are very clever. You were shown a segment on whales amid the climate confusion but what about the devastation caused by the bombing and mess in the Middle East and the starving beautiful babies in Yemen being bombed with weapons supplied by the US and UK as money talks and lives don’t matter. We need to connect the dots of the bigger picture – there is an amazing article on the current GreenMedInfo by a Mr Latham that is on ‘The Meaning of Life’ and the manipulation of science since the 1930’s. All this is coming out now but we do have to be streetwise and not manipulated by what the media wants us to focus on. Follow the money . Also, “The Truth About Vaccines’ currently playing on the internet is excellent and a real eye-opener. With love.

    • Dennis says:

      Agree, The Truth about Vaccines is a great enlightening revelation of the actions of Big Pharma.
      Big Pharma are also into supplements and one of these is Krill oil which is harvested in great nets in the Southern Ocean to the detriment of the whales. Krill is their natural food. We want to save the whales. Therefore we should do everything to save their food supply.

    • Carolyn says:

      This is why Kris left a link to contact your local representative– and to also see how they vote on issues. There are a ton of “other issues” OUT THERE—this is WHY it’s so important that each of us do what we can. The bombings with weapons supplied by the U.S. and the U.K. all come down to how Congress, the Pentagon, and that guy in the White House react, and as you know—any kind of REAL CHANGE is a long, tedious process at the legislative level. The U.S. dropped that M.O.A.B. in an isolated area in Afghanistan that reportedly killed a handful of Islamic State members—a preventative act? who knows, perhaps one of those Islamic State members was about to carry out another terrorist act. I did not vote for the current president, and at this point, the only thing many individuals can do—whether it’s about climate change, the current commander in chief, the bombings, homelessness, child abuse, corruption, fraud, (insert problem here:___), is what they’re currently doing, protesting, demonstrating, etc. Do something— or don’t, it’s a choice. Right?

  17. Pearl says:

    P.S. There are thousands of organizations-local ,national and international, you can be a part of..or start one ! Especially as the ones listed are mostly US based-many of us live elsewhere : )

  18. Pearl says:

    Dear Kris, THANK YOU so much for speaking out on your well- earned platform.We all want to hear and talk about the good things in life more,and remind each other that every one of us has an important contribution to make. We think that negative actions dominate the planet,but it’s not true!!! Media just finds the negatve more saleable! Time to counterbalance with the good news we create and share. : )

    • Ann says:

      As someone who feels a need to voice an opinion, I agree Pearl. I’m based in South Africa, but am rather lost as to where to start with something like this. I’m sure finance comes into it and if one doesn’t have the means, what is one to do?
      I love the messages being sent, but feel so overwhelmed a lot of the time …

  19. Lindsay says:

    We face similar issues in the UK – a right-wing government that prioritises economic growth over the environment and looks after its own – eg the tax system is skewed towards the well-off and big business. We face the huge challenge of BREXIT – our environmental, labour rights, animal welfare legislation etc is EU legislation and it will be a huge battle to get that enshrined in EU law with all the free-market philosophy that dominates our government. We (the taxpayers) bailed out the finacial sector 8 years ago and they never paid us back – they literally laughed all the way to the bank!!! I am not optimistic. We won’t change the situation via politics because the voting system is skewed to support the Conservatives. I hope we can make inroads via grass roots action but we are a sadly divided nation and all the old prejudices are returning – Brexit and Trump seem to be legitimising racism and other forms of ignorant phobia.

1 2 3

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

KrisCarr.com