Something happens when we try to engage with the ecological crisis — and then don’t.
Not laziness. Not indifference. Something more fundamental.
Research in psychology, neuroscience, and contemplative science points to a pattern:
The gap between knowing and acting on climate is not primarily a lack of information. It is shaped by something happening in the mind — and in the relationship between the mind and the world it belongs to.
When the nervous system meets a threat that feels too big, too distant, or too permanent, it learns to protect itself. Through numbness. Through avoidance. Through a quiet sense that nothing we do will matter.
This is not weakness. It is a form of disconnection — from our own inner life, from others who carry the same weight, and from the living world itself.
The field of eco-awareness is, in part, a response to this. A space where that disconnection can be met — not with answers, but with orientation, practice, and company.
These are Dots in the field where others are working with exactly what you named. Not as a fix — as a form of company.
This tool draws on research by Christine Wamsler, Jamie Bristow, and Rosie Bell — compiled in “What the Mind Has to Do with the Climate Crisis” and the accompanying policy report “Reconnection: Meeting the Climate Crisis Inside Out” (The Mindfulness Initiative & Lund University Centre for Sustainability Studies, 2022).
It is among the most comprehensive explorations of the intersection of inner life and ecological action to date.
Put your Dot on the Global Map of Eco-Awareness.
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