Épisodes

  • Grandma was Right - Naps Cure Everything.
    May 7 2026

    A nap as climate action sounds ridiculous until you follow the biology. We dig into a Resilience Institute framework that treats personal burnout and environmental collapse as one linked system, and we trace how small “microactions” can scale into real climate resilience without grinding you into dust. If you’ve ever felt paralyzed by the size of the problem, this is a practical map for staying effective.

    We start with tier one: saving yourself. That means nervous system regulation, not vague self-care. We talk sleep rituals, deep breathing and the vagus nerve, social connection that lowers cortisol, and why decisive problem solving trains your brain to meet stress with strategy. We also explore what the research suggests about stress in children and adolescents, and why resilience tools can be protective at a neurological level. Even journaling gets a hard-nosed upgrade here, framed as an after-action review that turns distorted memories into a usable dataset.

    Then we scale outward to tier two: saving the world through your immediate environment. We break down local sustainability, emissions reduction through shorter supply chains, and why environmental justice is inseparable from climate policy, from redlining to urban heat islands and tree canopy gaps. We also challenge the “reduce, reuse, recycle” myth by explaining the thermodynamics and energy costs that put recycling last, not first.

    Finally, we land on the missing ingredient: rest as the engine that makes long-term activism possible, plus tier three collaboration that pulls experts out of silos and pairs hard research with human stories that actually change behavior. If this reframes how you think about resilience, subscribe, share this with a friend who’s exhausted, and leave a review with the one problem you might solve faster by resting first.

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    20 min