Rather than solving climate change to preserve human society, using climate challenges as leverage to transform consciousness and cultural values.
Most climate discourse frames the problem instrumentally: how do we fix the climate to maintain economic growth and material abundance? Laozi suggests reversing this causality. What if climate disruption is reality's teaching tool, forcing humans toward wisdom we refuse to learn voluntarily? Rather than climate-as-problem-to-solve, consider it as crisis-as-curriculum. The constraints it imposes—limits to energy use, material consumption, and geographic separation—push societies toward values that Taoism recommends anyway: simplicity, localism, self-sufficiency, community interdependence. From this view, excessive focus on technical climate solutions without cultural transformation misses the actual lesson. The environmental crisis teaches that domination fails, that complexity breaks, that endless growth kills its host. Societies that respond by becoming more local, more connected to natural cycles, more humble about human power actually solve climate problems while gaining deeper benefits: meaning, community, resilience, peace. This reversal doesn't minimize climate urgency but reframes its purpose. The question becomes not merely how to maintain current civilization with clean energy, but what new civilization climate pressures might birth.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.