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Full Description
This book argues that climate change is not only an ecological and political crisis but a spiritual one, shaping how people understand loss, responsibility, and action. Drawing on the psychology of climate grief alongside Indigenous and religious traditions, it offers a framework for moving beyond paralysis toward resilient, justice-centered engagement.
Rather than rehearsing scientific diagnoses or policy prescriptions, Crawford O'Brien addresses the affective and spiritual dimensions of climate crisis: grief, despair, burnout, and moral exhaustion. She engages current research on eco-anxiety and climate grief, showing how emotional overwhelm undermines collective action even when solutions are known and available. Against this backdrop, the book turns to religious and Indigenous traditions that have long cultivated practices for living with loss, sustaining hope, and acting ethically within fragile ecosystems.
Each chapter draws on case studies from diverse Indigenous North American traditions as well as Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Sikhism, Hinduism, Buddhism, and religions of the African diaspora. These traditions challenge extractive worldviews, emphasize relationality and interdependence, and ground justice in care for land, community, and future generations. Together, they model ways of grieving what we love without surrendering to despair.
Crawford O'Brien also introduces the concept of "inner activism": the formation of moral courage, clarity, and presence that makes sustained ecological action possible. Practices of mindfulness, ritual, lament, storytelling, and community accountability are presented not as private coping strategies but as sources of collective resilience and ethical commitment.
Written for readers seeking hope without denial and action without burnout, this book offers spiritual resources for transforming grief into courage, solidarity, and sustained engagement for ecological justice.
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. Climate resilience is spiritual resilience
2. Retrain your brain: Lessons from climate psychology
3. Lament can change the world
4. Feeding resilience
5. Sleep is sacred
6. Mindful movement
7. Climate contemplation
8. Climate kinship
9. Decolonizing climate work
10. Learn to listen
11. Climate calling
12. Hope is a ceremony
Notes
Index



