I am a mother of two precious girls. As any mother, I want them to be able to experience the wonders of our world; I want them to know the magical beauty of the world that I have seen.
That’s why for me watching the news stories about the changing climate and the destruction it is already bringing makes my heart break. Seeing our beautiful rainbow reef turn a stark ghostly white; or the towering trees of Tasmania burned to a crisp; or the stunning glaciers melt in front of our eyes brings tears to my eyes.
What upsets me most is our Government’s role in this devastation. By continuing to approve giant coal mines, frack for unconventional gas, and drill the Great Australian Bight for deep oil, our Government is condemning my children to a radically different world.
As a mother, watching this unfold can leave me feeling helpless. I also at times feel guilty for not doing enough. It can be hard as one individual knowing how to stand up to a Government that is intent on watching the world burn while handing out subsidies to their friends in the fossil fuel industry to keep on polluting: putting short term profit ahead of our children’s futures.
I currently run a Facebook page called 'What Will We Leave Our Children?' and this weekend myself, my eight year old daughter, and a group of mothers will be spending our Mothers Day peacefully protesting at the coal port of Newcastle under the banner of Break Free.
We will be joining with farmers, pacific islanders, community leaders and people from all across Australia to show our political leaders that Australians care about the future of the planet. We simply cannot keep pretending that climate change is someone else’s problem, and that is why, as a mother I felt compelled to act.
I sometimes wonder why every parent is not marching on the streets demanding a future for our children? But then I remember that, like me, we all get wrapped up in the daily chores of life.
Too often we put our faith in governments to solve all our problems. But on climate change, governments have recklessly abdicated their role to provide leadership. Lobbyists have bought them their election victories and now money trumps science in the most important issue we as a civilisation have ever faced – our climate and planet. To be honest, sometimes I just have to allow myself to be angry or let the grief roll in.
It is at moments like this that I remind myself of all the incredible mothers out there who in their own way are working to safeguard the climate for their children’s future. These are the mothers that I have sat in parks with and brainstormed ideas of how to change the world. These are mothers from all walks of life who are brought together for a common cause.
My local climate action group is awash with mothers. They are incredibly inspiring. Between school pick ups and swimming lessons they fit in late night grant applications, writing speeches, organising local events, media releases and market stalls. They do what they can, we all know what's at stake.
Through my page I've found other women, Knitting Nannas, Climate Angels, mothers who run their own pages. I feel a genuine sense of community among these inspiring groups and I can see as time goes by our acts are becoming more defiant, more determined. We will not allow this destruction to go on. We will not allow governments and corporations to sacrifice our children's future and we will stand in their way to create a better outcome.
Once you are a mother your child's life becomes your priority. Our main purpose is to care for them, to protect them, to raise them so they are happy human beings who can cope with the struggles life brings. But when you realise that this life you have nurtured is jeopardised by the very greedy few, how can you not act?
That is why this Mother's Day I will defend the rights of my children. I will join hundreds of others on the frontline in the coal ports of Newcastle to demand that our Government truly embrace the change that is needed and that they put their children and grandchildren first.
I am so proud to be able to share my Mother's Day with other brave mothers. And also with countless other extraordinary, but ordinary, mothers, grandparents friends across the country who in their own way are standing up against the fossil fuel industry. There is no turning back now: as the temperature rises the people will too. This movement can only grow.
Top Comments
thanks you - for writing this and, to Mamma, for publishing it. Just thank you. More people are finally realising we can't leave it to governments - they simply get too many donations from fossil fuel companies so feel cannot possibly act against them. Meanwhile our children's future evaporates before our eye. I can't stand by and watch this anymore either. Donating lots to the organisations, Like 350.org that are challenging the status quo in a big way,
The single biggest contribution we can make to this planet is to stop overpopulating it. If people were serious about making sacrifices limit yourself to one or two children. If the whole world did this then massive differences would be seen in just one generation. Australia has actually stopped replacing our own population through birth rate, and increases to our population is purely through immigration.
Did you read Dan Brown's 'Inferno'? Your rhetoric is straight from there.
Population growth is coming from developing or undeveloped nations. Best way to reduce number of children per mother? Educate the mother. That leads to an increase in age at marriage and decrease in number of children.
Overconsumption is also a huge issue. Australia's fertility rate may be low, but on a per capita basis we are terrible polluters and very wasteful. Of course in developing nations, the fertility rate is higher, but consumption is lower, and as people are lifted out of poverty (a good thing) they then consume more (a bad thing)...
I guess there is never a simple answer to these issues, but renewable energy is certainly an import at part of the world's future if we want to increase the standard of living around the world.
Ha ha. No I hadn't read it, so I just had to look up the plot line. I promise I was only thinking of a voluntary limitation.