Taking a Break from Saving the World: A Conservation Activist’s Journey from Burnout to Balance
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About this ebook
"The climate crisis is an overwhelming phenomenon and eco-activist Stephen Legault knows all about that. He’s been a burnout casualty a number of times and seeks solutions for the malaise, knowing people can’t be effective politically unless they take care of themselves. He has recommendations on everything from diet to organizational restricting – leaves of absence, anyone? Think about it." - NOW Magazine Toronto
Professional conservation and political activist Stephen Legault examines the consequences of overwork in the “save the world” movement.
A veteran of burnout himself, Legault looks at the culture of self-sacrifice that permeates the work done by volunteers and paid staff in the environmental conservation movement, and dissects how to manage our own time, energy, and commitment to our causes. Following a river-running metaphor, and proposing a variety of techniques to help with various states of anxiety resulting from burnout, including clarity of purpose, recognition of limits, fitness and diet, mediation and yoga, as well as organizational structural changes such as leave-of-absence policies, Legault encourages readers to find time to “eddy out”—to rest a moment in quieter waters and scout downriver—to ensure our lifetime of engagement is fulfilling, effective, and self-sustaining.
Just as with teachers, nurses, doctors, lawyers, paramedics, steelworkers, students, and airline pilots, burnout is a growing concern in many social-change circles. Taking a Break from Saving the World takes a look at the impacts of eco-anxiety, over-work, and the associated stress surrounding the present and future state of the environment and offers practical and insightful suggestions on how to deal with it.
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Taking a Break from Saving the World - Stephen Legault
Taking a Break from Saving the World
A Conservation Activist’s Journey from Burnout to Balance
By Stephen Legault
For Jenn,
For Silas and Rio,
For the Belly River,
Guides on the journey downstream.
Table of Contents
Author’s Caution
Preface
The Cost of Capsizing
Notes on Technique
Chapter 1: Paddling Heavy Water
Learning from Rivers
Notes on Technique: Paddling Heavy Water
Chapter 2: The High Brace
Why and How to Stay in Your Boat
Making a Plan
Enlisting Help
When to Throw the High Brace, and When to Eddy Out
Notes on Technique: The High Brace
Chapter 3: When to Eddy Out
Looking for Flat Water
Solo or Tandem Paddling
Options When Cutting the Eddy Fence
Notes on Technique: When to Eddy Out
Chapter 4: How to Cut the Eddy Fence
Dealing with Anger
How to Meditate
Storytelling
Back to Waterton
Math and Nightmares
Notes on Technique: How to Cut the Eddy Fence
Chapter 5: Forward Ferry
Taking Responsibility
Notes on Technique: Forward Ferry
Chapter 6: Thrown Overboard
While you’re still at work:
Once you’ve left, here’s what to do next:
Notes on Technique: Thrown Overboard
Chapter 7: Reading the River
When Reading the River
Relief
Bitterness or Resentment
FOMO
Disappointment
Acceptance and Renewal
What I Read in the River
The Power of Myth
Notes on Technique: Reading the River
Chapter 8: Bow-In and Pointing Downstream
Bow-In
The Role of Creativity
Emotions and Passions
Low Brace to Maintain Balance
Meditation
Counselling
Physical Activity
Healthy Diet
Sleep
Nature
Relationships
Spiritual Health
This Is Not a Holiday
Notes on Technique: Bow-In and Pointing Downstream
Chapter 9: Rescue Mid-River
Creating a Culture of Resilience
NGO Leaders
Be a Good Model
Support Your Team
Don’t Make It Hard
Nonprofit Organizations
Support the Leader
Sabbatical Policy
Succession Planning
NGO Funders
Sabbaticals Redux
Fund People as Well as Organizations
De-Professionalization
Notes on Technique: Rescue Mid-River
Chapter 10: Eddy Back In
Notes on Technique: Eddy Back In
Gratitude
Bookshelf
About the Author
Notes
Author’s Caution
Everything in this book may be wrong. It’s offered with the best of intent, but it’s personal opinion and may be out in left field.
You’ve been warned.
Preface
To burn out you must once have been on fire.—UNKNOWN1
This is a book about what can happen when we spend our lives trying to make the world a better place but overlook taking care of ourselves. People who are deeply engaged in the good work of saving the world2 regardless of how grand or humble our efforts– can at times suffer from an inability to remain resilient. In plain speak, we burn out.3
If we’re employed in the nonprofit sector, this can lead to serious problems that can impact our careers. We may feel compelled to quit, we may get fired when our work suffers, and we may suffer from physical or emotional health problems.
Despite increasing efforts by the organizations in the nonprofit sector, when staff burn out it can feel as if we are on our own. As the voluntary sector is often working right at the margins of its capacity to sustain itself, when one of our team suffers burnout, the result can be a transfer of the workload, and its accompanying anxiety, to other teammates.
As volunteers and grassroots activists, burning out can ultimately have the same outcome, but we may receive even less support from the causes and groups we serve. The consequences can be very serious. The rate of suicide among people who identify as social-profit employees or volunteers has long been a point of concern. While statistics aren’t available to compare the rate of suicide among activists with those in greater society, numerous anecdotal examples exist.4
This field is so full of depression and stress and negativity and suicide,
says Dr. Jim Butler, professor emeritus at the University of Alberta in Edmonton. In fact, this field has one of the highest suicide rates of any field, you’d be interested to know. Most people do it in the form of outdoor accidents so that the insurance goes back to the family or causes that they care about. I could give you a long list of people whose friends know that was the case.
5 Dr. Butler delivered these remarks at the inaugural conference of the Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation Initiate (Y2Y) at Waterton Lakes National Park in the fall of 1997. I was the chair of that conference.
I’ve heard Dr. Butler deliver this message a few times in the more than 20 years since that September day in Waterton. I’m always astonished to look around the room at the number of heads nodding, and the tears in listeners’ eyes.
In a March 2018 New York Times piece, John Eligon investigated the high rate of premature death among founders and activists from the Black Lives Matter movement. With each fallen comrade, activists are left to ponder their own mortality and whether the many pressures of the movement contributed to the shortened lives of their colleagues.
6
I’m skilled at eluding the fetal crouch of despair– because I’ve been working on climate change for thirty years,
says author and activist Bill McKibben in the New Yorker magazine. I’ve learned to parcel out my angst, to keep my distress under control. But, in the past few months, I’ve more often found myself awake at night with true fear-for-your-kids anguish.
7 McKibben, who has led the fight against climate change for 30 years, says that, despite the efforts of millions to address the climate crisis, the angst of emergency often wakes him at 2 a.m. to worry about our collective future.
Long-term physical or mental health issues can and have sidelined some of the most promising activists striving for social change. This can have a lasting impact on their ability to live fulfilling, healthy and rewarding lives. Aside from the personal impact of these challenges, the impact of burnout and its outcomes can be challenging for the management of the organizations that are striving to make the world better. Loss of productive labour hours, high staff turnover, low morale and toxicity in the workplace all take their toll. The cost to recruit and train new staff, and the significant loss of institutional memory, can be significant obstacles to the success of social-profit organizations.
People come and go from organizations that serve the cause of social or environmental justice, humanitarian needs or peace, just as they do in more traditional forms of employment. There is conflicting data on the rate of employee turnover in the nongovernmental organization (NGO) sector, however.8
According to the Society for Human Resources Management’s 2016 Human Capital Benchmarking Report, turnover in the nonprofit sector is the exact same– 19 per cent– as in the for-profit sector.9 Most managers in the NGO sector might be surprised to read that our turnover is so low; it feels like we’re always short of staff and bleeding talent. There is contradictory evidence on the rate of turnover in nonprofit organizations, just as there are other factors at play.
Non-profits tend to ‘run on tired,’
says Tracy Vanderneck, president of Phil-Com, a Florida-based consulting firm. They may have too few staff members doing too many jobs and always feel like they are behind. Because of this, the organization’s leadership spends their time putting out fires instead of proactively putting a solid plan in place for recruitment, training and continual stewarding of employees.
10
Maybe all four of your four staff positions are filled, but you are trying to do the work of eight or 12 people.
The contrast to this comes from Mario Siciliano, who as president and CEO of Volunteer Calgary in 2008 noted, Turnover in the non-profit sector is very high. Lately in Alberta, it is estimated to be between 30% and 40%. We also know that the non-profit sector has one of the highest rates of applications for long-term disability because of stress.
Siciliano says, [There is] no doubt it is there. When you combine a critical lack of resources with people who are so passionate about the work they are doing; they don’t want to stop. It is a recipe for stress and burnout.
11
Just as the rate of turnover fluctuates with the employment rate, location and general economic trends, the rate specific to nonprofits also fluctuates. While turnover rates are one indicator of nonprofit health, so are the statistics around overall mental health in the workforce. A recent Gallup study of nearly 7,500 full-time employees found that 23 percent reported feeling burned out at work very often or always, while an additional 44 percent reported feeling burned out sometimes,
reported CNBC in August of 2018.12
The personal crisis, and the crisis facing the nonprofit sector, is not likely to get any better. The new energy injected into the climate emergency through student-led strikes, the Green New Deal and the debate over climate change as a dominant issue in the politics of many countries worldwide has attracted a new generation of activists. Some, like those who identify themselves as the Sunrise Movement, are young, well educated and racially diverse. They are, according to Vox Online, young, angry, and effective.
13
Thirty years ago that line might have been used to describe my efforts to raise awareness of many of the same issues the Sunrise Movement seeks to highlight today, though how effective my colleagues and I were is open for debate. Nearly everybody I joined arms with during those early days of my life as an activist continues to work for social change today. Many, however, have suffered the consequences of overwork, commitment and burnout.
If I could say one thing to the new generation of activists– from the Sunrise Movement to Black Lives Matter to Idle No More– it would be this: it’s a marathon, not a sprint. To survive such an endurance race as we face in the effort to address the climate emergency, inequality and the myriad crises of our generation, we have to pace ourselves. If we don’t, we run the risk of great personal challenges, and we won’t be around continuing the struggle we feel so passionately about now.
While our organizations have an important role to play in addressing burnout and its consequences, it’s at the personal level that each member of the global activist community can make a difference. Learning to stay healthy as an activist often runs contrary to the self-sacrificing nature of those