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In this episode you will learn what triggered Sarah to embark on a purpose led journey. You’ll see how her journey unfolded with beauty, and allowed her to focus her energy on systemic environmental change. As she puts it, this is ‘being in the position to do good, to influence things for the better, and it comes with a huge feeling of responsibility’. She continues ‘We need systemic change if we want to be really sustainable, in the sense that it doesn’t need constant repairing.’
You will hear how Sarah is empowering others through education, around her meaningful environmental projects. She wants people to be empowered not only through understanding the problem, but also seeing the solution. In her upcoming book, kids’ education will be a focus.
You’ll see we don’t need to be climate or biodiversity experts for each of us to play a meaningful and impactful role.
You will also observe a recurring theme in my podcasts, about how our purpose is protecting us. Sarah’s stubborn optimism is embellished with meaningful action in order to attract more and more people to the movement of change makers.
Awareness leads to small changes, and through the ecology of small gestures, and by reaching only a 3.5% tipping point, we can change the world.
Why are sustainability consultants nowadays overbooked? What do leaders need to know about the circular economy and, in fact, to be able to go beyond it to include health and wellbeing and biodiversity?
Sustainability, of course, is not doing further harm. But given so much harm has already been done, there is a need to go to regeneration and repairing. However, nature is very resilient, and it can repair and actually thrive, but we need to give it a little bit of help. The conversation needs to be more about regeneration and restoration, and companies need to go down that route.
You will hear how we now need to act collectively to make mother Earth healthy!
In this episode you will learn what triggered Sarah to embark on a purpose led journey. You’ll see how her journey unfolded with beauty, and allowed her to focus her energy on systemic environmental change. As she puts it, this is ‘being in the position to do good, to influence things for the better, and it comes with a huge feeling of responsibility’. She continues ‘We need systemic change if we want to be really sustainable, in the sense that it doesn’t need constant repairing.’
You will hear how Sarah is empowering others through education, around her meaningful environmental projects. She wants people to be empowered not only through understanding the problem, but also seeing the solution. In her upcoming book, kids’ education will be a focus.
You’ll see we don’t need to be climate or biodiversity experts for each of us to play a meaningful and impactful role.
You will also observe a recurring theme in my podcasts, about how our purpose is protecting us. Sarah’s stubborn optimism is embellished with meaningful action in order to attract more and more people to the movement of change makers.
Awareness leads to small changes, and through the ecology of small gestures, and by reaching only a 3.5% tipping point, we can change the world.
Why are sustainability consultants nowadays overbooked? What do leaders need to know about the circular economy and, in fact, to be able to go beyond it to include health and wellbeing and biodiversity?
Sustainability, of course, is not doing further harm. But given so much harm has already been done, there is a need to go to regeneration and repairing. However, nature is very resilient, and it can repair and actually thrive, but we need to give it a little bit of help. The conversation needs to be more about regeneration and restoration, and companies need to go down that route.
You will hear how we now need to act collectively to make mother Earth healthy!