Feed what you love (A practice) with Jennifer England

What if feeding what you love—even in the face of despair—could be your most vital climate practice?

In this episode, Jennifer offers a guided practice inspired by a recent conversation with climate educator and author Sarah Jaquette Ray, who invites us to face the monstrous scale of climate change not with more fixing, but with more loving. Together, they explored the emotional toll of activism, the trap of numbness, and the surprising resilience we access when we stay rooted in what brings us joy and meaning.

This practice is designed for anyone who feels overwhelmed, powerless, or stretched thin by the weight of the world—and who longs to feel more alive, connected, and steady in the long game.

In this episode, you’ll take away:

  • A fresh perspective on grief and anxiety as signals of what you care most deeply about

  • A two-part reflective and experiential practice to help you feed what you love

  • A gentle invitation to discover how ordinary joys can become acts of resistance and renewal

Join Jennifer in this quiet, potent offering—a return to what enlivens, surprises, and sustains us. Because when you feed what you love, you find others there. And together, we remember how to belong.

Links & resources—

Next
Next

When Grief brings us back to love: The quiet courage of climate activism with sarah jaquette Ray