Connect with us

Published

on

Earlier this year, I took my first voice lesson. The first thing I was taught was how to breathe, and it turns out I have been breathing incorrectly my whole life.

When you are told to take a deep breath, you inhale — with your shoulders and chest. However, to properly fill your lungs, you must inhale and breathe deep within your body. When you place your hand on the top of your ribs, you should feel as they gently and naturally lift up.

We take breathing for granted.

Melody & family

I am a proud Chicana born and raised in Southern California. My story begins with my parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents because our climate stories are rooted in the generations before us and the generations after us.

My dad’s family is from Zacatecas, Mexico, a state known for its mining. My grandma knew the conditions were not ideal for her and her family, so in the 60’s she was proactive and moved to northern Mexico to give her children a better life.

In 1974, my dad was born in Tijuana, Mexico, but my grandma’s proactiveness was not enough because the harm had already been done. After 30+ years of breathing polluted air, her body was tainted, and my dad was born with weak lungs and pneumonia. But, what you don’t know about my dad is that he is resilient, even as a newborn.

However, fast forward 46 years, 34 years of smoking, 30 years of working nights and days in a warehouse, and a lifetime of countless lung problems – my dad was diagnosed with interstitial lung disease.

Black porous lungs accompanied by dry suffocating coughs and purple-gray skin; my dad’s body begs for air his lungs cannot contain.

I have seen the generational effects of environmental racism on our health, bodies, and minds. What I didn’t realize was how directly impacted my community and I were.

I remember growing up in California, thinking we had everything: valleys, mountains, deserts, urban and coastal areas. Driving from Southern to Northern California, through Central Valley, the landscape is rural, with the sights of farms, cattle roaming, and glimpses of crops and fields: grapevines, strawberries, and tomatoes. As a child, I was captivated by these sights; however, as I got older, I realized there was more than just that — I began to see the people working the land, mi gente. I would hear stories of the harsh working conditions, harmful treatment, and health problems that workers were experiencing.

Even in my neighborhood of Whittier, California, I noticed similar patterns. On the green hills, stood dozens of giant metal dancers constantly and rhythmically pumping — oil drills extracting the land’s natural resources. The views from the hills used to be stunning, but now, those days are gone because of the perpetual smog from pollution. The effects of extraction, coupled with heat and drought exacerbated by climate change, are difficult to ignore. Signs in people’s yards scream ‘DON’T DRILL / SAVE OUR FUTURE.’

Now, living in Minnesota, I see the patterns of environmental injustices here, which are not unique to Mexico or California but are repeated across different communities all over the place. Every summer and winter in Minnesota since I moved here have been record-breaking, like a winter without snow or flooding in the summer. And just like everywhere else, we can see how low-income, immigrant, and BIPOC communities are disproportionately impacted.

When I used to think about climate change, I often felt a sense of doom, like there was nothing I could do. However, now as an environmental justice organizer at COPAL, or Communities Organizing Latine Power and Action, I realize there are things we can do — policies we can change to ensure that our communities and environment are protected and healthy.

I don’t want to live in a world where our future generations are bearing the burden of our mistakes. We must stop this cycle. We must fight for the future that we want for the next generation and all the generations that follow.

Melody is a Climate Generation Window Into COP delegate for COP29. To learn more, we encourage you to meet the full delegation, support our delegates, and subscribe to the Window Into COP digest.

Melody Arteaga

Melody Arteaga was born and raised in Southern California, in the Inland Empire region, surrounded by warehouses and polluting projects that impacted her family’s health. In pursuit of education and new opportunities, she moved to Minnesota to attend college. Through her experiences as a youth worker, mentor, and facilitator, Melody has seen firsthand the power of community in changing systems and creating equitable changes. She firmly believes that we must organize to demand knowledge about the underlying systems affecting day-to-day life. As the Environmental Justice Coordinator at COPAL, Melody works alongside other environmental organizers to make change in Minnesota.

The post Breathe appeared first on Climate Generation.

Breathe

Continue Reading

Climate Change

Malnourished Gray Whales of the Eastern North Pacific Are in ‘Serious Trouble’

Published

on

The population has plummeted over the past seven years as climate change triggers mass starvation in warming Arctic waters.

SEATTLE—Exceptionally skinny gray whales—enfeebled by starvation and mangled by blunt-force trauma—are washing up this spring along the coast of Washington state in numbers that alarm marine-mammal scientists.

Malnourished Gray Whales of the Eastern North Pacific Are in ‘Serious Trouble’

Continue Reading

Climate Change

Sewage and Fuel Leaks Contaminate the Potomac River, Source of Drinking Water for More Than 5 Million People

Published

on

Observers believe regulatory failures contributed to catastrophic sewage and fuel leaks in the watershed. The river was recently named the most endangered in the nation.

The warning signs were years in the making. And yet, regulators failed to heed the writing on the wall, according to Dean Naujoks.

Sewage and Fuel Leaks Contaminate the Potomac River, Source of Drinking Water for More Than 5 Million People

Continue Reading

Climate Change

Community Leaders in Florida Say Trump’s FEMA Pullback Leaves Them Struggling to Fill the Void

Published

on

The president may have backed off killing the agency outright, but his FEMA Review Council clearly sees a much reduced emergency management role for the federal government.

When disaster strikes, those who turn to government agencies for assistance tend to be the most vulnerable: senior citizens, individuals with special needs, homeowners who had insurance and a disaster plan but were living paycheck-to-paycheck and suddenly have no place to go.

Community Leaders in Florida Say Trump’s FEMA Pullback Leaves Them Struggling to Fill the Void

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2022 BreakingClimateChange.com