start where you are

Chapter 171,982 wordsCompleted

The narrator begins by recalling a speech to “great humans” who ask how to begin serving. She cites Buddhist nun Pema Chödrön, who teaches that whatever role you occupy—mother, actress, construction worker, retiree, lonely person—is the “vehicle for waking up” and the proper place to start acting. The narrator repeats the mantra: “Start now. Start where you are. Start with fear, pain, doubt… just start.” She relates this to her own crisis in business, feeling trapped by material temptation and isolated responsibility; the discomfort becomes her wake‑up vehicle, prompting her to draw a bold line.

Next, the narrator tells the story of her friend Lucy, a mother of two who felt powerless before a major school‑strike for climate. When parents claimed they could not reach the city, Lucy booked a minibus, created an Eventbrite sign‑up, and within an hour the bus filled. She upgraded to a coach, then a second coach, ultimately registering 130 participants in 48 hours. The narrator shared Lucy’s feat on social media, sparking imitators and amplifying the strike’s turnout.

The narrative then moves to a brainstorming session with leading tech CEOs and venture capitalists who propose creating a large new climate charity. The narrator, after a pause and a brief “Can I be brutal?” asks the room—mostly men—whether they truly need another charity. She answers bluntly: the world doesn’t need another split‑off charity; it needs apps, tech, and investment for the seasoned climate experts who already know the science and politics. She reiterates “Start where you are, where you can be of service” and warns against the “hero” myth.

After these external examples, the narrator reflects on the broader requirement of sacrifice for meaningful change. She notes that modern culture prizes merit and comfort, but true progress demands giving up something: physical effort (e.g., building abs), psychological stories, childhood comforts, or time spent scrolling. She draws parallels to wartime sacrifices—British Blitz, American home‑front adjustments, World‑War II women entering the workforce—and argues that sacrifice yields social advances such as daycare centres.

She describes her own practice: half of each week she generates income to give away, handing windfalls to a window‑cleaner on a traffic light, creating a fleeting moment of shared humanity. She recounts the COVID‑19 lockdown, where privileged people found joy in ordinary acts—playing Scrabble with kids, helping elderly neighbours, making masks—and acknowledges that such “nice interludes” were possible because of privilege. She questions whether humanity will stop at this comforting pause or continue mobilising in solidarity to confront inequality and environmental crisis.

Overall, the chapter weaves personal anecdote, activist example, corporate counsel, and philosophical meditation to argue that starting from one’s current circumstance, performing ordinary yet necessary acts, and willingly sacrificing comfort are essential steps toward collective renewal.»