Pedaling tales: Bike trek finds global impact of climate crisis
Devi Lockwood ’10 discovered her love for listening to people and hearing their stories amid one of the darkest episodes of her life.
A junior at Harvard in April 2013, Lockwood was in Boston when two brothers detonated homemade bombs near the finish line of the Boston Marathon. Three people were killed in the blasts; 264 more were injured, including 17 who lost limbs.
A manhunt ensued, with the entire city on lockdown until the perpetrators were caught.
“When that lifted, all I wanted to do was talk to strangers and to remind myself that not everyone is murderous,” Lockwood told an assembly audience last week during a visit to Exeter. “I cut open a cardboard box and wrote ‘open call for stories’ in Sharpie on it, and wore that as a sign around my neck while I walked around the city. And some people stared at me, they thought it was pretty weird, but some people approached me to share a story. And once I started having these conversations and listening to strangers, I really didn’t want to stop.”
That summer, Lockwood rode her bicycle 800 miles down the Mississippi River, wearing the sign as she went. “The farther down the river I rode my bike, the more stories I was hearing, specifically about water and climate change, in terms of intensifying storms, salt water encroachment on the land, and people making the decision to leave places that they had called home for generations in the aftermath of a big storm.”
What began as self-therapy turned into an odyssey that continues today. Lockwood has traveled across 20 countries on six continents — mainly by bicycle — to document stories about the effects of climate change. Her research has resulted in her first book, 1,001 Voices on Climate Change, published by Simon & Schuster in August 2021.
“I was wondering, what might it mean to put those voices in dialogue with the stories of people from other parts of the world?” she recalled. “My goal became to listen to those stories about water and climate change, and amplify the voices of people I met, who were the most impacted.”
After a brief assembly presentation, Lockwood sat for an interview on stage with seniors Lina Huang and Emma Chen. Below are highlights of that conversation:
And I think just fully communicating, non-verbally, that I am there to experience the gift of someone sharing their story with me, and receiving it as such. And so yeah, all of those things combine together. And it’s a practice that is not always easy, especially if it’s someone’s point of view that I disagree with, but try to approach those types of conversations also from a place of curiosity, frankly. Why do you think the way that you think? How did you get to this point, and what can I learn from that? And I really do believe that everyone has something to teach me, if only I slow down enough to listen. It’s not always easy to do that, but it can be a really fun thing to do at its best.”
I think a lot of the editing process was figuring out which stories to include, which felt the most interesting to me, which would bring in new themes, and also talk not only about the lived experiences of people who are living with climate change right now, but I interviewed a handful of climate scientists, too. Getting those two types of stories in dialogue with each other, that was the juxtaposition that I was trying to get at. And yeah, just getting it to cohere as a whole was a really fun adventure of a process.”
I just had a handful of really incredible teachers while I was here who were able to bring out different aspects of thinking deeply about language. I remember being in Ms. Moore’s English class, and we would underline verbs and have these long, drawn-out conversations about what a verb is and what it does and how good writing is driven by verbs and verbs are the engine of the sentence, and I think about that all the time. Or even being in Ms. Foley’s class, we did a gender studies class together, and I did a final project where I was doing interviews and then writing poems based on those interviews. And that was a version of what I ended up doing for my senior thesis at Harvard that then inspired this book. So yeah, it all comes back to here.
But I think if I were to give advice, I would encourage you guys to use the scariness of that time to listen to yourself more than anyone else, and be like, “OK, what is it that I love? What is it that energizes me? What am I really good at?” And then, “How can I use that in service of a cause that I care deeply about?” For me it took this form, but for you guys it might look like something completely different, and that’s equally valid. I think really taking that time to be with yourself and to get to know yourself at that point can be really important.
For me, expertise also comes from lived experience, and that’s equally as valid as having a PhD in atmospheric sciences. And it’s important that we understand those dynamics and understand the science, and really great metaphor and good asking questions of those scientists can help us get there, to a point where it’s maintaining the nuance of the science but also easy to understand. But not only that, but we need to just broaden how we discuss these issues, and I think that the movement as a whole can do a better job of that.
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