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COMMENTARY: Ordinary people can do extraordinary things

We live in a time of complex and wicked problems: climate change, economic inequality, violent conflict and human rights violations. These problems seem too large to tackle and much too difficult to solve.
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Altocumulus clouds create beautiful shades of pink and violet over Mount Lady MacDonald in Canmore in 2019. RMO FILE PHOTO

We live in a time of complex and wicked problems: climate change, economic inequality, violent conflict and human rights violations. These problems seem too large to tackle and much too difficult to solve. What can the ordinary person do but throw up their hands in despair or stick their head in the sand and try to tune out the bad news coming from every direction?

However, we don’t have to accept the way things are. We are not too small or insignificant to make change. Cultural anthropologist Margaret Mead declared: “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has.”

We all have values about what is important and beliefs about how the world should be. But impact in the real world requires more than good intentions, it requires action. Many of us want to make change, but don’t know how to get started.

You may wonder how can one go about effecting positive change in the world? Often, the first step is to be able to articulate what it is you most care about. This is usually something that angers or frustrates you or keeps you up at night. Is it the threat of wildfire and the fear you will lose your home? Or are you worried that your children will not be able to afford renting or owning a home when they become adults?

The next step is getting together with other people who share the same concerns to build a team to tackle the issue together. Usually having face-to-face conversations and building relationships is the best way to start. It is more effective than sending out mass emails or social media calls and hoping people show up. You can look to make connections at organizations you already belong to: schools, workplaces, religious organizations or neighbourhood committees.

G7 Summit protestors from around the world will soon be converging to let world leaders know what they care about, and they will do it with hundreds or thousands of other kindred souls. But these protests usually make little change. The demands are usually vague and based on abstract principles. Protestors make passionate speeches to raise awareness about global warming or the threat of nuclear weapons, childhood poverty or looming pandemics. But after the event, nothing changes.

To make real change, you need to define your issue more specifically and state it in terms of the change you want to see. The ultimate goal needs to be broken down into smaller actionable steps. For example, do you want your provincial government to double its investments in renewable energy? Do you want your municipality to ensure 20 per cent of housing stock in your community is perpetually affordable, meaning 30 per cent or less of household income?

You have to be strategic in how you get your demands met. It is necessary to understand who makes decisions about the issue you have defined. Mapping out the power landscape and building relationships with the people who are decision-makers on your issue is key to having impact. Timing is also important in influencing decision-makers. Politicians tend to be most responsive in the period leading up to the next election and corporate annual general meetings are a good opportunity to hold a company’s board of directors and executives to account.

Democracy means power is distributed among the people and not concentrated in the hands of the few. It means that people have power and responsibility to shape the future. For democracy to work, it cannot be a spectator sport. We cannot simply sit back and watch politicians score points off each other, spurred on by a media that is more interested in sensationalism than substance.

We must realize that our obligation to participate as citizens does not end at the ballot box. Through participation and engagement between elections, we need to hold politicians we elect to account, and make sure they are working for us.

If we are apathetic, mistrustful and disengaged, we leave ourselves vulnerable to exploitation by people looking to seize power to enrich themselves and their friends. We don’t have to feel that change is being done to us. Instead, we can get together and make change. We can challenge the status quo and influence decision-making no matter who is in power.

So, if you are worried, frustrated or angry about the way things are in the world; if you find yourself shouting at the TV newscast or venting your exasperations on social media; or if you have ever thought that someone should do something about an issue, then, guess what, it is time to break out of your complacency and realize that that someone is you.

Vamini Selvanandan is a rural family physician and public health practitioner in the Bow Valley. For more articles like this, visit .

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