Earlier this month, I traveled to Cleveland, Ohio, for the 2026 Midwest Climate Summit, held at Case Western Reserve University and hosted by The Midwest Climate Collaborative. This was my second time attending the conference. Last year, I had such a great experience in Madison, Wisconsin, so I was excited to return and see what this year would bring.

Sami Aaron (Founder, The Resilient Activist), Sarah Mayerhofer (TRA Board Member), Briana Anderson (TRA Board Member), and fellow attendees at the 2026 Midwest Climate Summit, hosted by the Midwest Climate Collaborative at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio.

Community Is Still the Best Tool We Have

What I found, once again, was not just a conference, in your typical sense, but a gathering of people trying to imagine what it means to live well, care for one another, and respond to a changing world with honesty and courage.

One of the biggest things I took away from the summit is that community is still the best tool we have. Again and again, I saw that the real strength of this work lies not just in policy or technology. It lives in resource sharing, relationship-building, mutual support, and people showing up for one another. So many of the conversations I attended came back to the same truth: we cannot face climate change in isolation. We need each other. We need local knowledge, trusted networks, and spaces where people can learn from one another and build real resilience together.

Women Are Shaping This Work

Attendees, including Sarah Mayerhofer, Briana Anderson, and Sami Aaron, collaborate during a small-group session at the 2026 Midwest Climate Summit.

Another thing that stood out to me was how clearly women are leading the way in resilience, climate mitigation, and preventing burnout. This was evident not only in the range of speakers but also in the people attending the resilience-focused sessions and in the conversations that took place both during and after them. Women were asking thoughtful questions and naming the hard things out loud. They were offering solutions and articulating their concerns with clarity and vision. It really hit me how much women are shaping this field — especially in spaces that ask us to care not just about systems, but about people.

Cleveland Reminded Us: No Place Is Untouched

One of the more memorable moments of the conference came on the second night, when Cleveland reminded us that no place is untouched by climate reality. The Midwest is often talked about as a strong region for climate migration, and in many ways it is. Compared with other parts of the country, it can seem more buffered from certain climate impacts. But it is not immune. That became very real when all 500 of us at the conference had to head down to the basement at Case Western Reserve University due to a tornado warning. I think it was a stark reminder of why we were all together. Climate change is not a future concept or a distant threat. These “unique” weather events are feeling less and less unique. It is already reshaping where and how we live, including in places many people think of as “safer.”

Standing at the Frontier

Summit participants take in the view during an outdoor session at Cuyahoga Valley National Park.

Another idea that has stayed with me came from a storytelling session. A few people were discussing books, movies, and the ways our culture portrays climate change. During that conversation, someone brought up the word frontier. Not in the traditional sense, but as a way of describing a threshold — something that is ending and something else that is beginning. That language really struck me.

It feels like the moment we are in right now. There is so much uncertainty, so much unraveling, and so much that feels unsustainable. I do not know exactly what is ending, and I do not know exactly what is beginning. But I do know that many of us can feel it. We are standing in between worlds, on the edge of something we cannot fully name yet. And for all the fear that can come with that, I also think there is a possibility there. It feels like we are on the cusp of something meaningful, maybe even something better, if we are willing to help shape it.

What the Midwest Understands

Sarah Mayerhofer at Cuyahoga Valley National Park, one of the field trip stops during the 2026 Midwest Climate Summit.

That may be the lesson I carry with me most. The Midwest Climate Summit reminded me that climate work is not only about preventing disaster. It is also about building the kinds of communities we will need in order to endure, adapt, and care for one another through what is coming. It is about imagination, honesty, and connection. And maybe most of all, it is about remembering that even in uncertain times, we are not powerless when we are together.

Sarah Mayerhofer

Sarah Mayerhofer writes about the messy beauty of being human in a changing world. She’s a yoga student & teacher, garden tender, sourdough baker, and sustainability nerd who’s obsessed with self-resilience and the power of slow living. Whether she’s taking a yoga class, starting seeds, or losing track of time in a good book, Sarah believes in small acts that root us more deeply in ourselves and our communities. Her work invites readers to pause, reconnect, and find meaning in the everyday.