[wind gusting] [birds chirping] [river trickling] [ushigua speaking spanish] [♪♪♪] [patricia gualingaanish] [paez] i have been persecuted and i have been monitored by the government. several times, i had to go to the international courts to tell the story about what happens when you are a human rights defender, or you have been working so hard to protect the rights of nature. years by years, you protect yourself, protect your family, you protect the forest, the resistance... sometimes, i-i get tired. i get tired and i... get, uh, lost, and i start feeling that it's not enough, but, day by day, i have to do the best to change it. [♪♪♪] [dodds] hmm. when i get to that point with climate change, the notion of what's happening, and i go "i can't take anymore, i'm just exhausted." that's a big struggle in my head, where i'm grasping for somewhere that isn't this new reality. -yeah. -for me, it was when the fires were happening in tasmania and that gondwana forest was burning, and something just touched me really deeply, knowing that forest, it is not supposed to burn, and i remember feelin