At Rainplan, we believe that a little action goes a long way—especially when it comes to managing stormwater and making your home more climate-resilient.
Let’s be honest: climate anxiety is real—and growing.
You feel it when you scroll through wildfire maps.
You feel it when another 100-year flood hits your city… for the third time in a decade.
You feel it when leaders argue over action while the thermometer creeps higher.
This type of anxiety has a name: eco-anxiety or climate anxiety. It’s not just a buzzword—it’s a legitimate emotional response to witnessing environmental degradation, uncertainty about the future, and feeling powerless to stop it.
What Does Climate Anxiety Feel Like?
It can show up as: A sense of dread or despair about the planet’s future
Guilt or paralysis when making everyday decisions (“Paper or plastic? Or neither?”)
A feeling that individual actions don’t matter
Emotional fatigue from bad climate news
Avoidance—tuning it all out because it’s just too much
If any of this feels familiar, you’re not alone.
A 2021 global survey found that over 60% of young people feel “very” or “extremely” worried about climate change, and over half felt their governments weren’t doing enough. So, if you’re tired, overwhelmed, or frustrated—that’s a completely valid response.
But here’s the thing: staying in that state doesn’t help you—or the planet.
So What Can You Do?
We’re not here to sugarcoat the issue. There’s no rain garden big enough to stop global warming on its own.
But at Rainplan, we believe in the power of micro-actions—small, tangible, local steps that don’t just reduce environmental harm, but also help you feel better. Why? Because doing something, however modest, gives you agency.
And agency is the antidote to despair.
Stormwater: An Overlooked Opportunity
Stormwater runoff might not make front-page news, but it’s a major contributor to pollution, flooding, and ecosystem damage. Cities are struggling to keep up. The infrastructure isn’t ready for today’s storms, let alone tomorrow’s.
The twist? Homeowners, businesses, and communities can help—in really practical ways. You can turn your property into part of the solution, and many cities will actually pay you to do it.
Enter: The Slightly-Less-Anxious Climate Toolkit
We’ve built a platform that helps you discover local stormwater incentive programs—grants, rebates, and tax credits—for green infrastructure projects like:
🌱 Rain gardens – absorb and filter stormwater naturally
🛢️ Rain barrels and cisterns – capture rain for reuse
🌳 Tree planting – reduce runoff, cool your surroundings, and store carbon
🚶 Permeable pavement – allow water to soak into the ground
🌿 Green roofs – insulate buildings and slow down rainwater flow
These aren’t just buzzwords—they’re real solutions backed by science and supported by local agencies across the country.
Climate Action, Meet Mental Health
A growing number of psychologists and climate experts agree: personal climate action can help reduce eco-anxiety. Even if your action doesn’t “solve” the whole problem, it restores a sense of purpose. You become part of the solution rather than just a witness to the problem.
You don’t need to go off-grid or change careers to make an impact. Sometimes, installing a rain barrel or planting a native garden is enough to shift your mindset. And when it’s supported by financial incentives? Even better.
TL;DR: Here’s How to Slightly Ease Your Climate Anxiety
Acknowledge the anxiety – It’s real. You’re not imagining it.
Reclaim your agency – Start small, start local.
Use Rainplan – Find incentive programs and projects that make sense for your property.
Take action – Even one project helps your community and your state of mind.
We’re not promising a cure for climate dread. But we do promise this: when you move from awareness to action, something inside you shifts.
You feel a little lighter. A little less helpless.
And sometimes, that’s enough to keep going.
🌎 Ready to channel your climate worry into something useful?
💧 Start by checking what incentive programs are available near you: Explore the Rainplan!