In early March, on the morning of her ninth-consecutive Friday striking from school, 12-year-old Denver seventh-grader听Haven Coleman wakes up to look at her calendar and inventory her page-long list of the day鈥檚 tasks. 鈥淪o I did like three e-mails, checked on my texts, and checked on Slack鈥攖hat鈥檚 where the state leads are,鈥 she explains. After touching base with a publicist and press adviser, Coleman and her mom head听out听to the Colorado state House, where she hunkers down for her three-hour climate strike on a bitterly windy day. Then it鈥檚 home again for another series of calls, e-mail, and tasks. Over 1,700 miles away, in New York City, 13-year-old seventh-grader听Alexandria Villase帽or鈥檚 day takes a similar shape. She and her mom NBC news into their apartment for a series of interviews. Later听she sets up camp on her regular bench outside the United Nations headquarters. Then she goes home to wade through e-mail听and fight climate-change-denying trolls on Twitter.
Coleman and Villase帽or are two of three coleaders听directing听the in the United States, which is working to shut down schools across the country on March 15 to demand that world leaders act on preventing climate change. They听say that some of their teachers are very supportive of their strikes, and some are听not.听But the good thing about skipping school is that, as middle schoolers working 40 hours a week leading a social movement, it鈥檚 kind of inconvenient to risk detention if you need to check your phone.听
Villase帽or,听Coleman, and a handful of other American students听have ushered in 2019 by ditching class听and going on strike every Friday, regardless of rain, sleet, or snow. The girls join tens of thousands of other young people worldwide听who have been inspired by the outspoken 16-year-old Swedish climate activist . Thunberg has waged what has become known as her #FridaysForFuture strike outside the Swedish parliament building every Friday since September 2018, an effort听to push all world leaders to sign onto听the Paris climate agreement and limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius听above preindustrial temperatures. Other countries that have seen student-led protests for the past few months include听Uganda, Australia, Japan, Belgium, Germany, the UK, Spain, Canada, and Colombia.
鈥淥ne of my demands is zero greenhouse-gas emissions by 2030,鈥 Villase帽or says, in addition to solidarity with Thunberg鈥檚 . Although each girl鈥檚 strike began this winter as an individual act, the actions have morphed into a strike movement led by Coleman, Villase帽or, and 16-year-old Isra Hirsi of Minneapolis.

The #FridaysForFuture听movement, also known as #SchoolStrike4Climate, was slow to catch on in the United States. Kallan Benson, 14, of Maryland, and Zayne Cowie, nine, of New York, were the first to model strikes based on听Thunberg鈥檚, in early December. Villase帽or and Coleman got on board a few weeks later. However, it took more than two months before any of听Villase帽or鈥檚 fellow students听 her on East 42nd Street, and Coleman had to learn to shrug off weird looks and haters听who drove by and . 鈥淚t鈥檚 very frustrating,鈥 Coleman听says.听鈥淭hey don鈥檛 realize that鈥 this will be the biggest problem of our generation. No matter what. Because we will be recovering from all of these droughts, heat waves, fires, snowstorms, tsunamis, sea-level rise.鈥 And, she says, 鈥淲e鈥檒l have to work together.鈥
Coleman and Villase帽or, who met over social media but haven鈥檛 yet met in person, still show听up every Friday at their respective protest locations, often alone, occasionally posting pictures of the two of them in spite of miles of separation. Many of their classmates 鈥渟till see themselves in the structure that we鈥檝e all been taught to live in,鈥 Villase帽or says. A few years back, at her old school, Coleman was bullied for trying to educate her classmates on climate breakdown.听Although Villase帽or, Coleman, and Hirsi all note a degree of apathy among fellow听students, as soon as they teamed up and went public across social media with plans for the March 15 strike, the trio immediately heard back from student leaders across the country who also wanted to lead state-level strikes. Such events are now听planned in more than听听and 92 countries,听with an of 100,000 nationally. Hirsi and Coleman estimate听that they鈥檙e spending between six and eight hours each听day answering e-mail听and fielding听calls with reporters and other students. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 have any extracurricular activities,鈥 Coleman says. 鈥淐limate is my extracurricular.鈥
Hirsi agrees. Though she has organized a handful of school walkouts and actions urging local lawmakers to pass a Green New Deal for Minnesota, this is the first time she鈥檚 organized anything at the national level. One of her main jobs is managing student leaders in each state鈥攎any of whom are older than she is. 鈥淚t feels really stressful, because I鈥檓 only a sophomore,鈥 Hirsi says. 鈥淢y family says that I鈥檓 taking on too much, that I should dial it down a few notches. I can鈥檛. I say I鈥檒l try, and then I schedule more calls and meetings.鈥
But at the end of the day, they鈥檙e still adolescents. 鈥淪ometimes I just feel so screwed over by this,鈥 Coleman says. 鈥淟ike, sometimes I鈥檒l just sit and cry for like an hour about just how terrible this is.鈥澨

The pressure of the work beats standing still. Villase帽or, who is originally from Davis, California, was an hour from the Paradise fire听when it听broke out this summer. 鈥淚t was very postapocalyptic,鈥 she recalls. Other young activists throughout the world, who have also been striking on Fridays since January, or earlier, echo this sentiment.听Lilly Platt听of Holland听is horrified that the ocean will soon be filled with ,听Holly Gillibrand of Scotland听is concerned about the lack of biodiversity on grouse moors,听and Vanessa Nakate of Uganda is troubled by seeing drought in January, which is traditionally the rainy season.
Choosing to self-educate and to act has not been all worry and sacrifice. After all, these young people have found each other and have become, as Coleman calls it, her ever growing international 鈥渃limate family.鈥 鈥淲ith all the darkness we face now, you gotta find the joy,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 helped me be even more positive. And that鈥檚 helped me push through the bullying and the remarks on social media. I鈥檓 finding the little joys that we might not have in the future, and I鈥檓 cherishing them: A听plant in our room. All the animals that future generations won鈥檛 be able to see鈥 only in picture books.鈥