Ah, sorry to hear about the pain.
There is no fix for the climate, but that's not to say it's not worth trying. If the world stopped GHG emissions tomorrow, we could limit the earth to 2° warming, and return to normal in a relatively short time period (could still be hundreds of years). But of course that's not possible. If by some miracle we drastically reduce emissions in the next decade or two, maybe it's still possible.
The other pathway is 8° warming in the long term, returning to normal thousands of years later!
Even 2° is a disaster. 8 is unimaginable. The ice age was caused by 5-6° cooling, and it put mile thick ice over parts of Europe and America.
The reason for the big jump between the two warming trajectories is feedbacks. Warming causes more warming. For example melting tundra releases GHGs. Warmer oceans hold less CO2. Melting ice allows more sun to hit the ocean or land. Drought causes rainforests to stop absorbing CO2. We don't know exactly when each tipping point will happen to trigger feedbacks, or the exact speed or scale.
The ends of glacial cycles are triggered by Milankovitch cycles, but most of the warming is feedbacks.
https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1810141115