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Initiation, chapter one of Living with the Unknown, begins where all inquiries into the unknown begin: with myth. Read this week’s newsletter featuring a new essay from Martin Shaw. Illustration by moonassi. https://t.co/U2wvqF8NVz
As we walk our questions into a troubled future, storyteller and mythologist Martin Shaw invites us to subvert today’s voices of certainty and do the hard work of opening to mystery. Navigating the Mysteries, by Martin Shaw. Illustration by moonassi. https://t.co/4mNuYqG40y
“Mosses were the first plants to blanket the Earth. I wouldn’t be surprised if they are also the last.” In today's newsletter, Robin Wall Kimmerer relates the power and wisdom of mosses. Also: Last chance to vote in @TheWebbyAwards! Art by @ayuko_hoshino. https://t.co/ncjVIQ43BT
As we continue to celebrate Earth Week, we bring you a special new story from Robin Wall Kimmerer about the collective power of the small and green. Read “Ancient Green: Moss, Climate, and Deep Time.” Illustration by @ayuko_hoshino. https://t.co/EvDvoLw8Ur
Kinship Book Club returns tomorrow, April 13, for its fifth and final session. Join @humansandnature and contributing authors as they discuss “Practice,” Volume 5 of “Kinship: Belonging in a World of Relations,” presented by @PointReyesBooks. https://t.co/u6Oy9h9ayW
As Sumana Roy debates with her young nephew over his watering of dead trunks of trees, she is surprised by the unexpected truth his childhood mind reveals. Listen to this week’s podcast, “Watering the Dead and the Unseen” by @SumanaSiliguri. https://t.co/Ej7AKd31EA
"We are the consequence of our species’ so-called cognitive niche, the outcome of our fierce entanglement with one another." Listen to this week’s podcast, “On Death and Love” by Melanie Challenger. Artwork by Annalise Neil. https://t.co/Ej7AKd31EA
In this week’s podcast, Melanie Challenger exposes how the myth of human exceptionalism, which drives us to outrun death, has devastated life on this planet. Listen to “On Death and Love” by Melanie Challenger. Artwork by Annalise Neil. https://t.co/Ej7AKd31EA
We live in a time when striving towards justice means reckoning with both history and identity. Read this week’s newsletter featuring J. Drew Lanham’s imagined exchange of letters between two pillars of conservation. Artwork by @OnyisMartin. https://t.co/cGVMUN1wMd
Reflecting on her own intimate meetings with death—through story, family, and forest—Melanie Challenger reminds us that our ending is the one thing we have in common with all of life. Read “On Death and Love.” Artwork by Annalise Neil. https://t.co/zL0YAgMOMj