A Moment: when celebration and concern share the same sky
A Line I Heard
"How do I celebrate independence when I don't feel free from fossil fuels?"
Journey Framing:
Someone asked a question worth sitting with this 4th of July weekend.
Let's move through it together
To build language for real conversations.
Starting with "Notice"...
NOTICE
What happens when you read this quote?
Maybe you feel the part of you that genuinely loves the holiday — the cookouts, the neighbors, the sky lighting up — and the part that can't stop doing the math.
Or maybe you feel the exhaustion of not being able to just enjoy something without your climate brain showing up.
Whatever's showing up, just notice it's there.
CONNECT
On the first Independence Day in July 1776, the CO2 in the atmosphere was 280 parts per million. Today it's 422.
The Founders declared independence from a power that controlled their lives without their consent.
(Fossil fuels controlling the climate without anyone's consent is not entirely unrelated.)
Here's what Metaphor sees: the question isn't whether to celebrate. Loving this country and being scared for it aren't opposites.
You can hold a sparkler AND want the air to still be breathable. Both are true. That's "yes, and."
TRY
This weekend, find one moment where the love and the concern are both present at the same time.
Just notice what it feels like to hold both — the celebration AND the question.
That's taking the holiday for what it really stands for.
REST
You don't have to solve fossil fuel dependence this weekend. Period.
Perhaps feeling into the celebration or the noise canceling headphones are exactly what you need.
& REPEAT
Watch for this pattern elsewhere.
Notice when you think you have to choose between loving something and being honest about what threatens it.
Each time you catch it, you find the "yes, and." I love this country. And I want it free from fossil fuel’s influence.
In Community,
Amber Peoples
Creator of Earth Archetypes