Atmos
Climate and culture, inspired by nature 🌍
Magazine, podcast, newsletters, features, and more ↓

The winged gardeners that sustain life on Earth.
Every day, bees, bats, hummingbirds, and butterflies softly move from flower to flower, pollinating our future. Without this quiet and essential work, ecosystems would collapse and the diversity of life on Earth as we know it would be irrevocably altered.
For Atmos Volume 12: Pollinate, photographer @danielpshea traveled to Costa Rica to document the ephemeral beauty of the creatures that keep our world alive.
Our newest print issue is available now at the link in our bio, and find the full story with an accompanying soundscape by composer @petermmurray on our site.
Photographer @danielpshea
Special thanks Dylan Monge
Atmos Volume 12: Pollinate
Cofounder / Editor-in-Chief @willowonearth
Cofounder / Chief Creative Officer @jakesarge
Executive Director @the.resaperez
Editorial Operations Director @karen.pk.gray
Art Director @tessaforrest
Creative Producer @anameizing
Print Design by @actualsource.work
Print Editor @unwrinkling
Associate Editor @jasminexhardy
Copy Editor Karly Alderfer
Research Editor Matt Mahoney

The winged gardeners that sustain life on Earth.
Every day, bees, bats, hummingbirds, and butterflies softly move from flower to flower, pollinating our future. Without this quiet and essential work, ecosystems would collapse and the diversity of life on Earth as we know it would be irrevocably altered.
For Atmos Volume 12: Pollinate, photographer @danielpshea traveled to Costa Rica to document the ephemeral beauty of the creatures that keep our world alive.
Our newest print issue is available now at the link in our bio, and find the full story with an accompanying soundscape by composer @petermmurray on our site.
Photographer @danielpshea
Special thanks Dylan Monge
Atmos Volume 12: Pollinate
Cofounder / Editor-in-Chief @willowonearth
Cofounder / Chief Creative Officer @jakesarge
Executive Director @the.resaperez
Editorial Operations Director @karen.pk.gray
Art Director @tessaforrest
Creative Producer @anameizing
Print Design by @actualsource.work
Print Editor @unwrinkling
Associate Editor @jasminexhardy
Copy Editor Karly Alderfer
Research Editor Matt Mahoney

The winged gardeners that sustain life on Earth.
Every day, bees, bats, hummingbirds, and butterflies softly move from flower to flower, pollinating our future. Without this quiet and essential work, ecosystems would collapse and the diversity of life on Earth as we know it would be irrevocably altered.
For Atmos Volume 12: Pollinate, photographer @danielpshea traveled to Costa Rica to document the ephemeral beauty of the creatures that keep our world alive.
Our newest print issue is available now at the link in our bio, and find the full story with an accompanying soundscape by composer @petermmurray on our site.
Photographer @danielpshea
Special thanks Dylan Monge
Atmos Volume 12: Pollinate
Cofounder / Editor-in-Chief @willowonearth
Cofounder / Chief Creative Officer @jakesarge
Executive Director @the.resaperez
Editorial Operations Director @karen.pk.gray
Art Director @tessaforrest
Creative Producer @anameizing
Print Design by @actualsource.work
Print Editor @unwrinkling
Associate Editor @jasminexhardy
Copy Editor Karly Alderfer
Research Editor Matt Mahoney

The winged gardeners that sustain life on Earth.
Every day, bees, bats, hummingbirds, and butterflies softly move from flower to flower, pollinating our future. Without this quiet and essential work, ecosystems would collapse and the diversity of life on Earth as we know it would be irrevocably altered.
For Atmos Volume 12: Pollinate, photographer @danielpshea traveled to Costa Rica to document the ephemeral beauty of the creatures that keep our world alive.
Our newest print issue is available now at the link in our bio, and find the full story with an accompanying soundscape by composer @petermmurray on our site.
Photographer @danielpshea
Special thanks Dylan Monge
Atmos Volume 12: Pollinate
Cofounder / Editor-in-Chief @willowonearth
Cofounder / Chief Creative Officer @jakesarge
Executive Director @the.resaperez
Editorial Operations Director @karen.pk.gray
Art Director @tessaforrest
Creative Producer @anameizing
Print Design by @actualsource.work
Print Editor @unwrinkling
Associate Editor @jasminexhardy
Copy Editor Karly Alderfer
Research Editor Matt Mahoney

The winged gardeners that sustain life on Earth.
Every day, bees, bats, hummingbirds, and butterflies softly move from flower to flower, pollinating our future. Without this quiet and essential work, ecosystems would collapse and the diversity of life on Earth as we know it would be irrevocably altered.
For Atmos Volume 12: Pollinate, photographer @danielpshea traveled to Costa Rica to document the ephemeral beauty of the creatures that keep our world alive.
Our newest print issue is available now at the link in our bio, and find the full story with an accompanying soundscape by composer @petermmurray on our site.
Photographer @danielpshea
Special thanks Dylan Monge
Atmos Volume 12: Pollinate
Cofounder / Editor-in-Chief @willowonearth
Cofounder / Chief Creative Officer @jakesarge
Executive Director @the.resaperez
Editorial Operations Director @karen.pk.gray
Art Director @tessaforrest
Creative Producer @anameizing
Print Design by @actualsource.work
Print Editor @unwrinkling
Associate Editor @jasminexhardy
Copy Editor Karly Alderfer
Research Editor Matt Mahoney

The winged gardeners that sustain life on Earth.
Every day, bees, bats, hummingbirds, and butterflies softly move from flower to flower, pollinating our future. Without this quiet and essential work, ecosystems would collapse and the diversity of life on Earth as we know it would be irrevocably altered.
For Atmos Volume 12: Pollinate, photographer @danielpshea traveled to Costa Rica to document the ephemeral beauty of the creatures that keep our world alive.
Our newest print issue is available now at the link in our bio, and find the full story with an accompanying soundscape by composer @petermmurray on our site.
Photographer @danielpshea
Special thanks Dylan Monge
Atmos Volume 12: Pollinate
Cofounder / Editor-in-Chief @willowonearth
Cofounder / Chief Creative Officer @jakesarge
Executive Director @the.resaperez
Editorial Operations Director @karen.pk.gray
Art Director @tessaforrest
Creative Producer @anameizing
Print Design by @actualsource.work
Print Editor @unwrinkling
Associate Editor @jasminexhardy
Copy Editor Karly Alderfer
Research Editor Matt Mahoney

The winged gardeners that sustain life on Earth.
Every day, bees, bats, hummingbirds, and butterflies softly move from flower to flower, pollinating our future. Without this quiet and essential work, ecosystems would collapse and the diversity of life on Earth as we know it would be irrevocably altered.
For Atmos Volume 12: Pollinate, photographer @danielpshea traveled to Costa Rica to document the ephemeral beauty of the creatures that keep our world alive.
Our newest print issue is available now at the link in our bio, and find the full story with an accompanying soundscape by composer @petermmurray on our site.
Photographer @danielpshea
Special thanks Dylan Monge
Atmos Volume 12: Pollinate
Cofounder / Editor-in-Chief @willowonearth
Cofounder / Chief Creative Officer @jakesarge
Executive Director @the.resaperez
Editorial Operations Director @karen.pk.gray
Art Director @tessaforrest
Creative Producer @anameizing
Print Design by @actualsource.work
Print Editor @unwrinkling
Associate Editor @jasminexhardy
Copy Editor Karly Alderfer
Research Editor Matt Mahoney

Honoring the relationships that nurture us.
In one of her final interviews, Dr. Jane Goodall reflected: “We are part of Mother Nature. We depend on Mother Nature for clean air, for water, for food, for clothing, for everything.” Today, her work remains a powerful reminder of our sacred connection to the Earth.
The Nature of Hope: The World Jane Goodall Inspired, created by @amivitale, is a collective offering from more than 100 photographers around the world who have devoted their lives to witnessing and documenting our planet.
Learn more at the link in our bio.
Photographs by @michaelnicknichols, @marionpayr, @daisygilardini, @marinacano, @malin.hanning, @leilajeffreys, @ggkenya, Dr. Jane Goodall, @suzieszterhas

Honoring the relationships that nurture us.
In one of her final interviews, Dr. Jane Goodall reflected: “We are part of Mother Nature. We depend on Mother Nature for clean air, for water, for food, for clothing, for everything.” Today, her work remains a powerful reminder of our sacred connection to the Earth.
The Nature of Hope: The World Jane Goodall Inspired, created by @amivitale, is a collective offering from more than 100 photographers around the world who have devoted their lives to witnessing and documenting our planet.
Learn more at the link in our bio.
Photographs by @michaelnicknichols, @marionpayr, @daisygilardini, @marinacano, @malin.hanning, @leilajeffreys, @ggkenya, Dr. Jane Goodall, @suzieszterhas

Honoring the relationships that nurture us.
In one of her final interviews, Dr. Jane Goodall reflected: “We are part of Mother Nature. We depend on Mother Nature for clean air, for water, for food, for clothing, for everything.” Today, her work remains a powerful reminder of our sacred connection to the Earth.
The Nature of Hope: The World Jane Goodall Inspired, created by @amivitale, is a collective offering from more than 100 photographers around the world who have devoted their lives to witnessing and documenting our planet.
Learn more at the link in our bio.
Photographs by @michaelnicknichols, @marionpayr, @daisygilardini, @marinacano, @malin.hanning, @leilajeffreys, @ggkenya, Dr. Jane Goodall, @suzieszterhas

Honoring the relationships that nurture us.
In one of her final interviews, Dr. Jane Goodall reflected: “We are part of Mother Nature. We depend on Mother Nature for clean air, for water, for food, for clothing, for everything.” Today, her work remains a powerful reminder of our sacred connection to the Earth.
The Nature of Hope: The World Jane Goodall Inspired, created by @amivitale, is a collective offering from more than 100 photographers around the world who have devoted their lives to witnessing and documenting our planet.
Learn more at the link in our bio.
Photographs by @michaelnicknichols, @marionpayr, @daisygilardini, @marinacano, @malin.hanning, @leilajeffreys, @ggkenya, Dr. Jane Goodall, @suzieszterhas

Honoring the relationships that nurture us.
In one of her final interviews, Dr. Jane Goodall reflected: “We are part of Mother Nature. We depend on Mother Nature for clean air, for water, for food, for clothing, for everything.” Today, her work remains a powerful reminder of our sacred connection to the Earth.
The Nature of Hope: The World Jane Goodall Inspired, created by @amivitale, is a collective offering from more than 100 photographers around the world who have devoted their lives to witnessing and documenting our planet.
Learn more at the link in our bio.
Photographs by @michaelnicknichols, @marionpayr, @daisygilardini, @marinacano, @malin.hanning, @leilajeffreys, @ggkenya, Dr. Jane Goodall, @suzieszterhas

Honoring the relationships that nurture us.
In one of her final interviews, Dr. Jane Goodall reflected: “We are part of Mother Nature. We depend on Mother Nature for clean air, for water, for food, for clothing, for everything.” Today, her work remains a powerful reminder of our sacred connection to the Earth.
The Nature of Hope: The World Jane Goodall Inspired, created by @amivitale, is a collective offering from more than 100 photographers around the world who have devoted their lives to witnessing and documenting our planet.
Learn more at the link in our bio.
Photographs by @michaelnicknichols, @marionpayr, @daisygilardini, @marinacano, @malin.hanning, @leilajeffreys, @ggkenya, Dr. Jane Goodall, @suzieszterhas

Honoring the relationships that nurture us.
In one of her final interviews, Dr. Jane Goodall reflected: “We are part of Mother Nature. We depend on Mother Nature for clean air, for water, for food, for clothing, for everything.” Today, her work remains a powerful reminder of our sacred connection to the Earth.
The Nature of Hope: The World Jane Goodall Inspired, created by @amivitale, is a collective offering from more than 100 photographers around the world who have devoted their lives to witnessing and documenting our planet.
Learn more at the link in our bio.
Photographs by @michaelnicknichols, @marionpayr, @daisygilardini, @marinacano, @malin.hanning, @leilajeffreys, @ggkenya, Dr. Jane Goodall, @suzieszterhas

Honoring the relationships that nurture us.
In one of her final interviews, Dr. Jane Goodall reflected: “We are part of Mother Nature. We depend on Mother Nature for clean air, for water, for food, for clothing, for everything.” Today, her work remains a powerful reminder of our sacred connection to the Earth.
The Nature of Hope: The World Jane Goodall Inspired, created by @amivitale, is a collective offering from more than 100 photographers around the world who have devoted their lives to witnessing and documenting our planet.
Learn more at the link in our bio.
Photographs by @michaelnicknichols, @marionpayr, @daisygilardini, @marinacano, @malin.hanning, @leilajeffreys, @ggkenya, Dr. Jane Goodall, @suzieszterhas

Honoring the relationships that nurture us.
In one of her final interviews, Dr. Jane Goodall reflected: “We are part of Mother Nature. We depend on Mother Nature for clean air, for water, for food, for clothing, for everything.” Today, her work remains a powerful reminder of our sacred connection to the Earth.
The Nature of Hope: The World Jane Goodall Inspired, created by @amivitale, is a collective offering from more than 100 photographers around the world who have devoted their lives to witnessing and documenting our planet.
Learn more at the link in our bio.
Photographs by @michaelnicknichols, @marionpayr, @daisygilardini, @marinacano, @malin.hanning, @leilajeffreys, @ggkenya, Dr. Jane Goodall, @suzieszterhas

Honoring the relationships that nurture us.
In one of her final interviews, Dr. Jane Goodall reflected: “We are part of Mother Nature. We depend on Mother Nature for clean air, for water, for food, for clothing, for everything.” Today, her work remains a powerful reminder of our sacred connection to the Earth.
The Nature of Hope: The World Jane Goodall Inspired, created by @amivitale, is a collective offering from more than 100 photographers around the world who have devoted their lives to witnessing and documenting our planet.
Learn more at the link in our bio.
Photographs by @michaelnicknichols, @marionpayr, @daisygilardini, @marinacano, @malin.hanning, @leilajeffreys, @ggkenya, Dr. Jane Goodall, @suzieszterhas

The ocean has an invasive species problem. Chefs think they can help.
Lionfish, green crabs, and other marine species spread through human activity are overwhelming coastlines from Bermuda to New England, devastating native reef populations and costing billions in ecological damage each year. But targeted culling has been shown to reduce lionfish densities by more than 50%, giving fragile ecosystems a fighting chance to recover.
For Atmos, Alexandra Marvar (@hollowwalls) reports from the front lines of "invasivorism"—where chefs, divers, and coastal communities are turning one of the ocean's most pressing ecological crises into an unexpected culinary opportunity, while asking what it really means to fight back against a species that humans, in many ways, helped set loose in the first place.
Head to the link in our bio for the full story.
Photographs by @philipdanielducasse

The ocean has an invasive species problem. Chefs think they can help.
Lionfish, green crabs, and other marine species spread through human activity are overwhelming coastlines from Bermuda to New England, devastating native reef populations and costing billions in ecological damage each year. But targeted culling has been shown to reduce lionfish densities by more than 50%, giving fragile ecosystems a fighting chance to recover.
For Atmos, Alexandra Marvar (@hollowwalls) reports from the front lines of "invasivorism"—where chefs, divers, and coastal communities are turning one of the ocean's most pressing ecological crises into an unexpected culinary opportunity, while asking what it really means to fight back against a species that humans, in many ways, helped set loose in the first place.
Head to the link in our bio for the full story.
Photographs by @philipdanielducasse

The ocean has an invasive species problem. Chefs think they can help.
Lionfish, green crabs, and other marine species spread through human activity are overwhelming coastlines from Bermuda to New England, devastating native reef populations and costing billions in ecological damage each year. But targeted culling has been shown to reduce lionfish densities by more than 50%, giving fragile ecosystems a fighting chance to recover.
For Atmos, Alexandra Marvar (@hollowwalls) reports from the front lines of "invasivorism"—where chefs, divers, and coastal communities are turning one of the ocean's most pressing ecological crises into an unexpected culinary opportunity, while asking what it really means to fight back against a species that humans, in many ways, helped set loose in the first place.
Head to the link in our bio for the full story.
Photographs by @philipdanielducasse

The ocean has an invasive species problem. Chefs think they can help.
Lionfish, green crabs, and other marine species spread through human activity are overwhelming coastlines from Bermuda to New England, devastating native reef populations and costing billions in ecological damage each year. But targeted culling has been shown to reduce lionfish densities by more than 50%, giving fragile ecosystems a fighting chance to recover.
For Atmos, Alexandra Marvar (@hollowwalls) reports from the front lines of "invasivorism"—where chefs, divers, and coastal communities are turning one of the ocean's most pressing ecological crises into an unexpected culinary opportunity, while asking what it really means to fight back against a species that humans, in many ways, helped set loose in the first place.
Head to the link in our bio for the full story.
Photographs by @philipdanielducasse

The ocean has an invasive species problem. Chefs think they can help.
Lionfish, green crabs, and other marine species spread through human activity are overwhelming coastlines from Bermuda to New England, devastating native reef populations and costing billions in ecological damage each year. But targeted culling has been shown to reduce lionfish densities by more than 50%, giving fragile ecosystems a fighting chance to recover.
For Atmos, Alexandra Marvar (@hollowwalls) reports from the front lines of "invasivorism"—where chefs, divers, and coastal communities are turning one of the ocean's most pressing ecological crises into an unexpected culinary opportunity, while asking what it really means to fight back against a species that humans, in many ways, helped set loose in the first place.
Head to the link in our bio for the full story.
Photographs by @philipdanielducasse

The ocean has an invasive species problem. Chefs think they can help.
Lionfish, green crabs, and other marine species spread through human activity are overwhelming coastlines from Bermuda to New England, devastating native reef populations and costing billions in ecological damage each year. But targeted culling has been shown to reduce lionfish densities by more than 50%, giving fragile ecosystems a fighting chance to recover.
For Atmos, Alexandra Marvar (@hollowwalls) reports from the front lines of "invasivorism"—where chefs, divers, and coastal communities are turning one of the ocean's most pressing ecological crises into an unexpected culinary opportunity, while asking what it really means to fight back against a species that humans, in many ways, helped set loose in the first place.
Head to the link in our bio for the full story.
Photographs by @philipdanielducasse

The ocean has an invasive species problem. Chefs think they can help.
Lionfish, green crabs, and other marine species spread through human activity are overwhelming coastlines from Bermuda to New England, devastating native reef populations and costing billions in ecological damage each year. But targeted culling has been shown to reduce lionfish densities by more than 50%, giving fragile ecosystems a fighting chance to recover.
For Atmos, Alexandra Marvar (@hollowwalls) reports from the front lines of "invasivorism"—where chefs, divers, and coastal communities are turning one of the ocean's most pressing ecological crises into an unexpected culinary opportunity, while asking what it really means to fight back against a species that humans, in many ways, helped set loose in the first place.
Head to the link in our bio for the full story.
Photographs by @philipdanielducasse

The ocean has an invasive species problem. Chefs think they can help.
Lionfish, green crabs, and other marine species spread through human activity are overwhelming coastlines from Bermuda to New England, devastating native reef populations and costing billions in ecological damage each year. But targeted culling has been shown to reduce lionfish densities by more than 50%, giving fragile ecosystems a fighting chance to recover.
For Atmos, Alexandra Marvar (@hollowwalls) reports from the front lines of "invasivorism"—where chefs, divers, and coastal communities are turning one of the ocean's most pressing ecological crises into an unexpected culinary opportunity, while asking what it really means to fight back against a species that humans, in many ways, helped set loose in the first place.
Head to the link in our bio for the full story.
Photographs by @philipdanielducasse

The ocean has an invasive species problem. Chefs think they can help.
Lionfish, green crabs, and other marine species spread through human activity are overwhelming coastlines from Bermuda to New England, devastating native reef populations and costing billions in ecological damage each year. But targeted culling has been shown to reduce lionfish densities by more than 50%, giving fragile ecosystems a fighting chance to recover.
For Atmos, Alexandra Marvar (@hollowwalls) reports from the front lines of "invasivorism"—where chefs, divers, and coastal communities are turning one of the ocean's most pressing ecological crises into an unexpected culinary opportunity, while asking what it really means to fight back against a species that humans, in many ways, helped set loose in the first place.
Head to the link in our bio for the full story.
Photographs by @philipdanielducasse

The ocean has an invasive species problem. Chefs think they can help.
Lionfish, green crabs, and other marine species spread through human activity are overwhelming coastlines from Bermuda to New England, devastating native reef populations and costing billions in ecological damage each year. But targeted culling has been shown to reduce lionfish densities by more than 50%, giving fragile ecosystems a fighting chance to recover.
For Atmos, Alexandra Marvar (@hollowwalls) reports from the front lines of "invasivorism"—where chefs, divers, and coastal communities are turning one of the ocean's most pressing ecological crises into an unexpected culinary opportunity, while asking what it really means to fight back against a species that humans, in many ways, helped set loose in the first place.
Head to the link in our bio for the full story.
Photographs by @philipdanielducasse

The ocean has an invasive species problem. Chefs think they can help.
Lionfish, green crabs, and other marine species spread through human activity are overwhelming coastlines from Bermuda to New England, devastating native reef populations and costing billions in ecological damage each year. But targeted culling has been shown to reduce lionfish densities by more than 50%, giving fragile ecosystems a fighting chance to recover.
For Atmos, Alexandra Marvar (@hollowwalls) reports from the front lines of "invasivorism"—where chefs, divers, and coastal communities are turning one of the ocean's most pressing ecological crises into an unexpected culinary opportunity, while asking what it really means to fight back against a species that humans, in many ways, helped set loose in the first place.
Head to the link in our bio for the full story.
Photographs by @philipdanielducasse

The ocean has an invasive species problem. Chefs think they can help.
Lionfish, green crabs, and other marine species spread through human activity are overwhelming coastlines from Bermuda to New England, devastating native reef populations and costing billions in ecological damage each year. But targeted culling has been shown to reduce lionfish densities by more than 50%, giving fragile ecosystems a fighting chance to recover.
For Atmos, Alexandra Marvar (@hollowwalls) reports from the front lines of "invasivorism"—where chefs, divers, and coastal communities are turning one of the ocean's most pressing ecological crises into an unexpected culinary opportunity, while asking what it really means to fight back against a species that humans, in many ways, helped set loose in the first place.
Head to the link in our bio for the full story.
Photographs by @philipdanielducasse

The ocean has an invasive species problem. Chefs think they can help.
Lionfish, green crabs, and other marine species spread through human activity are overwhelming coastlines from Bermuda to New England, devastating native reef populations and costing billions in ecological damage each year. But targeted culling has been shown to reduce lionfish densities by more than 50%, giving fragile ecosystems a fighting chance to recover.
For Atmos, Alexandra Marvar (@hollowwalls) reports from the front lines of "invasivorism"—where chefs, divers, and coastal communities are turning one of the ocean's most pressing ecological crises into an unexpected culinary opportunity, while asking what it really means to fight back against a species that humans, in many ways, helped set loose in the first place.
Head to the link in our bio for the full story.
Photographs by @philipdanielducasse

A world in a grain of sand.
Formed by the slow fragmentation of landscapes across eternity, sand is the miniature evidence of the immensity of time. From singing dunes and shifting beaches to modern life and the smartphone you’re holding, our world is built from it.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth reflects on the wisdom of a substance both ubiquitous and miraculous.
Subscribe at the link in our bio.
Photograph from Desert Dream, 1997
Installation Artist and Sculptor Danae Stratou
Industrial Designer and Architect Alexandra Stratou
Architect Stella Konstantinidis

A world in a grain of sand.
Formed by the slow fragmentation of landscapes across eternity, sand is the miniature evidence of the immensity of time. From singing dunes and shifting beaches to modern life and the smartphone you’re holding, our world is built from it.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth reflects on the wisdom of a substance both ubiquitous and miraculous.
Subscribe at the link in our bio.
Photograph from Desert Dream, 1997
Installation Artist and Sculptor Danae Stratou
Industrial Designer and Architect Alexandra Stratou
Architect Stella Konstantinidis

A world in a grain of sand.
Formed by the slow fragmentation of landscapes across eternity, sand is the miniature evidence of the immensity of time. From singing dunes and shifting beaches to modern life and the smartphone you’re holding, our world is built from it.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth reflects on the wisdom of a substance both ubiquitous and miraculous.
Subscribe at the link in our bio.
Photograph from Desert Dream, 1997
Installation Artist and Sculptor Danae Stratou
Industrial Designer and Architect Alexandra Stratou
Architect Stella Konstantinidis

A world in a grain of sand.
Formed by the slow fragmentation of landscapes across eternity, sand is the miniature evidence of the immensity of time. From singing dunes and shifting beaches to modern life and the smartphone you’re holding, our world is built from it.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth reflects on the wisdom of a substance both ubiquitous and miraculous.
Subscribe at the link in our bio.
Photograph from Desert Dream, 1997
Installation Artist and Sculptor Danae Stratou
Industrial Designer and Architect Alexandra Stratou
Architect Stella Konstantinidis

A world in a grain of sand.
Formed by the slow fragmentation of landscapes across eternity, sand is the miniature evidence of the immensity of time. From singing dunes and shifting beaches to modern life and the smartphone you’re holding, our world is built from it.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth reflects on the wisdom of a substance both ubiquitous and miraculous.
Subscribe at the link in our bio.
Photograph from Desert Dream, 1997
Installation Artist and Sculptor Danae Stratou
Industrial Designer and Architect Alexandra Stratou
Architect Stella Konstantinidis

A world in a grain of sand.
Formed by the slow fragmentation of landscapes across eternity, sand is the miniature evidence of the immensity of time. From singing dunes and shifting beaches to modern life and the smartphone you’re holding, our world is built from it.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth reflects on the wisdom of a substance both ubiquitous and miraculous.
Subscribe at the link in our bio.
Photograph from Desert Dream, 1997
Installation Artist and Sculptor Danae Stratou
Industrial Designer and Architect Alexandra Stratou
Architect Stella Konstantinidis

A world in a grain of sand.
Formed by the slow fragmentation of landscapes across eternity, sand is the miniature evidence of the immensity of time. From singing dunes and shifting beaches to modern life and the smartphone you’re holding, our world is built from it.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth reflects on the wisdom of a substance both ubiquitous and miraculous.
Subscribe at the link in our bio.
Photograph from Desert Dream, 1997
Installation Artist and Sculptor Danae Stratou
Industrial Designer and Architect Alexandra Stratou
Architect Stella Konstantinidis

A world in a grain of sand.
Formed by the slow fragmentation of landscapes across eternity, sand is the miniature evidence of the immensity of time. From singing dunes and shifting beaches to modern life and the smartphone you’re holding, our world is built from it.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth reflects on the wisdom of a substance both ubiquitous and miraculous.
Subscribe at the link in our bio.
Photograph from Desert Dream, 1997
Installation Artist and Sculptor Danae Stratou
Industrial Designer and Architect Alexandra Stratou
Architect Stella Konstantinidis

A world in a grain of sand.
Formed by the slow fragmentation of landscapes across eternity, sand is the miniature evidence of the immensity of time. From singing dunes and shifting beaches to modern life and the smartphone you’re holding, our world is built from it.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth reflects on the wisdom of a substance both ubiquitous and miraculous.
Subscribe at the link in our bio.
Photograph from Desert Dream, 1997
Installation Artist and Sculptor Danae Stratou
Industrial Designer and Architect Alexandra Stratou
Architect Stella Konstantinidis

A world in a grain of sand.
Formed by the slow fragmentation of landscapes across eternity, sand is the miniature evidence of the immensity of time. From singing dunes and shifting beaches to modern life and the smartphone you’re holding, our world is built from it.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth reflects on the wisdom of a substance both ubiquitous and miraculous.
Subscribe at the link in our bio.
Photograph from Desert Dream, 1997
Installation Artist and Sculptor Danae Stratou
Industrial Designer and Architect Alexandra Stratou
Architect Stella Konstantinidis

A century of love for the planet.
British biologist, writer, natural historian, and broadcaster @davidattenborough has spent a lifetime revealing the wonders of the Earth to audiences around the world, inspiring generations with a deep passion and knowledge for our planet. From his first wildlife program in the 1950s, to narrating landmark series like Planet Earth, to his most recent work covering our oceans, he has remained one of the most trusted guides to the natural world.
His message has never wavered: “No one will protect what they don’t care about, and no one will care about what they have never experienced.” In honor of Attenborough’s 100th birthday this week, the BBC will air a special live event—David Attenborough’s 100 Years on Planet Earth—celebrating not just a life well lived, but a planet better understood because of it.
How has David Attenborough inspired you? Let us know in the comments.
Photographs via BBC and by Danny Martindale, John Stillwell / Getty Images
Design by @astat

A century of love for the planet.
British biologist, writer, natural historian, and broadcaster @davidattenborough has spent a lifetime revealing the wonders of the Earth to audiences around the world, inspiring generations with a deep passion and knowledge for our planet. From his first wildlife program in the 1950s, to narrating landmark series like Planet Earth, to his most recent work covering our oceans, he has remained one of the most trusted guides to the natural world.
His message has never wavered: “No one will protect what they don’t care about, and no one will care about what they have never experienced.” In honor of Attenborough’s 100th birthday this week, the BBC will air a special live event—David Attenborough’s 100 Years on Planet Earth—celebrating not just a life well lived, but a planet better understood because of it.
How has David Attenborough inspired you? Let us know in the comments.
Photographs via BBC and by Danny Martindale, John Stillwell / Getty Images
Design by @astat

A century of love for the planet.
British biologist, writer, natural historian, and broadcaster @davidattenborough has spent a lifetime revealing the wonders of the Earth to audiences around the world, inspiring generations with a deep passion and knowledge for our planet. From his first wildlife program in the 1950s, to narrating landmark series like Planet Earth, to his most recent work covering our oceans, he has remained one of the most trusted guides to the natural world.
His message has never wavered: “No one will protect what they don’t care about, and no one will care about what they have never experienced.” In honor of Attenborough’s 100th birthday this week, the BBC will air a special live event—David Attenborough’s 100 Years on Planet Earth—celebrating not just a life well lived, but a planet better understood because of it.
How has David Attenborough inspired you? Let us know in the comments.
Photographs via BBC and by Danny Martindale, John Stillwell / Getty Images
Design by @astat

A century of love for the planet.
British biologist, writer, natural historian, and broadcaster @davidattenborough has spent a lifetime revealing the wonders of the Earth to audiences around the world, inspiring generations with a deep passion and knowledge for our planet. From his first wildlife program in the 1950s, to narrating landmark series like Planet Earth, to his most recent work covering our oceans, he has remained one of the most trusted guides to the natural world.
His message has never wavered: “No one will protect what they don’t care about, and no one will care about what they have never experienced.” In honor of Attenborough’s 100th birthday this week, the BBC will air a special live event—David Attenborough’s 100 Years on Planet Earth—celebrating not just a life well lived, but a planet better understood because of it.
How has David Attenborough inspired you? Let us know in the comments.
Photographs via BBC and by Danny Martindale, John Stillwell / Getty Images
Design by @astat

A century of love for the planet.
British biologist, writer, natural historian, and broadcaster @davidattenborough has spent a lifetime revealing the wonders of the Earth to audiences around the world, inspiring generations with a deep passion and knowledge for our planet. From his first wildlife program in the 1950s, to narrating landmark series like Planet Earth, to his most recent work covering our oceans, he has remained one of the most trusted guides to the natural world.
His message has never wavered: “No one will protect what they don’t care about, and no one will care about what they have never experienced.” In honor of Attenborough’s 100th birthday this week, the BBC will air a special live event—David Attenborough’s 100 Years on Planet Earth—celebrating not just a life well lived, but a planet better understood because of it.
How has David Attenborough inspired you? Let us know in the comments.
Photographs via BBC and by Danny Martindale, John Stillwell / Getty Images
Design by @astat

A century of love for the planet.
British biologist, writer, natural historian, and broadcaster @davidattenborough has spent a lifetime revealing the wonders of the Earth to audiences around the world, inspiring generations with a deep passion and knowledge for our planet. From his first wildlife program in the 1950s, to narrating landmark series like Planet Earth, to his most recent work covering our oceans, he has remained one of the most trusted guides to the natural world.
His message has never wavered: “No one will protect what they don’t care about, and no one will care about what they have never experienced.” In honor of Attenborough’s 100th birthday this week, the BBC will air a special live event—David Attenborough’s 100 Years on Planet Earth—celebrating not just a life well lived, but a planet better understood because of it.
How has David Attenborough inspired you? Let us know in the comments.
Photographs via BBC and by Danny Martindale, John Stillwell / Getty Images
Design by @astat

A century of love for the planet.
British biologist, writer, natural historian, and broadcaster @davidattenborough has spent a lifetime revealing the wonders of the Earth to audiences around the world, inspiring generations with a deep passion and knowledge for our planet. From his first wildlife program in the 1950s, to narrating landmark series like Planet Earth, to his most recent work covering our oceans, he has remained one of the most trusted guides to the natural world.
His message has never wavered: “No one will protect what they don’t care about, and no one will care about what they have never experienced.” In honor of Attenborough’s 100th birthday this week, the BBC will air a special live event—David Attenborough’s 100 Years on Planet Earth—celebrating not just a life well lived, but a planet better understood because of it.
How has David Attenborough inspired you? Let us know in the comments.
Photographs via BBC and by Danny Martindale, John Stillwell / Getty Images
Design by @astat

The U.S. banned cigarette ads. So why not oil?
Last week, Amsterdam became the first capital city to ban advertisements for high-carbon lifestyles, including airlines, gas stations, and burger joints. Meanwhile, the U.S. is still plastering them across Times Square, Dodger Stadium, and your social media feed—to the tune of billions of dollars.
But it doesn’t have to be this way—and Amsterdam proves it. For this week’s Understory, @randi_green unpacks Amsterdam’s historic ad ban, the advertising giant that spent $1 billion on ads in the U.S. promoting top fossil fuel companies, and what accountability could actually look like.
Subscribe and read the full breakdown at the link in our bio.
Photographs by @carmen_colombo / @connectedarchives, Kenzo Tribouillard / Getty Images

The U.S. banned cigarette ads. So why not oil?
Last week, Amsterdam became the first capital city to ban advertisements for high-carbon lifestyles, including airlines, gas stations, and burger joints. Meanwhile, the U.S. is still plastering them across Times Square, Dodger Stadium, and your social media feed—to the tune of billions of dollars.
But it doesn’t have to be this way—and Amsterdam proves it. For this week’s Understory, @randi_green unpacks Amsterdam’s historic ad ban, the advertising giant that spent $1 billion on ads in the U.S. promoting top fossil fuel companies, and what accountability could actually look like.
Subscribe and read the full breakdown at the link in our bio.
Photographs by @carmen_colombo / @connectedarchives, Kenzo Tribouillard / Getty Images

Weaving with nature and technology.
Based in Oakland, California, @swilkwork is a queer fiber installation and performance artist creating both mechanically automated and environmentally activated sculptural weavings. Their installations take on organic, ethereal forms, becoming living parts of the landscape.
Drawing from the depths of queer history and collective grief, Swilk's practice excavates the quiet gestures of resilience that emerge in the aftermath of loss, inviting audiences to sit with the stories and legacies that continue to shape us.
What do you think of this work? Let us know in the comments.
Weaving with nature and technology.
Based in Oakland, California, @swilkwork is a queer fiber installation and performance artist creating both mechanically automated and environmentally activated sculptural weavings. Their installations take on organic, ethereal forms, becoming living parts of the landscape.
Drawing from the depths of queer history and collective grief, Swilk's practice excavates the quiet gestures of resilience that emerge in the aftermath of loss, inviting audiences to sit with the stories and legacies that continue to shape us.
What do you think of this work? Let us know in the comments.

Weaving with nature and technology.
Based in Oakland, California, @swilkwork is a queer fiber installation and performance artist creating both mechanically automated and environmentally activated sculptural weavings. Their installations take on organic, ethereal forms, becoming living parts of the landscape.
Drawing from the depths of queer history and collective grief, Swilk's practice excavates the quiet gestures of resilience that emerge in the aftermath of loss, inviting audiences to sit with the stories and legacies that continue to shape us.
What do you think of this work? Let us know in the comments.

Weaving with nature and technology.
Based in Oakland, California, @swilkwork is a queer fiber installation and performance artist creating both mechanically automated and environmentally activated sculptural weavings. Their installations take on organic, ethereal forms, becoming living parts of the landscape.
Drawing from the depths of queer history and collective grief, Swilk's practice excavates the quiet gestures of resilience that emerge in the aftermath of loss, inviting audiences to sit with the stories and legacies that continue to shape us.
What do you think of this work? Let us know in the comments.
Weaving with nature and technology.
Based in Oakland, California, @swilkwork is a queer fiber installation and performance artist creating both mechanically automated and environmentally activated sculptural weavings. Their installations take on organic, ethereal forms, becoming living parts of the landscape.
Drawing from the depths of queer history and collective grief, Swilk's practice excavates the quiet gestures of resilience that emerge in the aftermath of loss, inviting audiences to sit with the stories and legacies that continue to shape us.
What do you think of this work? Let us know in the comments.

Weaving with nature and technology.
Based in Oakland, California, @swilkwork is a queer fiber installation and performance artist creating both mechanically automated and environmentally activated sculptural weavings. Their installations take on organic, ethereal forms, becoming living parts of the landscape.
Drawing from the depths of queer history and collective grief, Swilk's practice excavates the quiet gestures of resilience that emerge in the aftermath of loss, inviting audiences to sit with the stories and legacies that continue to shape us.
What do you think of this work? Let us know in the comments.
Weaving with nature and technology.
Based in Oakland, California, @swilkwork is a queer fiber installation and performance artist creating both mechanically automated and environmentally activated sculptural weavings. Their installations take on organic, ethereal forms, becoming living parts of the landscape.
Drawing from the depths of queer history and collective grief, Swilk's practice excavates the quiet gestures of resilience that emerge in the aftermath of loss, inviting audiences to sit with the stories and legacies that continue to shape us.
What do you think of this work? Let us know in the comments.

In his latest book, @davidgeorgehaskell shows how flowers made our world.
With nearly half the world's flower species in decline and ecosystems under mounting pressure from climate change, biologist David George Haskell's new book arrives at an urgent moment. In "How Flowers Made Our World," Haskell makes the case that flowers are the engineers of habitats, architects of food webs, and the biological infrastructure behind much of what humans eat and call "nature."
Haskell traces how flowering plants revolutionized the planet after arriving late in Earth's history, reshaping landscapes and forging tight partnerships with insects, birds, and mammals that persist to this day. For Atmos, he speaks with Features Director @daphnemilner about flowers as evolutionary agents—and what it would take to keep from unmaking the world they built.
Head to the link in our bio for the full conversation.
Photographs by @max_attila_bartsch
Design by @astat

In his latest book, @davidgeorgehaskell shows how flowers made our world.
With nearly half the world's flower species in decline and ecosystems under mounting pressure from climate change, biologist David George Haskell's new book arrives at an urgent moment. In "How Flowers Made Our World," Haskell makes the case that flowers are the engineers of habitats, architects of food webs, and the biological infrastructure behind much of what humans eat and call "nature."
Haskell traces how flowering plants revolutionized the planet after arriving late in Earth's history, reshaping landscapes and forging tight partnerships with insects, birds, and mammals that persist to this day. For Atmos, he speaks with Features Director @daphnemilner about flowers as evolutionary agents—and what it would take to keep from unmaking the world they built.
Head to the link in our bio for the full conversation.
Photographs by @max_attila_bartsch
Design by @astat

In his latest book, @davidgeorgehaskell shows how flowers made our world.
With nearly half the world's flower species in decline and ecosystems under mounting pressure from climate change, biologist David George Haskell's new book arrives at an urgent moment. In "How Flowers Made Our World," Haskell makes the case that flowers are the engineers of habitats, architects of food webs, and the biological infrastructure behind much of what humans eat and call "nature."
Haskell traces how flowering plants revolutionized the planet after arriving late in Earth's history, reshaping landscapes and forging tight partnerships with insects, birds, and mammals that persist to this day. For Atmos, he speaks with Features Director @daphnemilner about flowers as evolutionary agents—and what it would take to keep from unmaking the world they built.
Head to the link in our bio for the full conversation.
Photographs by @max_attila_bartsch
Design by @astat

In his latest book, @davidgeorgehaskell shows how flowers made our world.
With nearly half the world's flower species in decline and ecosystems under mounting pressure from climate change, biologist David George Haskell's new book arrives at an urgent moment. In "How Flowers Made Our World," Haskell makes the case that flowers are the engineers of habitats, architects of food webs, and the biological infrastructure behind much of what humans eat and call "nature."
Haskell traces how flowering plants revolutionized the planet after arriving late in Earth's history, reshaping landscapes and forging tight partnerships with insects, birds, and mammals that persist to this day. For Atmos, he speaks with Features Director @daphnemilner about flowers as evolutionary agents—and what it would take to keep from unmaking the world they built.
Head to the link in our bio for the full conversation.
Photographs by @max_attila_bartsch
Design by @astat

In his latest book, @davidgeorgehaskell shows how flowers made our world.
With nearly half the world's flower species in decline and ecosystems under mounting pressure from climate change, biologist David George Haskell's new book arrives at an urgent moment. In "How Flowers Made Our World," Haskell makes the case that flowers are the engineers of habitats, architects of food webs, and the biological infrastructure behind much of what humans eat and call "nature."
Haskell traces how flowering plants revolutionized the planet after arriving late in Earth's history, reshaping landscapes and forging tight partnerships with insects, birds, and mammals that persist to this day. For Atmos, he speaks with Features Director @daphnemilner about flowers as evolutionary agents—and what it would take to keep from unmaking the world they built.
Head to the link in our bio for the full conversation.
Photographs by @max_attila_bartsch
Design by @astat
To exist is remarkable.
The universe is a cascade of near-impossibilities—cosmic collisions, millennia of rainfall, chemistry that somehow crossed the threshold into life. And yet consciousness emerged, curious enough to look back and marvel at the chain of events that made it possible.
In The Overview, @willowonearth sits with the strangeness of being alive and what it means to find meaning in a universe that simply, improbably, is.
Head to the link in our bio to read the full newsletter.
Video edit by @astat

For Palestinians, the land holds memory, livelihood, and knowledge passed through generations.
Following the October 2025 ceasefire, travel to the West Bank became possible again for the first time in two years—allowing a visit to @treedomforpalestine, a grassroots initiative working with the Palestinian Farmers' Union to support food security and sustainable livelihoods. That same week, more than 8,000 olive trees were allegedly uprooted by Israeli forces and neighborhoods near Bethlehem razed.
Since 2003, an illegal 30-foot wall and network of military checkpoints have made the West Bank one of the most militarized civilian environments on Earth. Palestinians have tended this land for thousands of years. In every replanted tree and cultivated field, that bond endures. For Atmos, @yahya.alhamarna.pa shares a poetic reflection on Palestinian olive trees.
Head to the link in our bio to read more.
Photographs by @fredrick.horn

For Palestinians, the land holds memory, livelihood, and knowledge passed through generations.
Following the October 2025 ceasefire, travel to the West Bank became possible again for the first time in two years—allowing a visit to @treedomforpalestine, a grassroots initiative working with the Palestinian Farmers' Union to support food security and sustainable livelihoods. That same week, more than 8,000 olive trees were allegedly uprooted by Israeli forces and neighborhoods near Bethlehem razed.
Since 2003, an illegal 30-foot wall and network of military checkpoints have made the West Bank one of the most militarized civilian environments on Earth. Palestinians have tended this land for thousands of years. In every replanted tree and cultivated field, that bond endures. For Atmos, @yahya.alhamarna.pa shares a poetic reflection on Palestinian olive trees.
Head to the link in our bio to read more.
Photographs by @fredrick.horn

For Palestinians, the land holds memory, livelihood, and knowledge passed through generations.
Following the October 2025 ceasefire, travel to the West Bank became possible again for the first time in two years—allowing a visit to @treedomforpalestine, a grassroots initiative working with the Palestinian Farmers' Union to support food security and sustainable livelihoods. That same week, more than 8,000 olive trees were allegedly uprooted by Israeli forces and neighborhoods near Bethlehem razed.
Since 2003, an illegal 30-foot wall and network of military checkpoints have made the West Bank one of the most militarized civilian environments on Earth. Palestinians have tended this land for thousands of years. In every replanted tree and cultivated field, that bond endures. For Atmos, @yahya.alhamarna.pa shares a poetic reflection on Palestinian olive trees.
Head to the link in our bio to read more.
Photographs by @fredrick.horn

For Palestinians, the land holds memory, livelihood, and knowledge passed through generations.
Following the October 2025 ceasefire, travel to the West Bank became possible again for the first time in two years—allowing a visit to @treedomforpalestine, a grassroots initiative working with the Palestinian Farmers' Union to support food security and sustainable livelihoods. That same week, more than 8,000 olive trees were allegedly uprooted by Israeli forces and neighborhoods near Bethlehem razed.
Since 2003, an illegal 30-foot wall and network of military checkpoints have made the West Bank one of the most militarized civilian environments on Earth. Palestinians have tended this land for thousands of years. In every replanted tree and cultivated field, that bond endures. For Atmos, @yahya.alhamarna.pa shares a poetic reflection on Palestinian olive trees.
Head to the link in our bio to read more.
Photographs by @fredrick.horn

For Palestinians, the land holds memory, livelihood, and knowledge passed through generations.
Following the October 2025 ceasefire, travel to the West Bank became possible again for the first time in two years—allowing a visit to @treedomforpalestine, a grassroots initiative working with the Palestinian Farmers' Union to support food security and sustainable livelihoods. That same week, more than 8,000 olive trees were allegedly uprooted by Israeli forces and neighborhoods near Bethlehem razed.
Since 2003, an illegal 30-foot wall and network of military checkpoints have made the West Bank one of the most militarized civilian environments on Earth. Palestinians have tended this land for thousands of years. In every replanted tree and cultivated field, that bond endures. For Atmos, @yahya.alhamarna.pa shares a poetic reflection on Palestinian olive trees.
Head to the link in our bio to read more.
Photographs by @fredrick.horn

For Palestinians, the land holds memory, livelihood, and knowledge passed through generations.
Following the October 2025 ceasefire, travel to the West Bank became possible again for the first time in two years—allowing a visit to @treedomforpalestine, a grassroots initiative working with the Palestinian Farmers' Union to support food security and sustainable livelihoods. That same week, more than 8,000 olive trees were allegedly uprooted by Israeli forces and neighborhoods near Bethlehem razed.
Since 2003, an illegal 30-foot wall and network of military checkpoints have made the West Bank one of the most militarized civilian environments on Earth. Palestinians have tended this land for thousands of years. In every replanted tree and cultivated field, that bond endures. For Atmos, @yahya.alhamarna.pa shares a poetic reflection on Palestinian olive trees.
Head to the link in our bio to read more.
Photographs by @fredrick.horn

For Palestinians, the land holds memory, livelihood, and knowledge passed through generations.
Following the October 2025 ceasefire, travel to the West Bank became possible again for the first time in two years—allowing a visit to @treedomforpalestine, a grassroots initiative working with the Palestinian Farmers' Union to support food security and sustainable livelihoods. That same week, more than 8,000 olive trees were allegedly uprooted by Israeli forces and neighborhoods near Bethlehem razed.
Since 2003, an illegal 30-foot wall and network of military checkpoints have made the West Bank one of the most militarized civilian environments on Earth. Palestinians have tended this land for thousands of years. In every replanted tree and cultivated field, that bond endures. For Atmos, @yahya.alhamarna.pa shares a poetic reflection on Palestinian olive trees.
Head to the link in our bio to read more.
Photographs by @fredrick.horn

For Palestinians, the land holds memory, livelihood, and knowledge passed through generations.
Following the October 2025 ceasefire, travel to the West Bank became possible again for the first time in two years—allowing a visit to @treedomforpalestine, a grassroots initiative working with the Palestinian Farmers' Union to support food security and sustainable livelihoods. That same week, more than 8,000 olive trees were allegedly uprooted by Israeli forces and neighborhoods near Bethlehem razed.
Since 2003, an illegal 30-foot wall and network of military checkpoints have made the West Bank one of the most militarized civilian environments on Earth. Palestinians have tended this land for thousands of years. In every replanted tree and cultivated field, that bond endures. For Atmos, @yahya.alhamarna.pa shares a poetic reflection on Palestinian olive trees.
Head to the link in our bio to read more.
Photographs by @fredrick.horn

For Palestinians, the land holds memory, livelihood, and knowledge passed through generations.
Following the October 2025 ceasefire, travel to the West Bank became possible again for the first time in two years—allowing a visit to @treedomforpalestine, a grassroots initiative working with the Palestinian Farmers' Union to support food security and sustainable livelihoods. That same week, more than 8,000 olive trees were allegedly uprooted by Israeli forces and neighborhoods near Bethlehem razed.
Since 2003, an illegal 30-foot wall and network of military checkpoints have made the West Bank one of the most militarized civilian environments on Earth. Palestinians have tended this land for thousands of years. In every replanted tree and cultivated field, that bond endures. For Atmos, @yahya.alhamarna.pa shares a poetic reflection on Palestinian olive trees.
Head to the link in our bio to read more.
Photographs by @fredrick.horn

For Palestinians, the land holds memory, livelihood, and knowledge passed through generations.
Following the October 2025 ceasefire, travel to the West Bank became possible again for the first time in two years—allowing a visit to @treedomforpalestine, a grassroots initiative working with the Palestinian Farmers' Union to support food security and sustainable livelihoods. That same week, more than 8,000 olive trees were allegedly uprooted by Israeli forces and neighborhoods near Bethlehem razed.
Since 2003, an illegal 30-foot wall and network of military checkpoints have made the West Bank one of the most militarized civilian environments on Earth. Palestinians have tended this land for thousands of years. In every replanted tree and cultivated field, that bond endures. For Atmos, @yahya.alhamarna.pa shares a poetic reflection on Palestinian olive trees.
Head to the link in our bio to read more.
Photographs by @fredrick.horn
Can a machine have feelings?
Esteemed science writer @michael.pollan doesn’t think AI consciousness is the real conversation we should be having. Speaking at the @bioneers Conference, Pollan argued that genuine feelings depend on having a body that is vulnerable, that can suffer, and that can die. Without that, he says, any emotion a machine expresses is essentially weightless—a simulation, not a reality.
For Pollan, the stakes go far beyond philosophy. As AI companies push the idea that their systems may be developing a new form of consciousness, he warns that we risk losing sight of our moral obligations to the animals and people who actually share our experience of being alive. The choice of who—or what—we welcome into our circle of moral consideration, he argues, will define us as a species.
Head to the link in our bio to learn more.

We are not the only ones who feel.
Four centuries ago, a declaration separated mind from matter, humanity from the rest of the living world—yet beneath that divide, consciousness was always stirring. A narrow line between thought and feeling is all that stands between a planet of objects and a planet of persons.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth explores what it means to feel our place in a conscious world. Head to the link in our bio to subscribe.
Photograph by Michael Shainblum / Stills

We are not the only ones who feel.
Four centuries ago, a declaration separated mind from matter, humanity from the rest of the living world—yet beneath that divide, consciousness was always stirring. A narrow line between thought and feeling is all that stands between a planet of objects and a planet of persons.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth explores what it means to feel our place in a conscious world. Head to the link in our bio to subscribe.
Photograph by Michael Shainblum / Stills

We are not the only ones who feel.
Four centuries ago, a declaration separated mind from matter, humanity from the rest of the living world—yet beneath that divide, consciousness was always stirring. A narrow line between thought and feeling is all that stands between a planet of objects and a planet of persons.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth explores what it means to feel our place in a conscious world. Head to the link in our bio to subscribe.
Photograph by Michael Shainblum / Stills

We are not the only ones who feel.
Four centuries ago, a declaration separated mind from matter, humanity from the rest of the living world—yet beneath that divide, consciousness was always stirring. A narrow line between thought and feeling is all that stands between a planet of objects and a planet of persons.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth explores what it means to feel our place in a conscious world. Head to the link in our bio to subscribe.
Photograph by Michael Shainblum / Stills

We are not the only ones who feel.
Four centuries ago, a declaration separated mind from matter, humanity from the rest of the living world—yet beneath that divide, consciousness was always stirring. A narrow line between thought and feeling is all that stands between a planet of objects and a planet of persons.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth explores what it means to feel our place in a conscious world. Head to the link in our bio to subscribe.
Photograph by Michael Shainblum / Stills

We are not the only ones who feel.
Four centuries ago, a declaration separated mind from matter, humanity from the rest of the living world—yet beneath that divide, consciousness was always stirring. A narrow line between thought and feeling is all that stands between a planet of objects and a planet of persons.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth explores what it means to feel our place in a conscious world. Head to the link in our bio to subscribe.
Photograph by Michael Shainblum / Stills

We are not the only ones who feel.
Four centuries ago, a declaration separated mind from matter, humanity from the rest of the living world—yet beneath that divide, consciousness was always stirring. A narrow line between thought and feeling is all that stands between a planet of objects and a planet of persons.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth explores what it means to feel our place in a conscious world. Head to the link in our bio to subscribe.
Photograph by Michael Shainblum / Stills

We are not the only ones who feel.
Four centuries ago, a declaration separated mind from matter, humanity from the rest of the living world—yet beneath that divide, consciousness was always stirring. A narrow line between thought and feeling is all that stands between a planet of objects and a planet of persons.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth explores what it means to feel our place in a conscious world. Head to the link in our bio to subscribe.
Photograph by Michael Shainblum / Stills

We are not the only ones who feel.
Four centuries ago, a declaration separated mind from matter, humanity from the rest of the living world—yet beneath that divide, consciousness was always stirring. A narrow line between thought and feeling is all that stands between a planet of objects and a planet of persons.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth explores what it means to feel our place in a conscious world. Head to the link in our bio to subscribe.
Photograph by Michael Shainblum / Stills

We are not the only ones who feel.
Four centuries ago, a declaration separated mind from matter, humanity from the rest of the living world—yet beneath that divide, consciousness was always stirring. A narrow line between thought and feeling is all that stands between a planet of objects and a planet of persons.
In this week’s edition of The Overview, @willowonearth explores what it means to feel our place in a conscious world. Head to the link in our bio to subscribe.
Photograph by Michael Shainblum / Stills
The Instagram Story Viewer is an easy tool that lets you secretly watch and save Instagram stories, videos, photos, or IGTV. With this service, you can download content and enjoy it offline whenever you like. If you find something interesting on Instagram that you’d like to check out later or want to view stories while staying anonymous, our Viewer is perfect for you. Anonstories offers an excellent solution for keeping your identity hidden. Instagram first launched the Stories feature in August 2023, which was quickly adopted by other platforms due to its engaging, time-sensitive format. Stories let users share quick updates, whether photos, videos, or selfies, enhanced with text, emojis, or filters, and are visible for only 24 hours. This limited time frame creates high engagement compared to regular posts. In today’s world, Stories are one of the most popular ways to connect and communicate on social media. However, when you view a Story, the creator can see your name in their viewer list, which may be a privacy concern. What if you wish to browse Stories without being noticed? Here’s where Anonstories becomes useful. It allows you to watch public Instagram content without revealing your identity. Simply enter the username of the profile you’re curious about, and the tool will display their latest Stories. Features of Anonstories Viewer: - Anonymous Browsing: Watch Stories without showing up on the viewer list. - No Account Needed: View public content without signing up for an Instagram account. - Content Download: Save any Stories content directly to your device for offline use. - View Highlights: Access Instagram Highlights, even beyond the 24-hour window. - Repost Monitoring: Track the reposts or engagement levels on Stories for personal profiles. Limitations: - This tool works only with public accounts; private accounts remain inaccessible. Benefits: - Privacy-Friendly: Watch any Instagram content without being noticed. - Simple and Easy: No app installation or registration required. - Exclusive Tools: Download and manage content in ways Instagram doesn’t offer.
Keep track of Instagram updates discreetly while protecting your privacy and staying anonymous.
View profiles and photos anonymously with ease using the Private Profile Viewer.
This free tool allows you to view Instagram Stories anonymously, ensuring your activity remains hidden from the story uploader.
Anonstories lets users view Instagram stories without alerting the creator.
Works seamlessly on iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, and modern browsers like Chrome and Safari.
Prioritizes secure, anonymous browsing without requiring login credentials.
Users can view public stories by simply entering a username—no account needed.
Downloads photos (JPEG) and videos (MP4) with ease.
The service is free to use.
Content from private accounts can only be accessed by followers.
Files are for personal or educational use only and must comply with copyright rules.
Enter a public username to view or download stories. The service generates direct links for saving content locally.