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Plant What You Want To Grow

Every April, people around the world pause to recognize Earth Day, a day set aside to appreciate the planet and renew our commitment to caring for it. Communities organize beach cleanups, plant trees, and talk about protecting the natural world for future generations. 

At its heart, Earth Day carries a simple but powerful idea: what we nurture today will shape the world tomorrow. 

Today, environmentalism is often used as a shorthand for tribal identity. What began as a universal concern for conservation has been tilled into a political battlefield, and the seeds of division have been harvested in gridlock and resentment.


 
But the seeds of the modern environmental movement weren’t sown in a vacuum of ideology. In 1969, a massive oil spill off the coast of California galvanized the nation. That disaster became the catalyst for the first Earth Day in 1970, and this led directly to the creation of the EPA and the passage of the Clean Air Act and the Clean Water Act under the Nixon administration.

The message was clear and unified: the air we breathe and the water we drink are not partisan issues. 

On April 22, let Earth Day remind us that the environment flourishes when people choose to protect it. When we plant a community garden, clean a local beach, or invest in regional energy independence, the political labels tend to fall away. We find common ground. These acts may seem small or insignificant, but if small groups of citizens around the globe invest in their own communities, it can grow into something strong and sustaining for all of us. 

The same is true of the choices we make in our personal lives. 

Consider relationships. When we plant kindness, patience, and attention in our interactions with others, we cultivate trust and connection. On the other hand, when we neglect them or allow resentment to take root, those seeds can spread just as quickly as weeds in an untended field.

Relationships, like gardens, thrive when they are tended regularly.

Let’s make it even more personal. The thoughts we choose to dwell on shape the environment of our minds. When we plant gratitude, curiosity, and hope, we create fertile ground for a more positive outlook. When we repeatedly sow worry or negativity, those seeds can crowd out the good things trying to flourish. 

Earth Day teaches a lesson that extends far beyond environmental awareness. It reminds us that what we plant matters. The trees we plant, the habits we cultivate, the kindness we show, and the choices we make all shape the world around us. Like gardeners of both the earth and our own lives, we are constantly sowing seeds. April simply asks us to pause and consider them.

Plant what you want to grow.

 

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