Send us a text Please take a look at this corresponding Substack episode for references and the letter template. There's a particular kind of exhaustion that settles into societies after a crisis passes—or appears to pass. We've seen it before: the collective amnesia that follows disasters, the way urgent lessons fade into background noise as life rushes back to fill the void. But what if the crisis never actually ended? What if we're living inside its slower-burning sequel, one that's eating...
All content for Heliox: Where Evidence Meets Empathy 🇨🇦 is the property of by SC Zoomers and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Send us a text Please take a look at this corresponding Substack episode for references and the letter template. There's a particular kind of exhaustion that settles into societies after a crisis passes—or appears to pass. We've seen it before: the collective amnesia that follows disasters, the way urgent lessons fade into background noise as life rushes back to fill the void. But what if the crisis never actually ended? What if we're living inside its slower-burning sequel, one that's eating...
What Dinosaur Eggs Tell Us About Our Own Fragile Moment
Heliox: Where Evidence Meets Empathy 🇨🇦
14 minutes
1 month ago
What Dinosaur Eggs Tell Us About Our Own Fragile Moment
Send us a text Read the article on Substack The precision of this dating technique creates a kind of temporal vertigo. We're looking at eggs laid during a specific geological moment when climate change was reshaping the planet, when species were adapting and migrating and ultimately preparing—unknowingly—for extinction. The parallels to our own moment are so obvious they feel almost heavy-handed, like a novelist who's lost all subtlety. Yet there's also something oddly comforting about this d...
Heliox: Where Evidence Meets Empathy 🇨🇦
Send us a text Please take a look at this corresponding Substack episode for references and the letter template. There's a particular kind of exhaustion that settles into societies after a crisis passes—or appears to pass. We've seen it before: the collective amnesia that follows disasters, the way urgent lessons fade into background noise as life rushes back to fill the void. But what if the crisis never actually ended? What if we're living inside its slower-burning sequel, one that's eating...