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Tonino: Where would we humans go if we returned half the continent to the wild creatures?
Davis: Well, much of Canada and the American West is already rather uninhabited by humans. In fact, I suspect more than half of the continent could become ecological reserves. I like the idea that, instead of wilderness islands within a matrix of human development, we reverse the pattern, and humans live densely clustered within a wild matrix. It’s not politically or economically feasible right now, but some such arrangement might be possible eventually.
By Leath ToninoFebruary 2025February 2025To those devoid of imagination, a blank place on the map is a useless waste; to others, the most valuable part.
Aldo Leopold
I try to feed the chicks mealworms from my hands, crouching there sometimes for hours. I can’t remember how to make them believe in kindness.
By Chera HammonsFebruary 2025I like to be reminded—need to be reminded—that my father was young once, that he had a crush on a girl in his one-room schoolhouse near Ladies Chapel, that he looked forward to helping his aunt Alverdia tend bees or pick watermelon from the large patch near the creek, his feet smeared red with clay.
By Todd DavisFebruary 2025On a solo backpacking trip, in a desert military base, at a church revival
A Thousand Words features photography so rich with narrative that it tells a story all on its own.
By Roshni Adi JokhiFebruary 2025I’ve taken to telling young people that it takes ten years to get from age twenty to age twenty-five, five years to get from twenty-five to thirty, and three years, tops, to get from thirty to forty. So far, forty to fifty doesn’t seem like it’ll amount to much more than a long weekend. The people my age and older laugh knowingly, and the youngsters nod like Sure, sure, whatever you say, Gramps, and I am left, every time, wondering why the only thing we know to do with the stuff that terrifies us is to make jokes about it that aren’t really jokes at all.
Once we had settled into the new post-Helene normal, I felt called to venture into Asheville’s beloved River Arts District to document the storm’s aftermath. I wanted to honor the artisans, artists, and small-business owners who have poured their souls into this vibrant, creative community. The scale of the devastation and the sheer power of wind and water and mud were almost beyond comprehension.
By Brody HartmanFebruary 2025The best nights are when moonlight comes through the trees, casting indigo shadows across the ice. My partner swoops around, his arms swinging in front of his crouched body. “It’s the closest we get to flying,” he said once as he sailed past me. Another time: “Maybe this is how a dolphin feels carving through the water.” He loves the tension of the blade slicing across the surface, the whoosh of his skates drawing elaborate patterns on the ice, the crunch of a hockey stop. I listen for the occasional owl.
I was a sleepwalker through most of those days. A passenger in my own life. I couldn’t look to my family and see myself reflected there. I was born to no one. I was wild.
By Didi JacksonFebruary 2025Personal, political, provocative writing delivered to your doorstep every month—without a single ad.
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