Two Sides of Me: Why Being Alone Is Not the Same as Being Isolated in Environmental Work.
This post explores why deep environmental analysis requires uninterrupted cognitive space, how activity-based solitude reduces anxiety, and why alternating between engagement and withdrawal mirrors how healthy ecosystems function. I explore both my analytical and relaxed side.
Young Environmental Scientist Explains why Socializing Alone Might be Right for you!
This video breaks down why activity-based social environments reduce anxiety, build authentic connection, and support real social development without cliques, crowds, or forced performance. This is for people who don't enjoy clubs, don't thrive in group politics, and still want meaningful human connection without changing who they are.
The Greenwashing of Juneteenth: Corporate Sponsorship, But No Real Change
Juneteenth marks Black liberation, but corporate celebrations often stop at banners, cookouts, and slogans—while environmental harm in Black communities continues unchecked.

