Unleashed - W. Bradford Swift
Gaia's Call
What If Our Laws Helped the Earth?
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What If Our Laws Helped the Earth?

A Post-July 4th walk with Grand-Dude

A Note for Families and the Young at Heart

Last Friday, I shared some reflections on a new energy law passed by Congress—how it reveals the deeper beliefs shaping our politics, and how we might start building something better from the ground up.

But the real question I’ve been sitting with since then is this: What are we teaching the next generation about freedom, responsibility, and the earth we all share?

That’s why I wrote the following piece—not as a political commentary, but as a walk through the woods with my grandkids and other young Eco-Guardians in training. It’s a conversation I imagine having with Logan when he’s just a little older and starting to wonder how this world works… and how he can help shape it.

It’s written from the heart, in the voice of “Grand-Dude,” with just enough dirt on the boots to keep things grounded in love, wonder, and truth.

Feel free to share it with the kids in your life—or with the child still alive in your own heart.

What If Our Laws Helped the Earth?

A Post-July 4th walk with Grand-Dude

Hey there, kiddo.

Imagine you and I are out for one of our favorite walks through the woods. The sun’s peeking through the trees, birds are singing overhead, and there’s a gentle breeze that smells just a little like pine needles and adventure.

Now, let me ask you something.

What if the rules we made—you know, the big ones, the laws—helped the Earth instead of hurting it? What if every decision grown-ups made about energy, land, and how we live was also a promise to care for nature, for animals, and for kids like you?

What Happened This Week

Well, this week, the grown-ups in charge passed a big new law. It’s all about energy. It might sound good at first—more jobs, more power, more stuff—but here’s the thing: most of that energy will come from digging up fossil fuels like oil and gas.

And fossil fuels? They’re kind of like old buried treasure... but when we burn them, they make the air dirty, hurt animals’ homes, and heat up the planet more than it already is.

So that got me thinking...

The Four Great Untruths (a.k.a. some big misunderstandings)

You see, there are some ideas many adults still believe—ideas that just don’t hold up when you look at the world closely, especially out here in the woods. I call them the Four Great Untruths. Let me tell you what they are, and you tell me if they sound right to you, okay?

  1. “We’re separate from nature.”
    That’s like saying a tree doesn’t need the soil, or that we don’t need air or water. Silly, right?

  2. “More is always better.”
    Imagine trying to eat 100 cookies in one sitting. You’d probably get a bellyache. The Earth does too.

  3. “The Earth has endless resources.”
    Even your flashlight runs out of battery. So does the planet when we take too much.

  4. “Technology will save us.”
    Tech is cool—robots, rockets, and all—but we also need love, kindness, and wisdom. You can’t plug that into a charger.

The Four Great Truths (the real treasures)

Now here’s what I believe deep down—and I bet you do too. These are the Four Great Truths. These are the seeds we can plant together for a better world:

  • Interconnectedness – We’re all part of one big web of life. Like when a bee helps a flower, and the flower feeds a butterfly, and the butterfly makes us smile.

  • Sufficiency – There’s enough for everyone when we share—like pie on Thanksgiving when we each take just what we need.

  • Reciprocity – Giving and receiving go together. Like when you give a hug and get one back. Or when you help nature, and nature helps you.

  • Stewardship – This is the big one: taking care of the Earth like it’s your pet, your playground, your best friend. Because it is.

Your Mini-Mission: Ready to make some magic?

I’ve got a few little quests for you. Pick one—or all—and make this Independence Day about more than just fireworks.

Draw a “Freedom Flag”
Not just stars and stripes. Try trees and rivers, birds and bees. Make it a flag for all life.

Ask your family a big question
“What does real freedom mean—for people, animals, and the planet?” You might be surprised by what they say.

Plant something
A seed. A flower. A tree. Even a dream. And while you're at it, pick up a piece of trash if you see one.

And Remember…

You may be small, but your heart is huge. And your voice matters more than you know.

So let’s walk a little further, hand in hand, and dream together...

Because the future needs you, brave Eco-Guardian.

With love and muddy boots,
Your Grand-Dude

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