Publication - The Part of Climate Change Nobody Wants to Discuss

14/05/2026

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Climate change is often presented exclusively as the result of human activity, industrial pollution, and carbon emissions. Yet throughout Earth's history, the planet has experienced major climate shifts long before modern civilization existed.

Ancient warming periods, ice ages, magnetic pole variations, and natural environmental cycles reveal that Earth has always been in a state of transformation. These patterns suggest that climate change may involve larger planetary and cosmic influences in addition to human impact.

The role of the Sun is one of the most important factors in this discussion. Variations in solar activity, magnetic energy, and cosmic radiation have long been associated with changes in Earth's atmosphere, weather systems, and temperatures. Despite this, these influences are often less emphasized in mainstream conversations surrounding climate.

Another important area of study is the weakening of Earth's magnetic field. Some researchers and independent thinkers associate these changes with increasing environmental instability, stronger natural events, and shifts occurring within Earth's energetic systems.

Beyond the physical dimension, climate change may also reflect humanity's relationship with consciousness itself and the growing disconnection from the deeper source of life. Modern society has become increasingly disconnected from natural rhythms, driven by constant consumption, stress, division, and imbalance. Environmental disruption cannot be separated entirely from the state of human consciousness and the way civilization interacts with the planet.

Fear has increasingly become one of the dominant emotional responses surrounding the climate conversation. While environmental responsibility remains important, narratives driven primarily by fear can also shape public perception in ways that encourage dependency, anxiety, and greater acceptance of restrictive measures presented as necessary solutions.

A society that operates constantly in fear often becomes more disconnected from clarity, critical thinking, and inner balance. For this reason, the climate discussion may benefit from a more conscious and grounded approach — one that encourages awareness, responsibility, innovation, and a deeper understanding of humanity's relationship with both the Earth and consciousness itself.

This moment in history may represent not only an environmental challenge, but also an opportunity for humanity to reflect on the way it lives, thinks, and evolves collectively.

The conversation around climate change becomes far more meaningful when it remains open to deeper questions, broader perspectives, and a willingness to explore both scientific and planetary realities with humility.

What if the greatest imbalance affecting the planet is not only environmental… but the growing disconnection between humanity and consciousness itself?

Author: Helena Patacao

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