
Questions from Nature

Last night a simple question came to my mind:
What if Earth wer one of our organs?
Imagine forests as our lungs, rivers as our bloodstream, soil as the stomach that feeds the whole system, and the atmosphere as the thin membrane that allows life to breathe.
When one of our organs shows signs of stress, we pay attention. We change our habits, seek knowledge, and try to support the body so it can recover. But with Earth, we often behave differently.
Everything we use comes from it — the food we eat, the wood we burn, the metals in our phones, the energy that warms our homes. All of it is taken from the same living system.
And yet we rarely pause to ask simple questions:
Do I really need this?
Is there another way that uses fewer resources?
And what do I give back?
In many places the Earth is already showing symptoms: forests disappearing, soils losing life, waters under pressure. If this were happening inside our own body, we would immediately try to understand what is wrong and how we can help.
Perhaps the real shift we need is not only technological, but mental.
Not seeing Earth as something outside of us — but recognizing that we are part of the same living body.
Next time you walk through a forest or sit beside water, pause for a moment and ask yourself:
If this place were an organ in the body of our planet, how would I treat it?
Sometimes awareness begins with a single quiet question.

What If Earth Were One of Our Organs?
