When the Seasons Lose Their Memory
There was a time when weather followed a script. Winter arrived with warning. Spring unfolded gradually. Summer stretched predictably. Autumn cooled in recognizable rhythm. Even storms had seasons. Even droughts had cycles. The land carried memory, and so did we. Now that memory feels disrupted. Seasons blur. Extremes stack on top of one another. Heat waves arrive early and linger late. Cold snaps cut through unexpected warmth. Flood follows drought. Fire follows flood. The atmosphere feels less like a rhythm and more like a series of jolts. Mother Nature feels untethered. Is this climate acceleration? Geoengineering? Natural cycles amplified by human interference? The scientific debates continue. Data accumulates. Models refine. The language grows more technical. But beneath the arguments lies a quieter, more immediate question: When the environment destabilizes, what happens to human psychology? Humans evolved within patterned climates. Agricultural cycles shaped civilization. Seas...