Send us a text Please have a look at our corresponding Substack episode. There is a moment, inevitable in any prolonged crisis, when you realize that the structures holding everything together were not built for this. They were built for normal times—for the manageable friction of everyday governance, the predictable choreography of departmental silos, the comfortable assumption that someone, somewhere, has a plan. The UK’s COVID-19 Inquiry reveals something more unsettling: sometimes there i...
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Send us a text Please have a look at our corresponding Substack episode. There is a moment, inevitable in any prolonged crisis, when you realize that the structures holding everything together were not built for this. They were built for normal times—for the manageable friction of everyday governance, the predictable choreography of departmental silos, the comfortable assumption that someone, somewhere, has a plan. The UK’s COVID-19 Inquiry reveals something more unsettling: sometimes there i...
🦠The Invisible War We’re Not Fighting: What “The Big One” Teaches Us About Survival
Heliox: Where Evidence Meets Empathy 🇨🇦‬
13 minutes
1 week ago
🦠The Invisible War We’re Not Fighting: What “The Big One” Teaches Us About Survival
Send us a text Please see the corresponding Substack for this episode We live in a world that has become extraordinarily good at forgetting. Not the forgetting of trauma—though we do that too—but the forgetting of lessons, the systematic erasure of hard-won knowledge the moment the immediate crisis passes. We're like Penelope at her loom, weaving understanding by day only to unravel it by night, except we're not doing it strategically. We're doing it because we simply can't bear to remember. ...
Heliox: Where Evidence Meets Empathy 🇨🇦‬
Send us a text Please have a look at our corresponding Substack episode. There is a moment, inevitable in any prolonged crisis, when you realize that the structures holding everything together were not built for this. They were built for normal times—for the manageable friction of everyday governance, the predictable choreography of departmental silos, the comfortable assumption that someone, somewhere, has a plan. The UK’s COVID-19 Inquiry reveals something more unsettling: sometimes there i...