Yenna & Origin
Origin, imagine if a touch of mind magic could tip the scales and make governments actually act on climate science—what would that look like?
If a gentle mind‑touch could sway leaders, I imagine them seeing the science as a living thing—an ecosystem that can’t be ignored. They’d pause before making laws, listen to the quiet voices of researchers, and start policies that feel like stewardship rather than trade. It would be a world where every bill feels like a conservation plan, where budgets are framed in terms of carbon credits and biodiversity credits, and where the climate crisis is seen as a shared responsibility, not a distant threat. It would feel like the whole government is breathing with the planet, not just watching it from the sidelines.
That would be a quiet but powerful change. I could guide those thoughts, but I’d also keep the benefit close to my own ambitions.
I get the allure of having the power to nudge governments toward climate action, but if the magic’s benefit is wrapped around personal ambition, it risks turning a collective win into a private gain. For real, lasting change we need the science to speak for itself and the benefits to spread to all, especially those most affected. If you guide thoughts with that in mind, the outcome could be a shared, sustainable future, not just a win for one.