Sacred Stones, Spaces, and Stories: Divya Desams Part 38

Thiruthangal Temple, Thiruthangal, Tamil Nadu
Thiruthangal, located near Sivakasi in Tamil Nadu, is one of those Divya Desams where the story is not about movement but about choosing to remain. The presiding deity here is Ninra Narayana Perumal, and the goddess is Sengamalavalli Thayar. The name itself reflects the central image. Ninra means “standing,” and this is the Lord who stands, not in passing, but with intention. The temple sits on a small hill, and that elevation adds a quiet sense of separation from the everyday world below. Yet the feeling is not of distance. It is of steadiness.

The mythology of Thiruthangal is connected with a gentle but telling story involving the goddess. According to tradition, Lakshmi and Bhudevi once sought to determine who held a more significant place beside Vishnu. What began as a comparison grew into a moment of tension, not out of anger, but out of the desire to be seen. Lakshmi chose this place to perform penance, seeking clarity and affirmation. Vishnu appeared before her here and resolved the tension, not through argument, but through presence. Because the goddess stayed here and the Lord stood with her, the place came to be known as Thiruthangal. The story does not end in conflict. It settles into understanding.

Inside the sanctum, this sense of resolution becomes visible. Ninra Narayana Perumal stands in a composed posture, holding the conch and discus, calm and unhurried. The standing form carries a certain clarity. It does not suggest movement or rest, but readiness that has already found its place. Sengamalavalli Thayar’s shrine adds warmth to the space, grounding the stillness of the Lord with compassion. Together, they create an atmosphere that feels balanced.

The temple’s location on a hill shapes the experience quietly. The climb is not long, but it is enough to slow the body and shift the mind. By the time you reach the top, the rhythm has changed. The surroundings open up, and the space feels less crowded, even when there are other visitors. The hill does not isolate the temple. It gives it a clearer presence.

Historically, Thiruthangal reflects the continuity of temple culture in southern Tamil Nadu, with roots that extend through the Pandya period and later contributions from local patrons. The structure has been maintained across centuries, not through large expansions, but through steady care. This continuity is visible in the layout and in the ongoing practice of worship. The temple has remained active, carrying its story forward without interruption.

Architecturally, the temple follows the Dravidian style, with a gopuram marking the entrance and prakarams guiding the movement inward. The scale is modest compared to some larger temples, but the proportions feel balanced. The sanctum remains the focal point, drawing attention to the standing form of the Lord. The surrounding structures support the experience without distraction. The hill itself becomes part of the architecture, shaping how the temple is approached and understood.

The daily rituals follow the Vaishnavite tradition, with regular pujas conducted throughout the day. Festivals such as Vaikunta Ekadasi and Brahmotsavam bring larger gatherings, but the temple does not lose its steady tone. The standing form of the deity continues to anchor the space, even during moments of activity.

For pilgrims, the experience of Thiruthangal often comes with a sense of quiet clarity. After visiting temples associated with action, movement, or transformation, arriving here introduces a different emphasis. The Lord does not act. He stands. That posture begins to carry meaning. It suggests that some things do not need to be changed or moved. They need to be held in place.

Culturally, the temple holds its place within the Divya Desam tradition through the hymns of the Alvars, who recognised its significance. Over time, it has come to represent themes of balance, resolution, and steadiness. Devotees come here not only with requests but with the need for clarity. The temple does not provide answers in obvious ways. It offers a space where things settle.

In modern times, Thiruthangal continues to function as an active place of worship, maintained through regular rituals and community care. It remains part of a living tradition, drawing pilgrims who seek both devotion and quiet reflection.

Thiruthangal ultimately represents the strength of staying. Ninra Narayana Perumal does not move through the world here. He stands within it. In the larger Divya Desam journey, this temple offers a simple but steady insight. Not every moment calls for action. Some call for presence.

Thirukkoodal Temple, Madurai, Tamil Nadu
Madurai is a city that rarely pauses. It moves through history, ritual, and everyday life all at once, and in the middle of that movement stands Thirukkoodal, the temple of Koodal Azhagar Perumal, with Madhuravalli Thayar as the goddess. The name Koodal itself suggests coming together, a meeting point, a place where things gather. That meaning fits the temple well. It sits within a city known for convergence, where people, traditions, and rhythms overlap, and yet inside the temple, the experience becomes more focused, more contained.

The mythology of Thirukkoodal is not built around a single dramatic episode. Instead, it is shaped by presence across different states. The most striking aspect of the temple is that the Lord is worshipped in three distinct forms within the same space. In the sanctum, Koodal Azhagar stands in a composed posture, holding the conch and discus. Above, in another tier, he is seen seated, and in yet another, he reclines. These are not separate temples. They are layers within one structure. The arrangement itself becomes the message. The divine is not limited to one state. It stands, sits, and rests, all within the same presence.

This idea carries a quiet significance. In many temples, one encounters a single form and builds meaning around it. Here, the experience is expanded. The Lord is not fixed. He moves across states without losing identity. For the devotee, this creates a different kind of engagement. You do not see the divine in one moment. You see it as continuity across different conditions.

Inside the temple, this layered presence shapes the experience. The standing form of Koodal Azhagar holds the immediate attention. It feels grounded and direct. The seated and reclining forms above introduce a shift, inviting the mind to move beyond what is seen first. Madhuravalli Thayar’s shrine adds warmth to the space, grounding the experience in grace. Together, they create an atmosphere that feels complete, not because it is large, but because it holds multiple states at once.

Historically, Thirukkoodal has been an important temple in Madurai, with roots that extend through the Pandya period and later contributions from other dynasties. The temple has stood through centuries of change in the city, maintaining its identity even as the surroundings evolved. It is not as widely known as the Meenakshi Amman Temple nearby, but it holds its own place within the sacred geography of Madurai.

Architecturally, the temple reflects the Dravidian style, with a gopuram marking the entrance and prakarams guiding movement inward. The most distinctive feature is the vertical arrangement of the three forms of the deity. This structure creates a sense of movement within the temple without requiring physical distance. The experience shifts as one looks upward, moving from one state to another.

The daily rituals follow the Vaishnavite tradition, with regular pujas conducted throughout the day. Festivals such as Vaikunta Ekadasi and Brahmotsavam bring larger gatherings, but the temple does not lose its inward focus. Even during these times, the layered presence of the deity remains the central experience.

For pilgrims, Thirukkoodal often feels like a pause within the larger movement of Madurai. After navigating the busy streets and the intensity of the city, stepping into the temple creates a shift. The mind begins to settle, not into stillness alone, but into a recognition of different states coexisting.

Culturally, the temple holds its place within the Divya Desam tradition through the hymns of the Alvars, who recognised its significance. Over time, it has come to represent a broader idea. Life itself does not remain in one state. It moves through action, rest and reflection. Thirukkoodal reflects that movement without separating it into different spaces.

In modern times, the temple continues to function as an active place of worship, drawing devotees from within the city and beyond. It remains part of a living tradition, even as it stands alongside larger and more prominent temples.

Thirukkoodal ultimately represents presence across change. Koodal Azhagar Perumal does not remain in one posture. He stands, sits, and rests, all within the same space. In the larger Divya Desam journey, this temple offers a simple but steady insight. The divine is not limited to one state, and neither are we.

In My Hands Today…

The Last American Road Trip: A Memoir – Sarah Kendzior

It is one thing to study the fall of democracy, another to have it hit your homeland — and yet another to raise children as it happens. The Last American Road Trip is one family’s journey to the most beautiful, fascinating, and bizarre places in the US during one of its most tumultuous eras. As Kendzior works as a journalist chronicling political turmoil, she becomes determined that her young children see America before it’s too late. So Kendzior, her husband, and the kids hit the road — again and again.

Starting from Missouri, the family drives across America in every direction as cataclysmic events – the rise of autocracy, political and technological chaos, and the pandemic – reshape American life. They explore Route 66, national parks, historical sites, and Americana icons as Kendzior contemplates love for country in a broken heartland. Together, the family watches the landscape of the United States – physical, environmental, social, political -transform through the car window.

Part memoir, part political history, The Last American Road Trip is one mother’s promise to her children that their country will be there for them in the future – even though at times she struggles to believe it herself.

Sacred Stones, Spaces, and Stories: Divya Desams Part 3

Thirukoḻi Temple, Uraiyur, Tamil Nadu
Thirukoḻi Temple, now often referred to as Nachiar Koil, stands in Uraiyur, a suburb of Tiruchirappalli in Tamil Nadu. It’s one of the 108 Divya Desams, the sacred temples dedicated to Vishnu. But this place flips the usual script. Here, the goddess takes centre stage. Kamalavalli Nachiyar leads every procession, while the god follows. That alone makes the temple worth a closer look.

The story behind Thirukoḻi begins with a curse and a childless king. Rishi Brighu cursed Lakshmi to be born as a mortal. Meanwhile, Nanda Chola, a Chola king desperate for an heir, prayed to Mahalakshmi. His prayers worked. While hunting near a lotus pond, he found a baby girl nestled among the petals. He named her Kamalavalli, the child of the lotus. When Kamalavalli grew up, she visited Srirangam and fell in love with Ranganatha, the reclining Vishnu. She vowed to marry him. Ranganatha appeared in the king’s dream, revealing that the girl was Lakshmi herself. The king dressed her in bridal clothes and took her to Srirangam. As she approached the deity, she vanished. Ranganatha had accepted her. To honour the marriage, Nanda Chola built a temple at Uraiyur. Vishnu appears here as Azhagiya Manavala Perumal, the beautiful groom, standing in a wedding pose, facing north. Kamalavalli sits beside him, lotus in hand, as his bride. Another legend adds local flavour. A fowl and an elephant fought at this spot. The fowl won. So the place became known as Kozhiyur, kozhi meaning fowl in Tamil.

The temple likely existed before the seventh century, though exact dates blur into the past. The Medieval Cholas built the core structure around the eighth century CE. Later dynasties: Pandyas, Vijayanagar kings, Madurai Nayaks, added layers, renovations, and inscriptions.

Uraiyur itself holds weight in Tamil history. It was the early capital of the Chola dynasty, one of the great powers of South India. Karikala Chola, a legendary ruler known for building the Grand Anicut on the Kaveri River, made Uraiyur his base before the capital moved to other cities. The town thrived as a centre of trade and cotton production during the Sangam period, from 300 BCE to 300 CE. The temple also marks the birthplace of Thiruppaan Alvar, one of the 12 poet-saints who sang hymns to Vishnu. Thiruppaan’s verses appear in the Nalayira Divya Prabandham, the sacred canon of the Alvars. His presence here connects the temple to a broader spiritual and literary movement that shaped South Indian Vaishnavism.

The temple follows classic Dravidian design. A granite wall surrounds the complex, enclosing shrines, courtyards, and water tanks. The five-tiered Rajagopuram, the gateway tower, rises above, marking the entrance with carvings of gods, mythic creatures, and scenes from epics. Inside, the main shrine houses Azhagiya Manavala Perumal, standing in wedding attire and facing north. North-facing shrines are rare in Divya Desams, making this layout unusual. Kamalavalli Nachiyar sits beside him, no separate sanctum, lotus in hand. The vimana above the shrine is called Kamala Vimanam.

The temple has separate shrines for Ramanuja and Nammalvar, two towering figures in Vaishnavite tradition. Inside the Nammalvar shrine, paintings line the walls, images of Vishnu’s avatars, Vaishnava teachers, and scenes of dharma and justice. These murals date to the early 1800s, bright hues fading but still vivid. The layout isn’t grand by the standards of Srirangam or other large temple-cities. But it’s intimate, with detail packed into every corner. Carvings, inscriptions, and architecture all speak to centuries of devotion and craft.

Worship at Thirukoḻi follows a strict daily rhythm. Priests perform rituals six times a day, from 7 am to 8 pm. Each ritual has three steps: alangaram (decoration), neivethanam (food offering), and deepa aradanai (waving of lamps). During the final step, nagaswaram pipes and tavil drums fill the air, priests chant from the Vedas, and devotees prostrate before the temple mast.

The temple honours the goddess first in every ritual and procession. Kamalavalli Nachiyar moves ahead; Azhagiya Manavala Perumal follows. This reversal of typical temple hierarchy gives Thirukoḻi its nickname: Nachiar Koil, the goddess’s temple.

Festivals bring drama. Serthi Sevai, the homecoming festival, is the biggest. During the Tamil month of Panguni (March–April), the processional idol from Srirangam, Namperumal, arrives at Thirukoḻi. The images of Namperumal and Kamalavalli are adorned together in the Serthi hall, celebrating their eternal union. Special rituals, processions, and thousands of pilgrims fill the temple grounds.

Another festival honours Thiruppaan Alvar’s birthday. His processional idol is brought from Thirukoḻi to Srirangam, where he receives grand honors: a silk turban, garlands, sandal paste, and a shawl. These gestures are meant to bring a smile to the saint’s face. After, the idol visits the shrines of Nammalvar and the goddess, accompanied by chanting from the Nalayira Divya Prabandham. Other festivals: Dolostava, Vasanthothsava, and Navaratri keep the temple active year-round. Community involvement runs deep. Locals prepare offerings, organise annadhanam (free meals), and maintain traditions passed down through generations.

Reaching Thirukoḻi is straightforward. The temple sits about three km from Tiruchirappalli Junction, connected by frequent town buses and auto-rickshaws. The surrounding streets are busy with vendors selling flowers, garlands, and incense. The atmosphere is lived-in, not curated for tourists. Pilgrims remove their shoes at the entrance and step into a different rhythm. The temple is open from 5 am to 12:30 pm. and again from 4:30 pm. to 8:30 pm. Devotees line up for darshan, waiting patiently, sometimes in the heat, sometimes in the rain. After darshan, many sit near the water tanks or under the shade of temple trees. Some walk to the shrine of Thiruppaan Alvar or Nammalvar, pausing to reflect or chant. The temple feeds a hundred devotees daily through its annadhanam scheme, funded by donations. Sharing a meal in the temple hall becomes part of the experience: food as blessing, community as ritual. Local hospitality shows in small gestures: directions offered, prayers shared, stories told. Uraiyur feels quieter than Trichy proper, less rushed. The pilgrimage isn’t about ticking off a site, it’s about slowing down, noticing details, and absorbing the place.

Thirukoḻi shaped Vaishnavite culture in subtle but lasting ways. The temple appears in 24 hymns in the Nalayira Divya Prabandham, composed by Kulasekara Alvar and Thirumangai Alvar. These verses are still chanted during rituals and festivals, keeping the Alvars’ voices alive. The temple’s emphasis on the goddess influenced how communities thought about divine hierarchy. In most Vishnu temples, the god dominates. Here, Kamalavalli’s prominence flipped that script, creating space for female-centred worship within a predominantly male-focused tradition.

Today, the temple is managed by the Hindu Religious and Endowment Board of the Government of Tamil Nadu. Management balances tradition with practical needs: maintaining structures, funding festivals, and supporting daily worship. Restoration efforts are ongoing. Old murals need care, gopurams need repair, and water tanks require cleaning. Government and private donations fund these projects. Technology plays a role, online booking for accommodations, digital archives of inscriptions, and social media updates about festivals. Tourism is modest compared to Srirangam, but steady. Devotees make up most visitors, though historians, architecture enthusiasts, and curious travellers also come. The temple’s annadhanam scheme continues, feeding devotees daily and keeping the tradition of communal meals alive.

Thirukoḻi Temple stands apart in the Divya Desam circuit. Its goddess-centred worship challenges assumptions. Its connection to Uraiyur ties it to Tamil history and kingship. Its architecture, though modest, carries centuries of craft and care. For pilgrims, it offers something rare: a temple where the goddess leads, and the god follows, where legends of love and devotion play out in stone and ritual. For anyone interested in Indian spirituality, it’s a reminder that tradition isn’t static; it shifts, adapts, and sometimes flips the script. Visit if you can. Walk the streets of Uraiyur. Sit by the lotus tank. Watch the rituals. Listen to the stories locals tell. And maybe you’ll leave with a different sense of what sacred space can mean.

Thirukkarambanoor Temple, Uthamarkoil, Tamil Nadu
Thirukkarambanoor, better known today as Uthamarkoil or Sri Purushothaman Perumal Temple, sits on the outskirts of Tiruchirappalli in Tamil Nadu, near the Kollidam (Coleroon) river. It is a Divya Desam, but a very unusual one. Here, Vishnu, Shiva, and Brahma all have shrines inside the same complex, making it the only Divya Desam where the Trimurti share one sacred space.

The core legend begins with Vishnu testing Brahma. Vishnu takes the form of a kadamba tree at this spot, without announcing himself. Brahma recognises the presence of the lord and starts worshipping the tree with thirumanjanam, the ritual bath. The water from this worship collects and becomes Kadamba Theertham, the temple tank. When Vishnu is satisfied with Brahma’s devotion, he grants him a boon: Brahma will have a shrine here and receive worship alongside him. That alone flips the standard storyline where Brahma is usually sidelined.

Another track brings in Shiva. After Shiva cuts off one of Brahma’s five heads in anger, the severed head sticks to his hand as a karmic stain. To get rid of this burden, Shiva wanders as Bhikshatana, the begging ascetic, asking for alms. When he reaches Thirukkarambanoor, Vishnu asks Lakshmi to give alms to Shiva. She fills Shiva’s begging bowl completely, which is why she is called Poornavalli, “the one who filled the bowl.” Shiva’s sin starts to ease here and is finally erased later at Thirukandiyur.

So in this one story, you have Vishnu testing Brahma, Brahma worshipping Vishnu, Shiva depending on Lakshmi’s grace, and all three ending up with shrines in the same compound. The core message is not subtle: no single form of God is enough. They all lean on one another, and the devotee is asked to look beyond faction lines.

Historically, the temple seems to have taken shape in the late eighth century CE under the Medieval Cholas. Later, Vijayanagara rulers and the Madurai Nayaks added to the structures, gopurams, and mandapams, as they did across the Kaveri belt. Inscriptions trace donations, land grants, and festival endowments, tying the place into the political economy of temple Tamil Nadu. The site also appears in the Nalayira Divya Prabandham, the Tamil Vaishnava canon. Thirumangai Alvar sings of the lord here as Uthamar, “the perfect one.” A local tradition says Thirumangai Alvar stayed at Uthamarkoil while working on the fortification walls of Srirangam, using this temple as his base. That connects the place to the much larger project of building up Srirangam as a Vaishnava centre.

In 1751, during the Carnatic conflicts between the British and French, the temple reportedly served as an infantry base for both sides. Unusual detail: the complex came through with minimal structural damage. It’s a small example of how these temples were not just spiritual spaces, but also strategic assets in a war zone. When we romanticise “timeless” temples, we forget they sat right in the path of empires and gunpowder.

Uthamarkoil follows the Dravidian model but with its own logic. A granite wall encloses the complex, with the main tank just outside the gateway. Inside, shrines for Vishnu, Shiva, and Brahma are housed within the same campus, each with its own sanctum and tower, yet visually and ritually linked. Vishnu is worshipped here as Purushothaman Perumal, with Lakshmi as Poornavalli Thayar. Shiva appears as Bhikshadanar, the begging ascetic, and Brahma sits in a separate sanctum, a rare working Brahma shrine in South India. The very act of walking between these shrines makes you physically experience the unity the myths talk about.

Architecturally, you get the standard features: gopurams, pillared halls, subsidiary shrines. But the mood is different from the massive temple-cities. It feels compact and layered rather than overwhelming. Add in the Kadamba Theertham tank, the river nearby, and the relatively low-rise surroundings, and there’s a strong sense of human scale. Not every sacred space has to shout. Some accounts mention that the temple’s strategic role during the eighteenth-century conflicts led to minor defensive modifications without sacrificing the core iconography. That mix of sacred and practical is part of the aesthetic story too.

Ritual life here runs on a tight routine. There are six daily pujas for each of the Trimurti deities, from early morning to night. Each cycle includes alangaram (decoration), naivedyam (offering of food), and deepa aradanai (lamp worship). Priests chant Vedic mantras and Tamil hymns, and the deities receive separate but coordinated attention.

The major festival is the Brahmotsavam in the Tamil month of Karthigai (roughly November–December). Processional images of Purushothamar and Bhikshadanar are taken through the streets around the temple, side by side. Again, the temple refuses to choose one god over another; it stages them together. Another key event is the Kadamba Tiruvizha, when the festival image of Ranganatha from Srirangam is brought to Kadamba Theertham here for the ceremonial bath. That links Uthamarkoil into a larger ritual circuit with Srirangam. Tradition also says King Dasharatha performed a yajna here to ask for sons, long before Rama’s birth. Childless couples still come with that story in mind, seeking fertility blessings.

In practical terms, Uthamarkoil is easily accessible. It lies just off the Trichy–Salem highway, about 10 km northwest of Tiruchirappalli, near the banks of the Kollidam. Buses and shared autos run regularly; the last stretch is walkable through a typical temple-side settlement with tea stalls, small shops, and houses. The first thing that may strike you is that the place is not overrun. Compared to Srirangam, there is breathing room. You can stand in front of each sanctum without being pushed, let your eyes adjust to the dim light, and actually look at the deities. The space invites a quiet pause rather than a rush. Many take time by the Kadamba Theertham tank nearby, believed to have healing powers. The sound of temple bells, birds, and the river nearby creates a blend both calming and alive.

Thirukkarambanoor’s unique tri-deity setup has inspired Tamil literature and art for centuries. The temple entrances and pillars bear carvings not only of the Trimurti but also festive scenes and sacred dances, connecting the place to vibrant local traditions. Poets like Thirumangai Alvar included this temple in their hymns, bringing it spiritual prominence. The temple challenges rigid classification of sects. Here, Shaivism and Vaishnavism coexist visibly, influencing regional identity. Festivals often blend music, dance, and recitation traditions from different streams, making Thirukkarambanoor a cultural meeting point.

Today, Uthamarkoil is managed by the Tamil Nadu Hindu Religious and Endowment Board. The temple hosts six daily rituals for each of the three deities, plus major festivals like Brahmotsavam in the Tamil month Karthigai (November-December). Despite modern pressures, traditions of daily worship continue uninterrupted. Restoration projects focus on preserving the temple’s distinctive stone carvings and murals. Crowds are moderate, mostly pilgrims and devotees from nearby towns, though interest from history and architecture buffs is growing.

Thirukkarambanoor Temple stands as a rare see-through lens into Hinduism’s fluid unity. By housing Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva side by side, it asks us to rethink boundaries: sectarian, architectural, ritual, and cultural. The temple isn’t just a sacred space for worship but a symbol of harmony and complexity within Indian spirituality. Its layered stories, intimate scale, and lived traditions challenge assumptions about what a Divya Desam can be. This temple offers not just a place to pray, but a place to reflect on how diverse beliefs weave together to form a living, breathing spirituality. If you visit Uthamarkoil, slow down. Notice the quiet dialogues between the gods. Listen to hymns sung for both Shiva and Vishnu. Walk the stone paths shaped by centuries of devotion and conflict. You might leave recognising how faith is less about dividing lines, and more about shared sacred space.

In My Hands Today…

Blood in the Water: The Untold Story of a Family Tragedy – Casey Sherman

When Nathan Carman, a young man with a complicated past, is miraculously rescued from a lifeboat bobbing in the unforgiving North Atlantic, questions swirl about the fate of his mother, who is presumed to have drowned when their fishing boat sank. Nathan is in remarkably good shape for being lost at sea for a week, and his account of what exactly happened out there on the waves raises questions from family members and law enforcement.

Nathan’s story of a fishing trip gone awry doesn’t quite add up, and suspicion mounts. The mysterious murder of Nathan’s multi-millionaire grandfather a few years before had made Nathan’s mother an extremely wealthy woman. With a seven-million-dollar fortune at stake, did Nathan commit the ultimate betrayal? Or is there more to this tragic tale than meets the eye?

From New York Times bestselling author Casey Sherman comes a gripping contemporary true crime narrative for everyone who was fascinated by the Murdaugh murders, and for anyone compelled by the intersection between money, power, and family.

Earth Day 2026: Small Steps, Lasting Change

Every year, on April 22, the world pauses to honour the only home we’ve ever known: Mother Earth. It’s a day when the planet’s beauty, fragility, and resilience come together in a single reminder: that we share a collective responsibility for its care. As we approach Earth Day 2026, there’s a renewed urgency to rethink our choices and realign our actions with the world we inhabit.

The question is simple, yet profound: what does it mean to live gently on this Earth?

The first Earth Day was held in 1970, a time of political unrest, oil spills, polluted cities, and rising awareness of the environmental toll of industrial progress. It began with the vision of Senator Gaylord Nelson, who wanted to channel the energy of the student anti-war movement into environmental activism.

What started as a nationwide “teach-in” across the United States became a massive grassroots movement. More than 20 million people took to the streets to demand clean air, clean water, and a livable planet. That moment sparked the creation of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and major environmental laws like the Clean Air Act and Clean Water Act.

By 1990, Earth Day had gone global. Over 140 countries participated, and environmental issues became part of mainstream international discourse. Today, more than a billion people across 190+ nations mark Earth Day in some form; from schoolchildren planting saplings to global corporations pledging carbon neutrality. Earth Day is now the largest secular civic event in the world, a powerful testament to what collective awareness can achieve.

Each year, Earthday.org announces a global theme that unites efforts around a shared goal. Recent years have brought messages like Invest in Our Planet and Planet vs. Plastics.

If the last few years have taught us anything, it’s that climate change isn’t an abstract threat; it’s happening right now. From intense heatwaves to melting glaciers, from droughts to floods, the Earth’s rhythm is shifting. Yet, amid the chaos, hope endures. Across the world, innovators, scientists, and ordinary citizens are rewriting the story of sustainability, one conscious act at a time.

Fifty-six years after the first Earth Day, humanity stands at a crossroads. On one hand, we’ve made progress that once seemed impossible. Renewable energy like solar, wind, and hydro, now powers more homes than ever before. Countries like Denmark and Costa Rica are leading the way toward carbon neutrality. Electric vehicles have gone from niche luxury to mainstream transport. Cities are reimagining themselves as green, walkable spaces.

On the other hand, the challenges remain stark. Global temperatures continue to rise. Forests are shrinking. The oceans are warming and acidifying. Plastics have invaded even the deepest marine trenches. Species are disappearing before we’ve even had a chance to name them.

But Earth Day 2026 isn’t about despair, it’s about possibility. Because every problem, no matter how vast, carries within it the seed of change.

When we think of saving the planet, it’s easy to imagine that the work lies in the hands of governments or corporations. But the truth is, change begins with each of us. Our daily choices, how we consume, travel, eat, and dispose, ripple outward in ways we rarely see.

Here are small, sustainable actions that, when multiplied across millions, can lead to lasting impact.

At Home: Simple, Sustainable Swaps
Reduce, Reuse, Repair: Before buying new, ask if you can fix or repurpose what you have.
Compost your kitchen waste: Turn food scraps into nutrient-rich soil instead of sending them to landfills.
Mind your electricity: Switch off unused lights, unplug idle devices, and choose energy-efficient appliances.
Shop local and seasonal: Support farmers’ markets and reduce the carbon footprint of imported goods.
Ditch single-use plastics: Carry your own bottle, straw, and cloth bag. It’s such a small act, yet deeply symbolic of responsibility.

At Work: Greening Your Routine
Go paperless where possible: embrace digital receipts, notes, and reports.
Host green meetings, reduce printed agendas, opt for reusable mugs, and minimise travel through virtual calls.
Encourage team challenges like carpool days or plastic-free weeks.
Be an advocate: small office initiatives can grow into company-wide culture shifts.

In the Community: Collective Effort
Participate in a clean-up drive or a tree-planting event in your area.
Volunteer for local environmental NGOs or school eco-clubs.
Donate gently used items rather than discarding them.
Share your sustainability stories, awareness spreads through connection.

Online: Responsible Advocacy
The digital space can be both a tool and a trap. Misinformation spreads fast, so share verified sources and positive stories.
Follow credible environmental voices.
Support eco-conscious brands, artists, and initiatives.
Use your social platforms not for fear, but for inspiration and education.

Every small step counts. As author Anne-Marie Bonneau beautifully said, “We don’t need a handful of people doing zero waste perfectly. We need millions of people doing it imperfectly.”

At its heart, Earth Day is not just about activism; it’s about mindfulness. It asks us to slow down, to pay attention, and to live with intention. Think of the times you’ve stood at a beach and felt the tide wash over your feet, or walked through a forest and breathed in the scent of earth after rain. That connection, silent yet profound, reminds us of how deeply intertwined we are with nature. When we live mindfully, sustainability becomes more than a checklist. It becomes a way of honouring life itself.

Today, pause and step outside. Look up at the sky, notice how the clouds drift without effort. Feel the breeze brush past you. Remember, this air, this light, this moment, is a gift shared by all living things. The Earth asks for so little in return. Only that we tread gently.