This newsletter is my part of an ongoing conversation among colleagues who’ve had a rough week. I share two or three pieces of the puzzle that feel are most important, hazard a guess about what to expect next, and offer at least one useful thing to do.
Hello friends,
I open this newsletter the same way every week, like I’m standing at the front door, welcoming you in. Typing “Hello friends,” is such a comforting ritual now that it’s funny to remember I wasn’t always confident in the opening. I worried it could ring untrue, since I wasn’t really sure then what we all were to each other back then.
But I am thinking a lot about friends at the moment, inspired partly by new projects I’m excited to share with you, and partly, by a post I saw go by on Bluesky. There was a thread where people were trying to cope with tariffs by brainstorming necessities together - prescriptions? sewing supplies? canned goods? maybe seeds? My favorite answer by far was, “What should we stock up on? Honestly: friends.” What we need the most are more people we can count on, and who can count on us in return.
And this solves so many problems, right? We all have material needs, yes, but meeting them is not about filling more houses with more stuff. When we build networks and communities, we don’t all need to hoard supplies. We don’t need to learn every survival skill. We don’t need to figure out everything ourselves. Which is good news because, realistically, the vast majority of us simply can’t.
As we contemplate everything we’re losing, I keep reminding myself that we’ve got each other, and that’s a lot. This was week 15, let’s give it a shot.
This has been another grim week. I feel buffeted by news about due process and tariffs, not to mention the weather service itself. Meanwhile, the administration is cancelling the National Climate Assessment, reorganizing the EPA with major cuts to research, and manipulating the accreditation process, among other moves. For my own well-being, I am going to focus on just two lines of attack tonight: how the administration is hijacking the research enterprise and how it is undermining public health. Take these slow if you’re feeling fragile, okay?
I’ve been worried about tariffs, rising prices, and shortages since Week 2. I hope I’m somehow overreacting, but it really does feel like we’re in what one Bluesky poster described as “that weird liminal Wile E. Coyote–over-the-chasm moment” where the disaster is locked in but not yet manifest.
So when I opened tonight’s debrief with the idea of “stocking up on friends,” I meant it. Who have you been meaning to reconnect with? Do you have a neighbor you’ve been meaning to introduce yourself to? Do you know who lost grants or jobs in your network this week?
Social connections take emotional energy, and cultivating them takes time. So maybe that can be a focus for you this week. You have a standing invitation to join us for Meeting the Moment co-working time - the next one is Monday at 4pm PT. My priority for that meeting is continuing to develop the nascent mutual aid project we are standing up within Liminal. Science communication is already precarious work, and we are anticipating that as jobs get scarce and prices go up, life is going to get much harder. Put simply, we would rather face it together than alone.
And in that vein, now I get to share something precious to me. In all my free time, I’ve been working with a tremendous group of new friends to create an ambitious sensemaking project. We are focused on the administration’s moves to destroy, hollow-out, and weaponize the government, or as I like to say, “What all of this means for all of us”. Later this month, we’ll be launching a new project called Unbreaking. Please read my co-founder Erin’s vastly more eloquent explanation of the work at hand.

Take my hand, we’ll make it I swear,
Liz