What Earth Day Means in the Age of Space Exploration (And Why It Matters at Work)

Conceptual Planet Earth and full Moon. Nasa reference image: https://apod.nasa.gov/apod/image/0304/bluemarble2k_big.jpg

After seeing the extraordinary images of the moon from the Artemis II, something unexpected happened.

The focus didn’t stay on space.

It shifted back to Earth.
To home.
To what we have.
To what we’re responsible for.

There’s a quote from Jeremy Hansen, Artemis II Astronaut, that has stayed with me:

“The purpose of humanity is joy and lifting one another up—creating together versus destroying.”

It’s a powerful idea—especially at a time when we can reach farther than ever before.

Because if that is true—if our purpose is to create, to lift, to build—then the question becomes:

Where does that show up in our everyday lives?

Where does it show up at home, school and at work?


Earth Day: The Most Celebrated Holiday We Don’t Fully Live

Earth Day is recognized as the largest secular day of civic action in the world, with companies and individuals hosting events.

It began in 1970 as a call to awareness—an urgent response to environmental challenges. Over time, it has evolved into a global moment of participation and intention.

But today, the opportunity is bigger.

Earth Day isn’t just something to observe.
It’s something to live—at home, and increasingly, at work.

More than 150,000 organizations in over 192 countries celebrate Earth Day and drive positive environmental action.


Why Earth Day Matters More Than Ever at Work

Earth Day has always been about awareness. But today, it’s about action—and expectation.

Seeing the beauty of Earth from space…
does it make us want to care for it more?

Or maybe the better question is—what would change if we lived like we were seeing it that way every day?

That’s the real opportunity of Earth Day.

Not just to appreciate the planet—but to take responsibility for it. To recognize that this extraordinary, living, breathing place we call home is not guaranteed—it’s entrusted to us.

We have the ability to care for it.
To protect it.
To contribute to it.

Not in grand, unattainable ways—but in small, consistent, meaningful actions that, together, shape something much bigger. It is an invitation to all of us to celebrate Earth and Earth Day —at home with your kids, at work with your colleagues, or within your community.


How to Celebrate Earth Day at Home, At Work, and In Your Community

At Home

  • Spend time outside—walk, observe, notice what’s growing around you
  • Cook a meal with fresh, seasonal ingredients and talk about where food comes from
  • Start something small—an herb garden, a patio garden of seasonal vegetables, or even a simple seed in soil
  • Have a conversation about responsibility—what it means to care for something beyond yourself

At Work

  • Create a shared moment—step away from screens and do something tangible together
  • Bring nature into the workspace, even in small ways
  • Start a conversation about sustainability and well-being as part of company culture
  • Offer employees an experience that connects them to something real—not just another meeting
  • Host a gardening event with your colleagues- plant a pollinator garden and celebrate how the pollinators help protect us and the Earth.

In Your Community

  • Support local growers, markets, or environmental organizations
  • Participate in a cleanup or restoration effort
  • Share knowledge, resources, or time with others
  • Contribute to something that will outlast the moment

A Final Thought To Ponder-

Because maybe that’s what Earth Day is really about.

Not perfection.
Not performance.

But participation.

If the purpose of humanity is to create…
to lift one another up…
to build something together—

Then maybe the smallest acts matter more than we think.

Caring for something.
Protecting something.
Showing up for something beyond yourself.

You don’t need a rocket to fulfill that purpose.

Sometimes, all it takes is a moment.
A decision.
A willingness to care.

Artemis II is designed to take humans farther than we’ve gone in generations—
but maybe its greatest impact will be how it changes the way we see home.