This episode is part of [Curious Tendrils], a series of exploratory conversations about the questions we keep hearing around us, and the ones we're still learning how to hold. Today we ask ourselves: is urgency the spark that ignites climate action - or the flame that slowly burns us out? We discuss pros and cons of the climate emergency framework, looking at the current research. When "climte emergency" is declared, we have a formal recognition that climate change poses an existential threat. But what does this lead to? We each share where we stand, what might sit underneath these different approaches, and how we can move toward preventing climate chaos without losing our steadiness and hope. In the [How to] section, Dani from the Artivists Network guides us through the process of guerrila projections: a relatively easy action that you can do with your friends and disrupt the public space with the inconvenience of your truth. Timestamps 00:32 [Curious Tendrils] The climate emergency: So urgent we freeze? 39:48 [How to] Plan guerilla projections w/ Dani [Curious Tendrils] The climate emergency: So urgent we freeze? We sit with one of the big tenstions in climate conversations: how do we talk about urgency, specifically in the case of the "climate emergency", but not only? Do we sound the alarm, backed by the hard facts of a worsening climate? Or do we focus more on resilience, on our capacity to respond, adapt, and build differently, even in the middle of crisis? Does strong, urgent language actually move people to act, or does it leave us overwhelmed and exhausted? And if the situation is urgent (which it is), how do we communicate that without creating paralysis? [How to] Plan guerilla projections w/ Dani An action which requires some resources and equipment, but is still doable with only a handful of people and not of experience: doing subversive projections onto buildings in a public space. We learn how to access the necessary equipment, what software to use and the essential roles and logistics involved in the action. Resources Silvia Rivera Cusicanqui, Margara Millan Moncayo & Raquel Gutierrez Aguilar, "Words against the end of the world", Active Distribution (2025) Natascha van Bommel, Johanna I. Hoffken. "The urgency of climate action and the aim for justice in energy transitions - dynamics and complexity", Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions (2023) Michael Arbert. "Climate emergency and securitization politics: towards a climate politics of the extraordinary", Globalizations, (2022) Ole Sandberg. "Climate Disruption, Political Stability, and Collective Imagination in advance", Radical Philosophy Review 23(2), (2020) Charles Eisenstein. "Climate - a new story", North Atlantic Books (2018) Kate Marvel. "Human Nature: Nine Ways to Feel about Our Changing Planet". HarperCollins (2025) Carolina Vozian. "Pentru pace, pentru o etică radicală a nonviolenței", cutra.ro (2025) - Hosted & Edited by: Robi, Ani & M. Sound engineering by: Marius Montage: Ioni Theme music: Teo Graphic artist & illustrator: Mina Social media: Grc - If you like our work, you can support us on Patreon https://www.patreon.com/cw/thelastfireflies or with a one time donation on ko-fi https://ko-fi.com/thelastfireflies