If the question is, "How will society survive wildfires moving forward?" wildfire-adapted communities are a promising answer. According to the Fire Adapted Communities Learning Network, "A fire-adapted community is a community that understands its risk and takes action before, during, and after the fire in order for their community to be more resilient to wildfire." If fire-adapted communities have the potential to be effective, how are they brought into being? The prior introduces the very question this theoretical discussion-based lecture seeks to explore on April 30th at 10 a.m. - 11:30:00 p.m. MDT. Former Hotshot and winner of the National Park Service's Fuels and Ecology Award for Promoting Fire-Adapted Human Communities, Gregory Vigneaux draws on years of research to examine two modes of wildfire-adapted community change: transitions and refining the present. Attendees will be introduced to the unique pathways, dynamics, and concepts that shape each mode. The talk begins by discussing place before discussing how place is dwelled in and what that means for change. Through theoretical exploration, participants will be introduced to language and insights for a better understanding of the changes they hope to effect and explore whether a different approach might be more effective. This discussion does not address physical fire adaptation, such as creating defensible space and home hardening, but instead examines processes of change. This event is tailored for anyone interested in creating wildfire-adapted communities. For example, fire-adapted practitioners and stakeholders, community groups, fire mitigation experts, insurers, emergency managers, government fire officials, nonprofits, private organizations, and others. The talk provides valuable insights into community change processes around wildfire risk.