Most people see the concept of hope as a belittled thought, a vague belief that has no use in everyday life. This view is a misconception of hope. Hope reinforces the feeling that ‘all will be well’, reminding you that there is and can be good in life’s bad events, and instills a sense of security about the possibilities of a brighter tomorrow.
Every job, every meeting, and every other situation we engage in contains hope. It is not hope that gives us emotional pain.
Hope enables us to be flexible and fluid in the face of change and uncertainty. It’s not your dependence on the ray of hope that prevents us from making changes in your own life, it’s your search for certainty. That’s why the word “maybe” in life has a lot of meaning.
The future is uncertain, we don’t know what it will bring, but the beauty of not knowing is that it leaves open the possibility that something good could happen. You can see uncertainty as endless possibilities that you can’t even imagine today, and you should also consider that this uncertainty could mean that “maybe” could lead to something good.
I’m not saying let’s live in a dream or not accept what’s happening today, but let’s accept that the future is uncertain, which creates a wide scope for many possibilities, and there is always hope in this uncertainty.
As Martin Luther King Jr. said, “Everything that has been done in the world has been done through hope.”