stuff tagged with "optimism"
Every problem, every dilemma, every dead end we find ourselves facing in life, only appears unsolvable inside a particular frame or point of view. Enlarge the box, or create another frame around the data, and problems vanish, while new opportunities appear.
Fix the News issue 309
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fixthenews.com »
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Iāve cut social media almost entirely out of my life (10/10 recommend), but I still drop into LinkedIn every so often. And honestly? I get exhausted fast by all the heavy, depressing posts.
Yes, thereās a lot of real suffering and injustice in the world. If youāre in the thick of it right now, I hope youāre able to keep hanging in there.
But if youād like a little break from the bleak hellscape that is 21st-century journalism, check out the latest issue of Fix the News. Or, if you just want the highlights, here are a few that stood out to me:
Billions of people have gained clean water, sanitation, and hygiene in the last nine years. (Billions with a B.)
In the 12 months prior to June, Africa imported over 15GW of solar panels. Sierra Leone alone imported enough to cover 65% of its entire generating capacity.
Google estimates the median LLM prompt uses 0.24 Wh (about nine seconds of TV), emitting 0.03 g of COā and five drops of water. (How many of you leave the TV on while doing chores?)
Wildfires are terrifying, but between 2002 and 2021, global burned area actually fell 26%.
A gentle reminder: news and social media are designed to keep you engaged by stoking fear, outrage, and anxiety. That cycle is hard to break, and a lot of my friends worry that looking away even for a moment means we will collectively slide into totalitarianism and ruin.
Thatās a lot of weight to carry alone. Yes, we need to stay vigilant and hold leaders accountable, but we canāt live paralyzed by fear. There are countless good people stepping up, trying to make the world better (including many of you). Try to hold onto that truth alongside the bleak!
Maintaining a sense of humor and focusing on small wins are great ways to find encouragement to keep going. Another way is to refuse to believe the bad press about human beings. We notice and pay the most attention to cruelty and inhumanity and thatās actually because our brains focus on the negative over anything else. But I like to remind us that the reason stories of cruelty are so shocking to us is that they go against most people's natural instincts. How else can we explain human survival to date? We mostly work cooperatively and we are often concerned with helping others. This is reflected in the world in small and big ways. We have to train our brains to notice.
Kindness feels radical.
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brilliantcrank.com »
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Reach out to someone in your life whoās putting in the workānot for likes, not for a brand, but because they give a damn. Because theyāre trying to make something better. Tell them what you appreciate about them. Be specific. Be honest. And say thank you. Like you mean it, because you do.
Eject disk.
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brilliantcrank.com »
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If you're ready, step in.
If youāre not, keep performing.
If you don't have a choice, I see youāand I hope you get free.But know this:
You are not the problem.
The system was never built for you.
And you donāt have to shrink yourself to survive it.Iām not here to help you bounce back.
Iām here to help you stop pretending.
And start returning.
Saw this on Brad Frostās site and felt compelled to share it here.
I do wish I saw it three years ago, but hey, āsecond best time to plant a treeā and all that.
Optimism isnāt enthusiasm. Enthusiasm is a feeling, optimism is a choice.
Each morning I wake to five ways this world is vile and six ways its not.
WeblogPoMo 2024 - Song 13: Anxiety Attack Mitigation
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music.apple.com »
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originally shared here on
A heads up: this post talks about mental health and suicidal thoughts again.
When you mention suicidal thoughts to your therapist, the first thing they do is work with you to write up a plan.
The plan is a series of steps you can take when you are unable to pull yourself out of a funk.
The steps start out small and accelerate all the way up to āgo to the hospital.ā
My first small step was to write down movies, TV shows, or songs that make me happy.
The movies and TV shows were easy, but I struggled to think of songs that made me happy.
As Iāve written a lot about this month, most music simply distracts me or serves as a sympathetic friend. Itās not often that songs put a smile on my face.
I started a new playlist in Apple Music called Anxiety Attack Mitigation1. Over the following few weeks, I added songs that brought a legit smile to my face when I heard them.
Here are the songs on it as of today:
Black Box - Fall into My Love (Radio Edit)
One night, my daughter was eating at the table while I was doing dishes. We were arguing about something unimportant. She was āvery madā at me.
This song comes on shuffle and I begin dancing. I canāt help it with this song, itās too damn groovy.
I turn around and look over at my daughter. She looks up from her plate with an angry scowl. She sees what Iām doing and her jaw drops like a cartoon character. She gets this look on her face thatās equal parts amused and shocked.
She quickly realizes that sheās supposed to be mad at me, so she quickly covers her mouth and looks away.
Whenever this song comes on, even if Iām āvery madā about something, I canāt help but crack a smile.
Coolio - The Winner
I mentioned this song in my Hit āem High writeup, so Iāll make this quick:
This is a song that Iāve heard all my life, but never actually listened to until very recently.
Seriously, read these lyrics.
Iāll admit that I didnāt expect this sort of message from the same guy as Gangstaās Paradise, but Iām grateful for the wisdom of Coolio.
Des'ree - You Gotta Be
102.9 Lite FM was my second favorite radio station growing up2.
Iād fall asleep to that station every night.
The song I most looked forward to hearing was this one.
Even as a fourth grader, this song made me feel good about myself.
As an adult, the song serves as a manifesto for how to keep moving through life.
Sum 41 - Fat Lip
I had this song on my Cybiko.
Thatās a big deal because my Cybiko had a 16 megabyte card, which could store a whopping 16 minutes of low quality MP3s.
This song reminds me of middle school. Wanting to rebel but never feeling courageous enough to do it.
Iāve been lucky enough to see them perform it live twice this year3. I used to think pop punk music wasnāt something I was allowed to have as part of my identity, but the past few months have needed a soundtrack to help me make sense of my present situation.
Now, Iām no longer ashamed to admit that I love it.
12 year old Tim wouldāve loved to see Sum 41 live. 36 year old Tim is grateful to have had that realization before it was too late.
And every time I hear this song, it reminds me that I need to put on my own oxygen mask before helping others.
RĆŖve - Still Dancing
Hoobastank - Crawling In The Dark
Iām embarrassed to admit I listen to a lot of these songs, and this one is probably the one Iām the most embarrassed about.
Maybe Iām reaching a point in my life where I want to care less about what other people think, and this post serves as exposure therapy.
But I canāt rock out enough to this song when I feel angsty. It helps me feel less alone.
Jimmy Eat World - The Middle
This was another song that was on my Cybiko.
Every time I hear it, I try to place myself into the perspective of either the singer or the girl.
As the singer, someone pops into my head that I feel could use a pat on their back, so I shoot them a text and see how theyāre hanging in there.
As the girl, I allow myself to get the pat on the back.
Bluey - I Know a Place (The Creek Song)
The best childrenās television show of the past few years is unquestionably Bluey.
The soundtrack to the show is part of the reason why.
Close your eyes when listening to this song and picture the scene being described.
Itās a sure fire way to ground yourself back in reality, to give you a chance to let go of the thing that is causing you so much stress, to make space for thoughts that matter.
Em Beihold - Numb Little Bug
I went out for karaoke a month or so ago and heard someone sing this song that Iād never heard before.
The lyrics match the way I feel when Iām especially down, and listening to her helps me feel less isolated.
Modest Mouse - Float On
Like the Coolio song above, hereās a song thatās been in regular rotation for years, but I hadnāt really listened to the lyrics.
This song is a reminder that life often works out just fine in the end.
Hoku - Perfect Day
You listen to this song and try to not get a dumb grin on your face.
Curtis Mayfield - Move On Up
Yet another song Iāve enjoyed for years without considering the lyrics all that much.
The uplifting lyrics and encouragement to persevere through struggle make this song perfect for this playlist.
It also often gives me perspective for my own struggles. I know there isnāt such a thing as āthe suffering Olympics,ā but come on, my struggles arenāt much compared to those of an African American in the 70s.
The Linda Lindas - Talking to Myself
Iām seeing Green Day this summer, and the Linda Lindas are one of the opening sets.
Their entire Growing Up album is very good, but this song made it on this playlist because, much like the Numb Little Big song, it often feels like weāre alone when we have depressive thoughts.
Iām super lucky to have friends I can call to talk about the things I think about that I canāt help.
Some of you may even be reading this post! I canāt believe people read this stuff, but again, Iām a very lucky guy. ā¤ļø
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This is an incredibly dorky name. Just needed to admit that here. ↩
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My first was Radio AAHS. The ink I could spill about my love for Radio AAHS⦠↩
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They are currently on their final tour. Iām not sure if this is like pro wrestling when people have retirement matches and then go on to wrestle for another 30 years (looking at you, Ric Flair), but it sure feels like they are ready to call it. Yet another reason Iām glad I took the opportunity to see them live this year. ↩
Can we imagine a positive future?
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tomgreenwood.substack.com »
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originally shared here on
The reason that Iāve been looking for positive future visions is because I feel that the environmental and social movements here in the UK seem to be increasingly pessimistic, driven more by fear and despair than by hope and inspiration. Naturally these movements always have their roots in the challenges that we face, but when I first got involved as a teenager there seemed to be an atmosphere of genuine hope. That hope was inspiring and energising, a wonderful thing to be a part of and hugely motivational. In the last few years though, I have been disheartened to hear many people I admire and respect confess to me in private that they have given up hope.
And I donāt blame them. I have struggled with hope too. Itās been a very long time since we had a political leader who could inspire us with a meaningful vision for a better future, and despite repeated claims by activists that āwe already have all of the solutionsā, the elephant in the room is that they donāt seem to be working. Even Patagonia's founder, Yvon Chouinard, when changing the company's mission statement to āWe're in business to save our home planetā, apparently also said in private that itās because he thinks it's already too late for humanity.
To me, this is an untenable situation. Hope is the fuel that drives life forward. It's what gets us out of bed in the morning, enables us to face the struggles of life and gives us all something to aim for. Without hope, there is only darkness.
As we travel through the vast expanse of space on our tiny blue marble called Earth, we must remember that it is the tiny points of light out there in the darkness of the universe that give birth to all the wonders of life. Hope is light, and we only need a little bit for great things to happen.
I am constantly inspired by Tom Greenwoodās posts. This one was chock full of new-to-me concepts like New Earth, the Age of Aquarius, the ancient Indian Yuga Cycle, and Tomās vision called Harmonium.
I also like his three step process for reigniting hope (allow yourself to dream, work on yourself, move forward). This is the precise process Iāve been undergoing in my own life since getting laid off at the beginning of the year.
Compounding Optimism
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collabfund.com »
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originally shared here on
The core point of this article (incremental progress is vastly underestimated and compound growth is hard to fathom) is solid, but itās this part that stuck with me:
If you view progress as being driven by the genius of individuals, of course itās hard to imagine a future where things are dramatically better, because no individual is orders of magnitudes smarter than average.
But when you view it as one person coming up with a small idea, another person copying that idea and tweaking it a little, another taking that insight and manipulating it a bit, another yet taking that product and combining it with something else ā incremental, tiny bits, little ideas mixing, joining, blending, mutating, and compounding together ā itās suddenly much more conceivable.
This must be why Iāve been so drawn to finding a community lately.
I find it exhausting and boring being stuck all by myself, chugging through a coding problem with no one to talk to.
Mutating and remixing ideas is what gives me energy. Taking someoneās thought and tweaking it to make it better in some meaningful way. Itās the part of my job I love the most.
Everything is Terrible but Iām Fine
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theatlantic.com »
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originally shared here on
With greater access to news on social media and the internet, Americans are more deluged than they used to be by depressing stories. (And the news cycle really can be pretty depressing!)
This is leading to a kind of perma-gloom about the state of the world, even as we maintain a certain resilience about the things that we have the most control over.
Beyond the diverse array of daily challenges that Americans face, many of us seem to be suffering from something related to the German concept of weltschmerz, or world-sadness. Itās mediaschmerzāa sadness about the news cycle and news media, which is distinct from the experience of our everyday life.
Iām really not sure how my journalism friends maintain their sanity.
Iām also not sure how to interpret this theory other than āthis is what Iāve been trying to articulate for two years now, but with some data.ā
Turn off the news, delete your social media accounts. Your weltschmerz and mediaschmerz will thank you for it.
By All Means: DuNord Craft Spirits Founder/CEO Chris Montana
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tcbmag.com »
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This episode of the excellent By All Means podcast demanded to be shared for two reasons:
First, Allison Kaplan is painfully good at her job. I say painful because, as a podcast host myself, I know itās not easy to (a) identify good stories and (b) lead a guest comfortably through an interview. She was incredible as a host in this episode, and anyone looking for tips on how to conduct a long-form interview aught to follow Aliās work.
Second, the story told in this episode is undeniably compelling. Chris Montanaās story is filled with ups and downs, heās a guy you just canāt help but want to root for.
I lived a couple miles from Du Nord when it first opened, and my wife and I quickly found it to be our favorite local spot. Even now, I can close my eyes and remember exactly how I felt sipping a gin cocktail in his lounge. Iāve never met Chris before, but after hearing his story in full, I can tell that my experience at Du Nord was carefully considered and designed, and I appreciate it all that much more.
Thereās grief and pain tied in with the Du Nord story, to be sure⦠but also lots of success and optimism for the future. Itās stories like these that we all need to hear, learn from, and share voraciously with others.
The Day the Live Concert Returns
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theatlantic.com »
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originally shared here on
I donāt know when it will be safe to return to singing arm in arm at the top of our lungs, hearts racing, bodies moving, souls bursting with life. But I do know that we will do it again, because we have to. Itās not a choice.
Weāre human. We need moments that reassure us that we are not alone. That we are understood. That we are imperfect. And, most important, that we need each other.
The coronavirus has upended our lives, and we are all collectively looking forward to the day when it is safe to embrace a stranger again.
That collective optimism is what gives me hope that it actually will happen.
Personal Renewal
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pbs.org »
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Nothing is ever finally safe. Every important battle is fought and re-fought. We need to develop a resilient, indomitable morale that enables us to face those realities and still strive with every ounce of energy to prevail.
You may wonder if such a struggle -- endless and of uncertain outcome -- isn't more than humans can bear. But all of history suggests that the human spirit is well fitted to cope with just that kind of world.
It was very hard to pull a single quote out of this speech. If youāre struggling in life right now, reading this will help.
Edit from the future: I just realized I shared this twice in, like, two weeks haha! Here's the pull quote I used from the other sharing. I guess this is just a sign that this speech really is amazing.
If we are conscious of the danger of going to seed, we can resort to countervailing measures. At almost any age. You donāt need to run down like an unwound clock. And if your clock is unwound, you can wind it up again. You can stay alive in every sense of the word until you fail physically. I know some pretty successful people who feel that that just isnāt possible for them, that life has trapped them. But they donāt really know that. Life takes unexpected turns.