Six months ago, it was easy for many Americans to think COVID-19 was on the defensive. Vaccinations were
ticking up
Today, that optimism seems miles away. Hospitalizations are
hitting new highs
If you’re not exactly feeling hopeful about the year ahead, you’re not alone. Here are five of our favorite stories spotlighting resilience, healing, and yes, hope, to help you face 2022.
1. ‘Work with hope’
Face it,
poet and classics scholar Rachel Hadas
But if you think that makes our society unique, think again. For as long as humans have been writing, they’ve been facing crises, learning to adapt – more than we give our species credit for – and keeping hope afloat. And readers today can draw strength from yesterday’s literature.
Whether it’s Homer’s Greek epic “The Iliad” or American poet Emily Dickinson, writing about resilience often shares key themes, Hadas says: learning to balance the present and the future, the big-picture horizon and the joy of small things along the way. Quoting the modern Greek poet George Seferis, she writes of the need to “put to sea again with our broken oars.”
2. Before healing, remembering
The pandemic has robbed people not only of joy, but also of ways to process grief. As many people grasp “every opportunity to reconnect” and find new normals, others are still mourning lost loved ones, especially if COVID-19 restrictions prevented the kinds of healing and commemoration families once took for granted.

Eventually, as the pandemic ebbs, both groups can find happiness, but in different ways, writes
David Sloane
With normal healing interrupted, “
everyday memorials
As we recover, joy and grief are often mixed together, he says, but don’t let “survivor’s guilt” keep you from finding comfort.
3. Lean in to rituals
Across cultures, rituals can mark life milestones, strengthen social ties and even promote hygiene – such as
Wudu
But that presents
an opportunity to adapt
“There are good reasons people spend time, money and energy engaging in rituals in the face of COVID-19 restrictions,” she writes. “They are essential to meeting our physical, social and psychological needs in the face of adversity.”
4. Hope vs. optimism
Hope isn’t expecting good things, psychologist
Jacqueline Mattis
She offers
five strategies to actively cultivate hope
“Hopeful people do not wish – they imagine and act,” she writes, emphasizing the importance of acting in community.
Research on anti-poverty activists

5. Get in the flow
For people still crafting their 2022 resolutions, cognitive scientist
Richard Huskey
It’s on his own list, too. “Flow,” a term coined in the 1970s by psychologist Mihály Csíkszentmihályi, is that feeling of complete absorption, or intense concentration, when someone’s thoughts “are focused on an experience rather than on themselves,”
Huskey explains
Intrinsically rewarding experiences, like those that put us “in the zone,” support mental health, well-being and resilience. In fact,
a study from China
Editor’s note: This story is a roundup of articles from The Conversation’s archives.
This article is republished from
The Conversation