Hope may not disappoint us...? -- by Mari Howard

            The Problem of wishing ‘Happy’



                                             Frozen pond, foggy day


In the weeks before Christmas just past, when I was writing greetings cards to the many friends we haven't seen or communicated with regularly or recently, it felt more appropriate to wish them hope than happiness…. Indeed is it ever right to assume happiness is uppermost in the minds of far-flung friends? After such a year, who knows what might have happened in their lives? Floods, fires, and hurricanes are commoner, Covid and its consequences lurks throughout the world.


Hope was a better fit. Even though, or possibly because, I found myself dragged down by the dark damp weather, and the short days, into a feeling of hopelessness. I’ve  travelled to South Africa and the USA, and several European countries, but never to any that were politically dangerous or throughly disorganised.  I’ve lived in this country, where I was born, all my life, (except for a few months in Canada). It was a good place to grow up and a good place to raise children - or it appeared to be. What is happening here now, where peaceful protest might become criminalised? When desperate people might be sent back into the sea, should they arrive alive on our beaches in fragile rubber boats? Is this exaggerated reporting? It is not.


And, adding that Covid shows no signs of disappearing any time soon, how could we simply wish each other ‘Happy’ Christmas or New Year, as if this ill-defined feeling of ‘happiness’ should rest upon them, no matter what? Christmas and New Year, increasingly tied into expectation, festivities on a grand scale, sumptuous food, flowing drink, presents, treats, socialising, the works, supposedly creating happiness?  Without these, wouldn’t most people feel resentful, without reason to be ‘happy’? Maybe they ‘shouldn’t’ but it's hard to have your pleasures taken away - two years running - (or so the media say). 


So, our cards wished them ‘All best for a hopeful New Year’.


 Can hope replace happiness?


Hope implies looking forwards towards a better time, rather than backwards to an imagined expectation.


Hope involves setting achievable ‘goals’, available and achievable to all, not only to those who already have the resources.


Hope is realised when we all work towards creating a more liveable world for everyone.


Hope includes adopting a mindset which accepts the ‘other’ whoever they are, whatever ‘minority’, religion, ethnicity, and listening to opposing viewpoints, responding with personal restraint to ideas we personally may not agree with.


Hope must use facts, in another word, truth, rather than fudges and lies - or it is not hope but a sop or a fantasy.


Whatever else, Hope can’t be used as a trope or a meme. It is a word of action, or it is meaningless.  Hope creates travelling companions such as compassion, kindness, or joy, each of these relying on hope to initiate the effort involved.  Hope works collaboratively, and brings light into a situation.  


With hope, real life may be calling us to make good things happen.  


Green shoots in frozen ground (snowdrops?)

*A couple of quotes on how other, ancient, writers, understood  "hope":

Psalm 119.116:  Sustain me as You promised, that I may live; let me not be ashamed of my hope


Romans 5 v. 5

And hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who has been given to us.



** NOTE:  The above text first appeared on my 'Mari Howard Author' blog, on January 7th...  but almost overwhelmed with editing a first draft and preparing a book of short stories for publication, time & energy gave out, and so I reversed my usual 'first seen on Authors Electric'...



Comments

Sarah said…
Thank you for your hopeful words!
Peter Leyland said…
I like these messages of hope Mari and you have given me an idea for the title of my next blog!
Peter may I approve it, as its source is my blog title?!
Ruth Leigh said…
Very thought-provoking and timely, Mari
Peter Leyland said…
Certainly, it's after the famous quote by Dr Johnson!
Which famous quote is that? (Displaying my ignorance!!)
Peter Leyland said…
The one about second marriages being 'the triumph of hope over experience'. Oh no, I have inadvertently given away the subject of my next blog!?!?