I woke up Sunday to a text alert from my mom. A week ago, she had been in the hospital, so sleep turned to panic for me. I grabbed my phone and was relieved to see it was a photo she was sharing. She had woken up early and discovered her yard was covered in a six-inch-thick blanket of snow. It was stunning! The glistening fresh cover had washed out all the imperfections of the ground and dressed it in a silky-smooth sheet of white. The harsh winter landscape was reframed into a wonderland. It was beautiful. It was peaceful and refreshing.
I’ll be honest, sometimes things feel hopeless. Everywhere you look there’s chaos. The landscape is full of noise, unrest, and uncertainty. I hear it in conversations, see it in the news, and watch it unfold on the local, national, and global stage. People are concerned, anxious, and unsure about the future.
At the same time, on the shores of our generation, the next technological wave is crashing: Generative AI. It’s poised to amplify us, disrupt us, and rewrite how work gets done. It’s exciting. It’s unsettling. It’s both at the same time.
If you’re feeling unsteady, you’re not alone, and we’re not the first to feel this way. Human history is a long story of disruption and change. Empires rise and fall. Technologies reshape daily life. Resources run thin, then abundant again. Wars, disasters, inventions, revolutions, some slow, some sudden. And every time, people struggle. They pause. They worry. And then they adapt, learn, and often, they thrive.
It strikes me that the ones who do best aren’t necessarily the strongest or the loudest. They’re the most flexible. The most curious. The ones willing to lean in, learn, and keep moving forward with hope, even when the path isn’t fully visible yet.
Years ago, I wrote about hope, not as wishful thinking, but as fuel. Hope isn’t denial. It doesn’t ignore reality. It looks reality in the eye and says, “There’s still a way forward.” Science even backs this up. Hope changes us chemically, releasing endorphins and enkephalins, neurochemicals that help us endure pain, overcome obstacles, heal faster, and feel joy again.
Hope covers the chaos of our lives with a blanket of snow. It reframes our situation. It elevates our approach and redefines our mood. But hope isn’t passive. It asks something of us. It requires faith, the kind that takes one step forward despite obstacles. It knows the road ahead may be challenging, but it believes the destination exists. It’s quiet perseverance. It’s choosing curiosity over fear. It’s staying open when it would be easier to shut down.
I believe this moment, right now, is one of those hinge points in history. Technology is accelerating. The world feels unstable. There is more chaos on the horizon. And yet, opportunity is everywhere for those willing to adapt, grow, and imagine something better. The future isn’t something that happens to us. It’s something we build, shape, and invent together, one decision at a time.
So, if you’re tired, pause. If you’re anxious, breathe. If you’re uncertain, stay curious. And above all, don’t lose hope! The future is still ahead of us. Tomorrow is still one more step toward our dreams. And hope, real hope, is still one of the most powerful tools we have to get there.
May your week be covered in a fresh blanket of hope!

