Moving beyond both naive optimism and despair into a grounded hope that is rooted in spiritual practice rather than outcome assurance.
Mirabai's songs are often described as hopeful, yet they were written in circumstances of loss, rejection, and constraint. Her hope was not based on the promise of rescue or victory, but on the unshakeable ground of her love for the divine. This suggests a different kind of hope than the hope of the positive-thinking industrial complex—one that doesn't require certainty about outcomes. In anticipatory grief for civilization, we need this paradoxical hope: the capacity to work and love and grieve without needing to know that things will turn out well. This hope is rooted in spiritual practice, in the knowledge that meaning can be made even in loss, that beauty persists, that love is never wasted. It is hope that acknowledges reality while refusing despair, hope that motivates action not because victory is assured but because love requires it. This paradoxical hope is actually more resilient than naive optimism, because it doesn't collapse when circumstances worsen. Instead, it deepens, finding new dimensions of meaning and connection even within constraint.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.