Written by Julie Telgenhoff
There are seasons when life does not merely feel stressful. It feels relentless. Personal loss collides with financial pressure, health problems, broken relationships, political conflict, frightening technology and a constant stream of headlines warning us that something worse may be coming.
After enough of this, the mind begins living ahead of itself. It searches for the next emergency before the present one has even ended. A quiet afternoon no longer feels peaceful. It feels like the suspicious silence before another blow.
In that state, joy can feel almost inappropriate. How can we laugh when people are suffering? How can we enjoy a meal, a song or a beautiful afternoon when our own problems remain unresolved? We may even distrust happiness, afraid that the moment we relax, life will punish us for letting down our guard.
But joy is not a declaration that everything is fine. It is not forced optimism, spiritual bypassing or pretending that cruelty and suffering do not exist. Research into mixed emotions has found that happiness and sadness can be experienced together. In some circumstances, the ability to hold both emotions may actually precede improvements in psychological well-being.
That means we do not have to finish grieving before we laugh again. We do not have to solve the world before we notice the sunlight coming through a window. A moment of joy does not cancel pain. Both experiences can occupy the same human life.
Because trying to suppress fear, grief or anger usually creates another struggle inside us. We are no longer only hurting; we are judging ourselves for hurting. Research has associated the nonjudgmental acceptance of difficult emotions with better psychological health. Acceptance does not mean approving of what happened. It means admitting, without shame, that this is what we feel right now.
Joy enters through the same doorway. We acknowledge sorrow when it arrives, but we do not make sorrow the only emotion permitted inside the house.
Positive emotions are sometimes treated as decorative luxuries, useful only after the serious problems have been handled. Research suggests otherwise. Positive emotion may help protect people from some of the psychological effects of stress and trauma, while supportive relationships, self-compassion, hope and meaning can help positive emotion return after adversity. Studies of everyday stress have also found that positive emotions experienced on difficult days can soften the emotional impact of those stressors and may reduce how strongly people react to stress the following day.
This does not require becoming cheerful all day. The nervous system may not be ready for that, and demanding it can become another form of pressure. The goal is not constant happiness. The goal is to create small openings through which life can still reach us.
One of the first openings may come from limiting how much access chaos has to our attention. Being informed is different from remaining electronically connected to disaster every waking hour. News sites, social media and phone notifications can make events from across the world feel as though they are happening inside our own living room. Psychologists have warned that repeated media exposure and constant checking can intensify stress and emotional overload.
Turning away for a few hours does not make a person ignorant or uncaring. There is a difference between receiving information that helps us act and consuming information that leaves us frightened, frozen and unable to function. We can choose a limited time to read the news, gather what is useful and then return to the physical life directly in front of us.
When everything feels overwhelming, it also helps to shorten the distance we are trying to travel. Trauma pushes the mind into an enormous future filled with every possible loss. Joy usually lives in a much smaller place.
It may live in the next ten minutes.
What would make those ten minutes gentler? Opening a window. Washing our face. Sitting beside an animal. Playing a song connected to a good memory. Making tea in a favorite cup. Stepping outside long enough to notice that the sky is still moving.
These actions may appear insignificant beside the size of the problem, but that is precisely why they matter. Large problems often cannot be resolved in one day. The human body, however, still needs moments in which it receives the message that this particular minute is survivable.
Psychologists use the word “savoring” to describe deliberately attending to and appreciating a positive experience. Experiments have found that savoring can increase positive emotion after stressful experiences. It is not enough for something pleasant to happen while our attention remains trapped elsewhere. We have to stay with the experience long enough to notice it.
Instead of drinking something while reading frightening headlines, we taste it. Instead of automatically walking past a flowering tree, we stop and look at it. Instead of dismissing a kind exchange because it lasted only a minute, we allow that minute to matter.
Joy is often quiet enough to be missed.
The body also needs an exit from the mental loop. Gentle movement, when physically possible, can help shift attention away from constant rumination. It need not be an exhausting workout. Walking through a room, stretching, tending plants or moving to one song can reconnect the mind with the physical present. Research broadly associates physical activity with better mental well-being and greater capacity to cope with stress.
Nature can offer a similar interruption. Studies have linked exposure to natural environments with improved mental health, reduced stress and more positive emotion. Nature does not demand an explanation for our sadness. A tree does not ask us to become more productive. A bird does not care whether we have solved our future. The living world simply reminds us that existence is larger than the latest crisis being presented on a screen.
Connection is another shelter, although it must be the right kind of connection. Being surrounded by people who dismiss our experience can deepen loneliness. One person who listens without correcting, mocking or minimizing may be more valuable than a crowded room. High-quality social support has repeatedly been associated with greater resilience to stress and a lower risk of trauma-related psychological difficulties.
Connection can also come through animals, creativity, faith, service or participation in something that carries meaning. Trauma often produces helplessness. Meaningful action gives us a small piece of agency back. We may not be able to repair the entire world, but we can feed an animal, help a neighbor, create something beautiful, speak honestly, clean one corner of a room or complete one task that makes tomorrow less difficult.
Joy does not always arrive as excitement. Sometimes it appears as relief. Sometimes it is the satisfaction of finishing something. Sometimes it is remembering who we were before the chaos and discovering that person is not entirely gone.
People living through prolonged hardship may also need to release the guilt attached to pleasure. Enjoying one afternoon does not betray those who are suffering. Laughing does not mean we have forgotten what happened. Resting does not mean we have surrendered. A life containing joy is not evidence that the pain was unimportant.
It is evidence that the pain did not become the whole story.
The world may remain uncertain. Some problems will not be solved quickly, and some losses cannot be reversed. Keeping joy does not require us to deny any of that. It asks only that we stop giving chaos ownership of every thought, every conversation and every hour we have left.
We can grieve and still plant something. We can be frightened and still sing. We can recognize what is wrong while protecting what remains good.
Joy is not blindness. It is the refusal to let darkness occupy every room inside us.
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