Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Somatic Techniques for Sitting With the Discomfort of “The Healthy Depression”

Written by Julie Telgenhoff

Last month, I wrote an article called “The Healthy Depression,” describing a profound, low-level grief that can arise when we become aware of how disconnected, artificial, and morally inverted modern society has become. This form of depression does not come from a chemical imbalance or personal failure. It can emerge from seeing clearly and feeling the weight of what we are actually witnessing.

That awareness, however, can become difficult to carry. Once we recognize the machinery surrounding us such as the manipulation, distraction, digital overstimulation, social disconnection, and constant pressure to ignore our own inner knowing, it becomes nearly impossible to go back to sleep. Yet remaining awake without learning how to regulate the body can eventually lead to exhaustion, anxiety, numbness, or complete burnout.

True change requires more than recognizing that something is wrong. It requires deep reflection, moral authenticity, and radical personal accountability. It also requires learning how to remain present with the discomfort of awareness without allowing it to consume us.

When we see the matrix clearly, the nervous system may interpret the surrounding madness as an ongoing threat. The body can become trapped in survival mode, moving between hyperarousal, anger, fear, exhaustion, and emotional shutdown. Even when there is no immediate physical danger in the room, the body continues responding as though it must fight, flee, freeze, or remain constantly vigilant.

Regulation is not about convincing ourselves that society is healthy or pretending that everything is fine. It is the practice of reminding the body that we are safe in this particular moment. It shifts us from sympathetic survival mode into a state of anchored presence, where we can observe what is happening without losing ourselves inside it.

The goal is not to numb the healthy discomfort of awareness. The goal is to build the physical and emotional capacity to hold it.

Here are six practical, somatic exercises that can help regulate the nervous system while allowing us to remain conscious, discerning, and fully present.

1. Physiological Sighs and "Voo" Chanting (Vibrational Toning)
The vagus nerve passes right through the throat and vocal cords. You can manually stimulate it through sound to break a freeze state or a sense of deep, heavy numbness.
  • The Practice: Take a deep breath in through your nose, follow it immediately with a quick, secondary "sharp" sniff to max out the lungs, then release it with a long, deep, resonant "Voooooo" sound from your belly until you are completely out of air. Repeat 3 times. 
  • The Physiology: The rapid double-inhalation pops open collapsed alveoli in the lungs, instantly dropping carbon dioxide levels in the blood. The deep vocal vibration triggers the vagal brake, physically calming the heart and lowering blood pressure. These two techniques trigger the parasympathetic nervous system, shifting the body out of a panic response and into a state where reflection is possible. 
2. Vagal Humming (The Internal Sonic Massage)
When the surrounding culture feels empty or frantic, the nervous system often drops into a "freeze" state of heavy numbness or an anxious fight-or-flight loop. Humming creates an internal, self-generated vibration that manually coaxes the body back to safety.
  • The Practice: Close your mouth, relax your jaw, and inhale deeply through your nose. As you exhale, let out a sustained, low-pitched "Mmmmm" hum. Focus your attention on feeling the physical vibration in your throat, chest, and skull. Repeat for 2 to 3 minutes. 
  • The Physiology: The vagus nerve runs directly past the vocal cords and larynx. The physical vibration of humming stimulates this nerve, which instantly fires up the parasympathetic nervous system to lower your heart rate and blood pressure. Additionally, humming significantly increases the production of nitric oxide in the nasal passages, which dilates blood vessels and increases oxygen flow, clearing mental fog and soothing the body.
3. Physical "Orienting" (Breaking the Mental Screen)
The digital grid and over-reflection trap your consciousness entirely in your head. Orienting brings your primal brain back to the immediate physical safety of the present room.
  • The Practice: Let your eyes wander slowly around your space without an agenda. Notice three specific, boring objects (e.g., a doorknob, a rug on the floor, the color of a chair). Realize your neck is free to move and move it. 
  • The Physiology: Hyperarousal causes tunnel vision. Intentionally scanning your environment and moving your neck signals to the brainstem that there are no immediate physical predators in the room, dropping your baseline stress. 
4. "Somatic Witnessing" (Feeling the Location of the Grief)
Society teaches people to treat the "healthy depression" as an intellectual concept or a mental problem. True regulation requires you to feel it as a physical sensation in the body without trying to change it.
  • The Practice: Sit quietly and scan your body. Where does the sadness or frustration live? Is it a tightness in your chest? A knot in your throat? A weight in your stomach? Focus your attention on that exact spot and breathe into it, saying to yourself, "I can feel this tension, and I am safe enough to let it sit here right now."
  • The Physiology: This builds "interoceptive capacity" which is the ability to tolerate uncomfortable internal bodily states. By witnessing the physical sensation instead of running to a distraction, you digest the emotion rather than storing it as trauma. 
5. The "Mammalian Dive Reflex" (The Neural Reset)
When the mind becomes overwhelmed by societal inversion or digital exhaustion, the nervous system can get locked in a state of high-alert panic. You can use temperature to trigger an immediate, involuntary chemical shift in the body. 
  • The Practice: Splash cool water on your face or hold a cool cloth over your forehead and cheeks for 15 to 20 seconds. Breathe slowly while doing this. Dry off, and proceed. 
  • The Physiology: Cold water on the face stimulates the trigeminal nerve, which instantly activates the "mammalian dive reflex." This biological trigger bypasses your conscious thoughts to rapidly lower your heart rate, constrict peripheral blood vessels, and shift your entire system out of a high-stress state into immediate physiological calm
6. Intentional "Digital Off-Grid" Anchoring
The nervous system cannot regulate if it is constantly being bombarded by invisible, artificial pings, algorithmic outrage, and subliminal manipulation.
  • The Practice: Establish a daily, zero input window. No screens, no books, no podcasts. Sit with your hands flat on a wooden table, or walk outside and look at the sky or trees. Feel the hard ground beneath your feet. 
  • The Physiology: This removes the external neural overload. It forces the brain to calibrate to the slow, organic rhythms of nature rather than the hyper-fast, dopamine driven rhythms of the digital grid. It creates the actual container for "true elderhood" to form.

The healthy depression is not something we must immediately silence, medicate, distract ourselves from, or transform into forced positivity. It may be the part of us that still remembers what genuine human connection, integrity, purpose, and natural living are supposed to feel like.

But awareness without regulation can become its own prison. When the nervous system remains in a constant state of alarm, we lose the ability to think clearly, listen inwardly, and respond with intention. We become easier to exhaust, provoke, manipulate, and overwhelm.

These practices do not remove the realities we are witnessing. They help us remain steady enough to face them. They create a small space between what is happening around us and what happens inside us. Within that space, we regain choice.

Learning to regulate the nervous system is not an act of surrender to an artificial world. It is an act of self-possession. It allows us to feel grief without becoming hopeless, recognize manipulation without becoming consumed by it, and remain awake without destroying our own health.

We do not need to stop caring in order to survive. We need to become grounded enough to care without collapsing.

Perhaps that is the deeper purpose of the healthy depression. It interrupts the distractions, exposes what no longer feels true, and invites us to become more honest about how we are living. When we can sit with that discomfort instead of running from it, it can become more than grief. It can become discernment, direction, and the beginning of genuine inner change.

If my work has helped you in any way, you can support my independent writing here:  https://buymeacoffee.com/asheepnomore

Every bit helps me keep researching, writing, and sharing outside the corporate-approved narrative. Thanks. 

Stop Procrastination Energetic/Frequency Music - Get Things Done!

 

Julie Telgenhoff

I’m sharing another powerful frequency meditation from Elke Neher, this one created to help break through procrastination, release the invisible resistance that keeps us stuck, and restore the motivation to finally get things done.

The recording combines binaural beats, isochronic tones, healing frequencies, affirmations, subliminals, and an embedded energy transmission designed to bring the mind and body into a deeply relaxed state. From that place, we may be better able to release subconscious patterns connected to avoidance, hesitation, and feeling unable to move forward.

The energy around us has felt extremely heavy lately. For me, it has shown up as intense fatigue, a lack of motivation, and a feeling of being physically and emotionally unbalanced. Whether this is connected to the natural frequencies surrounding us or manipulation through increasing levels of EMF (from 5G toward 6G and 7G), something has felt noticeably different.

Today, however, I personally felt a shift for the better, and this meditation feels especially timely. Sit back, relax, allow the frequencies and affirmations to work, and hold the intention of moving forward with greater clarity, energy, and purpose.

Headphones may enhance the experience, although they are not required, and remember to drink plenty of pure water.


If my work has helped you in any way, you can support my independent writing here:  https://buymeacoffee.com/asheepnomore

Every bit helps me keep researching, writing, and sharing outside the corporate-approved narrative.


Monday, June 29, 2026

How Many Times Can This Be Called Coincidence? Trump Bought the Stocks. Then His Government Boosted the Companies.

Source:  nymag.com

Note: This is not a left-wing argument, and it is not an attack on Donald Trump simply because he is Donald Trump. Any president who holds individual stocks while overseeing contracts, regulations and policies that can enrich those companies should face the same scrutiny.

Two weeks separated Donald Trump’s multimillion-dollar investment in a Taser manufacturer from his administration’s announcement of an enormous federal Taser procurement.

On February 10, 2026, Trump’s investment account purchased between $1 million and $5 million in Axon Enterprise, the company that manufactures Tasers. Federal disclosure rules provide only broad value ranges, so the exact amount remains unknown. Trump’s account purchased another $15,000 to $50,000 in Axon shares on March 2 while also making two relatively small sales around the same period.

On February 24, only fourteen days after the large purchase, Immigration and Customs Enforcement posted a notice describing plans for a five-year contract worth an estimated $220 million. ICE wanted approximately 17,800 new Tasers, unlimited cartridges and training for its agents. The agency reportedly had about 4,300 Tasers in service, meaning the proposed purchase alone would more than quadruple its existing inventory.

The notice did not award the contract to Axon or even identify the company by name. It was a preliminary request for information from potential suppliers. However, reporting found that Axon was the only known company manufacturing a conductive energy weapon matching the specifications ICE requested. Axon was also already doing business with the Department of Homeland Security and had spent nearly $2.5 million lobbying during the previous year, the highest annual lobbying expenditure in the company’s history.

The timing becomes even stranger when we remember what Trump said on February 24, the same day ICE posted the contracting notice. During his State of the Union address, Trump called upon Congress to prohibit its members from profiting through insider information.

Let’s also ensure that members of Congress cannot corruptly profit from using insider information,” he declared.

Yet Trump did not propose extending that prohibition to the president. His own portfolio was holding as much as $5 million in a company positioned to become the primary beneficiary of a procurement announced by an agency under his control.

Axon might have been dismissed as an uncomfortable coincidence had it occurred alone. It did not.

Financial disclosures covering the first three months of 2026 revealed an extraordinary level of trading inside Trump’s investment accounts. CBS News counted 3,642 transactions involving 1,026 companies and funds between January 6 and March 30. That included 2,346 purchases and 1,296 sales. Reuters estimated the combined value of the transactions disclosed across two reports at between $220 million and approximately $750 million.

This was not a passive portfolio quietly holding broad market funds. It was an actively traded collection of individual corporations whose fortunes could be affected by contracts, regulations, tariffs, export approvals, health policies and public statements originating from the Trump administration.

Consider Dell Technologies.

On February 10, the same day as the large Axon purchase, Trump’s portfolio acquired between $1 million and $5 million in Dell stock. Nine days later, Trump stood before supporters in Georgia and told them to “go out and buy a Dell computer.” Three additional Dell purchases, each worth up to $50,000, followed in March.

In May, the Pentagon awarded Dell’s federal subsidiary a contract valued at up to $9.7 billion to manage and consolidate Microsoft software procurement across the Department of Defense, intelligence agencies and the Coast Guard. The agreement consolidated previously budgeted software spending rather than creating an entirely new $9.7 billion pool of money, and Dell had an established relationship with Microsoft and the Pentagon. None of that changes the central issue: the sitting president owned a major personal financial interest in a company he publicly promoted before his administration awarded that company the largest government contract in its history.

Then there were the semiconductor companies.

Trump’s financial managers purchased between $500,001 and $1 million in Nvidia stock on January 6. The following week, the administration relaxed export restrictions, allowing Nvidia to resume selling certain high value artificial intelligence chips to customers in China. The accounts continued buying and selling Nvidia throughout the quarter, eventually recording fifteen separate Nvidia transactions.

The portfolio also purchased between $50,000 and $100,000 in Advanced Micro Devices stock on January 6. On January 13, the Commerce Department authorized AMD to sell chips to Chinese customers. Trump’s accounts purchased at least $740,000 in AMD stock during the quarter.

Palantir provides another example. Trump bought between $65,000 and $150,000 in Palantir shares during January, sold between approximately $1.1 million and $5.3 million in February, and then bought between roughly $200,000 and $500,000 more in March. During February, Palantir entered an agreement with the Department of Homeland Security reportedly worth as much as $1 billion to provide technology supporting the administration’s immigration-enforcement operations.

On April 7, after the March purchases, Trump publicly praised Palantir on Truth Social. He did not merely mention the company. He included its stock-market ticker, PLTR, while praising its “war fighting capabilities and equipment.”

The pattern was not confined to military equipment, surveillance technology and artificial intelligence. It extended into prescription drugs.

Trump’s accounts made seven purchases of Eli Lilly stock during the first quarter, beginning on January 6, with the combined purchases valued at as much as $680,000. Two days after the first purchase, drug manufacturers faced a deadline to apply for a new Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services program designed to expand access to GLP-1 weight-loss drugs. Eli Lilly later became a participating manufacturer and described the development as a significant milestone.

The administration subsequently promoted several policies beneficial to Lilly. Medicare moved toward covering obesity drugs through a pilot program. The government’s TrumpRx website directed consumers toward lower-priced Lilly products and LillyDirect, the company’s own telemedicine service. The FDA intensified enforcement against cheaper compounded GLP-1 alternatives and later gave expedited approval to a Lilly weight loss pill. Not every government decision favored the company, but enough did that ethics experts openly questioned the appearance created by the president holding Lilly shares while his agencies shaped the company’s market.

Tobacco offers yet another variation on the same theme.

By 2026, Trump’s holdings in Philip Morris had reportedly grown to as much as $1.64 million. His portfolio also traded Altria and other tobacco-related stocks. Meanwhile, tobacco interests contributed millions of dollars to Trump’s political operation, inauguration and related projects. Reynolds American donated another $5 million to MAGA Inc. on April 30, one week before FDA guidance gave the tobacco and vaping industries an important regulatory victory.

During the same period, the administration withdrew a proposed menthol-cigarette ban, created faster pathways for nicotine products, eased the market entry of some vaping products, weakened federal tobacco-control offices and increased enforcement against unapproved competitors threatening the largest established companies. Financial analysts described portions of the new FDA policy as highly favorable to Philip Morris and other major industry players.

No publicly available evidence proves that Trump personally ordered any of these trades. No document currently proves that he knew in advance about the Axon procurement, the Dell agreement, the semiconductor export decisions or the health policies affecting Eli Lilly.

The Trump Organization says the investments are held in fully discretionary accounts managed by independent financial institutions. It claims neither Trump nor his family chooses, directs or receives advance notice of individual trades and that automated systems handle portfolio decisions.

That explanation deserves to be reported. It does not resolve the problem.

Trump’s portfolio is not a qualified blind trust. His assets remain in a trust controlled by his children, and his signed financial disclosures reveal the companies held and traded on his behalf. A person cannot honestly claim to be blind to investments appearing on documents that person reviews, signs and certifies.

The transaction volume may also have an ordinary financial explanation. Investment professionals reviewing the records suggested that Trump’s managers could be using automated direct indexing and tax-loss harvesting, strategies that can produce thousands of purchases and sales without anyone manually selecting every trade. The accounts sometimes bought and sold the same companies, making it difficult to isolate any one transaction and prove it resulted from nonpublic information.

But the ethical issue is larger than whether prosecutors could prove criminal insider trading.

The president oversees the agencies that award contracts, issue licenses, approve exports, negotiate drug prices and write regulations. He appoints the people running those agencies. He can publicly praise a company and move markets with a sentence. At the same time, his private portfolio may gain or lose money depending upon the decisions made by the government he controls.

Most executive branch employees would face strict restrictions against participating in official matters affecting their personal financial interests. Federal law, however, excludes the president and vice president from the principal criminal conflict of interest statute covering such conduct. Trump remains subject to financial disclosure requirements, but disclosure merely tells the public about the conflict after the transaction has occurred; it does not remove the conflict.

Trump’s latest filing was itself late. He reportedly paid a $200 penalty for failing to disclose the transactions within the STOCK Act’s 45 day deadline. In practical terms, a president overseeing trillions of dollars in government activity can maintain a portfolio worth hundreds of millions, disclose trades after the fact and face a penalty smaller than many Americans’ monthly utility bill.

Perhaps every one of these transactions was generated independently by an algorithm. Perhaps Trump knew nothing about the trades until they appeared on his disclosure forms. Perhaps each favorable government decision was made entirely on its merits.

But government ethics should not rest upon the public being asked to accept an endless series of perhapses.

One Axon purchase before a proposed $220 million Taser contract might be called coincidence. A multimillion dollar Dell purchase, followed by presidential promotion and a $9.7 billion Pentagon agreement, makes coincidence harder to accept as a complete explanation. Add Nvidia, AMD, Palantir, Eli Lilly and the tobacco companies, and we are no longer looking at a single suspicious date on a calendar. We are looking at a system that repeatedly places presidential power and private financial gain on the same side of the transaction.

The question is not merely whether Donald Trump broke a law designed with a presidential loophole large enough to drive a $9.7 billion contract through. The question is why any president is permitted to own and actively trade individual companies while controlling the federal machinery that can enrich them.

Sources:

Office of Government Ethics: Donald J. Trump Periodic Transaction Report, signed May 8, 2026
https://extapps2.oge.gov/201/Presiden.nsf/PAS+Index/405E4EC4E27BE8D185258DF7002DD1C0/$FILE/Trump,%20Donald%20J.-05.08.2026-278T(2).pdf

SAM.gov:  ICE Sources Sought Notice for Conducted Energy Weapons, cartridges and training
https://sam.gov/workspace/contract/opp/b40ef27c3e424cb788190e88ab12ca83/view

Samuel Larreal and Jackie Llanos, NOTUS:  “Trump Bought Corporations’ Stock as His Administration Boosted Their Business,” May 14, 2026; updated May 15, 2026
https://www.notus.org/money/donald-trump-stock-investments-palantir-axom-nvidia

Jackie Llanos, NOTUS:  “ICE Plans to Spend $220 Million on Tasers,” March 2, 2026
https://www.notus.org/immigration/taser-contract-immigration-customs-enforcement-220-million

Maegan Vazquez, The Washington Post: “Dell Inks $9.7 Billion Pentagon Contract After Trump Acquires Stock,” May 28, 2026
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2026/05/28/dell-inks-97-billion-pentagon-contract-after-trump-acquires-stock-praises-company/

Darius Tahir, KFF Health News:  “Trump Bought Stock in Drugmaker as His Government Boosted Its Obesity Drugs,” May 18, 2026
https://kffhealthnews.org/health-industry/trump-stock-trades-eli-lilly-glp-1-weight-loss-drugs-invest-ethics-disclosures/

Darius Tahir, KFF Health News:  “Trump Bought Tobacco Stocks and Raked In Industry Donations as FDA Eased Standards,” June 11, 2026
https://kffhealthnews.org/courts/fda-tobacco-vape-vaping-ecigarette-smoking-trump-investments-maga-donations/

Stefan Becket, Michael Kaplan, Graham Kates, Grace Manthey and Julia Ingram, CBS News: “3,600 Stock Trades in 3 Months: Breaking Down Trump’s Flurry of Investment Moves,” June 15, 2026
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-stock-trades-2026/

CBS News: Interactive database: “Explore Trump’s 3,600 Stock Trades From the First 3 Months of 2026,” June 15, 2026
https://www.cbsnews.com/projects/2026/trump-stock-trades/

Jarrett Renshaw, Lawrence Delevingne and Tom Bergin, Reuters: “Trump Ethics Filing Reveals Thousands of Trades Tied to U.S. Corporate Securities,” May 14, 2026; updated May 15, 2026
https://www.reuters.com/legal/government/trump-ethics-filing-reveals-thousands-trades-tied-us-corporate-securities-2026-05-14/

Samuel Larreal, NOTUS: “What Donald Trump Knows About His Stock Investments,” May 19, 2026
https://www.notus.org/money/donald-trump-stock-investments-portfolio-disclosure

Cornell Legal Information Institute: 18 U.S. Code § 202, defining the exclusion of the president and vice president from several federal conflict-of-interest provisions
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/202

Sunday, June 28, 2026

Joy Is Not Denial: How to Stay Human While the World Feels Like It Is Falling Apart

 

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.

If my work has helped you in any way, you can support my independent writing here:  https://buymeacoffee.com/asheepnomore

Every bit helps me keep researching, writing, and sharing outside the corporate-approved narrative.