It is so challenging to be optimistic today because in this world, we face terrible problems:
It might seem strange, but even the magnitude of these problems provides an additional reason to be optimistic because the past guides us: we learn what to expect from the future. All the crises the world has already gone through have turned into opportunities for growth. Crises are genuine turning points, moments of development, acceleration.
The greatest challenges require more determination and an equally strong sense of trust, the belief that the task can truly be accomplished. Think about how important it is to believe in the possibility of achieving something good and grand. All of this will only happen when we believe that something can happen, because nothing will come by chance.
It is important to imagine the world we want and believe that we can change reality and make it the way we envision it. Thus, the confidence in making something happen that seems impossible to most is what has shaped our history so far: our history has been shaped by optimists, and if we want to shape the future, we must be optimistic too.
The world we are shaping is not a perfect one, but it is always a projection towards something better, an improvement in our lives. If we expect the world to produce a little more good than bad, to give us a few more reasons to hope rather than fear, we cannot help but be optimistic.
Optimism certainly does not just mean having a positive temperament; it is based on the reality of historical progress, on the fact that we transcend the moment we are living in and observe the data scientifically and rationally. Reading the data, we cannot help but highlight how the world, in the last 500 years, has done nothing but grow and constantly improve day by day.
There are probably three reasons why there are so many pessimists:
To be optimistic, one must be realistic, and as mentioned, realism comes through the history we have already lived. The other important element of growth is trust among people and among nations: we have the opportunity to collaborate with perfect strangers, and this collaboration allows us to do things that go beyond ourselves and are bigger than what we can do.
We can also have confidence in future generations, in the billions of people who have not yet been born, just as it happened to us. Today, we are enjoying the work of past generations who studied to build infrastructure, roads, canals, skyscrapers, telephone networks, things from which we are now benefiting. We have more benefits than they did in the past (as if they had done it for us: when they started, we weren't there, so they acted as good ancestors for us. Sometimes even sacrificing what could have been all immediate benefits).
By looking out for future generations, we also want and can be good ancestors for them: this too is an act of optimism because we believe there will be future generations and because we are willing to sacrifice immediate gains to give more to the future.
Trust, a vision of the future, and the right relational approach between generations are elements that make up the strength of the optimist. The optimist is the one who is aware of the existence of problems and believes they can and should be addressed. The world is a constant cycle between awareness and ignorance, a continuous growth of learning new things. We have an obligation to be optimistic because being optimistic allows us to shape the future.
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