海角大神

2022
January
03
Monday

Monitor Daily Podcast

January 03, 2022
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Lindsey McGinnis
Staff writer

It was June 2020. COVID-19, economic turmoil, and police brutality dominated the news. Articles about combating 鈥渘ews fatigue鈥 punctuated long bouts of doomscrolling. It wasn鈥檛 exactly an auspicious time to take on the progress beat.

And yet, my assignment was clear: As the Monitor鈥檚 Points of Progress reporter, I needed to identify a handful of credible progress stories every week.

It felt like searching for a piece of hay in a pile of needles. For every hint of progress, I encountered at least 30 distressing headlines. It was hard to accept that those glimmers of growth could hold much weight in the midst of such overwhelmingly grim news. But over time, I began to recognize them as fuel for hope.聽

I quickly learned to spot the telltale signs of progress 鈥 and that 鈥減erfect progress鈥 doesn鈥檛 exist. So much is subjective, contentious, fragile, or incremental. The march toward progress rarely comes in giant leaps. But each step 鈥 even the false starts 鈥 can help build forward momentum.聽

There鈥檚 no doubt that these progress reports matter. More than half of Americans say the news causes them anxiety or sleep loss, according to a pre-pandemic survey by the American Psychological Association. Stories that touch on potential solutions to the world鈥檚 problems, however, have an empowering effect on audiences.

It鈥檚 not about turning a blind eye to hardship 鈥 it鈥檚 about making sure we don鈥檛 let it obscure our sense of reality.

As we begin 2022, many of the struggles of the past year still loom large in our memories. But we also found 257 signs of progress worth highlighting in 2021. This week鈥檚 feature explores key themes from last year, and underscores the biggest takeaway from my 18 months on the progress beat: There鈥檚 always a reason for hope, if you look for it.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

A deeper look

Karen Norris/Staff

Where adults might fret over uncertainty, children often see opportunity. We ask fifth graders about their visions for the future.聽Their answers are full of childlike innocence 鈥 but also are strikingly pragmatic and serious.

A Letter From

Louisville, Colo.
Jack Dempsey/AP
Renato D'Amario hugs neighbor Lori Peer after finding their homes destroyed, Dec. 31, 2021, in Louisville, Colorado, after wildfires swept through the day before.

In the wake of the Marshall Fire, thousands of Coloradans have begun the new year rebuilding their lives. For some locals, acts of kindness soothe the uncertainty.

Difference-maker

Chris Leslie/Courtesy of Mary's Meals
Magnus MacFarlane-Barrow, founder and CEO of Mary's Meals, in Haiti 鈥 six months after the earthquake in 2010. Scotland-based Mary鈥檚 Meals delivers more than 2 million meals a day to schoolchildren in 19 of the world鈥檚 poorest countries.

It鈥檚 not a novel idea, but it鈥檚 a powerful one: A good meal can fortify a hungry child鈥檚 endurance at school. But a Scottish salmon farmer鈥檚 global charity sees lunch as a vehicle to tackle poverty as well.

Points of Progress

What's going right
Staff

Our weekly roundups covered 257 moments of progress in 2021, evidence that humanity is capable of working together to advance a common good. Many were the culmination of years of work by people in their communities.

Commentary

Craig Ruttle/AP/File
Confetti falls as people celebrate the new year in New York's Times Square, Jan. 1, 2017. Our correspondent has never seen the Times Square ball drop in person, but she says watching the festivities on TV makes her hopeful about the changes in her life that will come in the new year.

From the internet to the pandemic, we find plenty of evidence of our global interconnectedness. Choosing to learn from times of shared crisis, our correspondent says, can move us 鈥 and our neighbors 鈥 forward.聽


The Monitor's View

AP
Eric Adams holds up a framed photo of his mother at his swearing-in as New York mayor in Times Square, Jan. 1, 2022.

As 2021 gives way to 2022, it鈥檚 not always easy to put into words the aspirations that well up. But sometimes poets express what we can鈥檛.

In 1850, Britain鈥檚 new poet laureate, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, wrote 鈥.鈥 His poem imagines that the church bells marking the new year will 鈥淩ing out the old, ring in the new / ... Ring out the false, ring in the true.鈥

In words that resonate today he hears the bells pealing with hope:聽

Ring out false pride in place and blood
The civic slander and the spite;
Ring in the love of truth and right,
Ring in the common love of good.
Ring out old shapes of foul disease; ...
Ring in the valiant man and free,
The larger heart, the kindlier hand.

Today poet Amanda Gorman employs the language of the 21st century but expresses the same conviction that good lies ahead. At last year鈥檚 presidential inaugural, the 22-year-old Ms. Gorman roused listeners with her poem 鈥淭he Hill We Climb.鈥 To mark 2022, she wrote "."听

A challenging 2021, she says, has only made us stronger. She writes, in part:

Tethered by this year of yearning,聽
We are learning聽
That though we weren鈥檛 ready for this,聽
We have been readied by it.聽
Steadily we vow that no matter聽
How we are weighed down,聽
We must always pave a way forward.聽
This hope is our door, our portal.

Acknowledge the past, she says, but don鈥檛 live there:

So let us not return to what was normal,聽
But reach toward what is next.聽
What was cursed, we will cure.
What was plagued, we will prove pure. ...
Come over, join this day just begun.聽
For wherever we come together,聽
We will forever overcome.

New York City鈥檚 new mayor, Eric Adams, isn鈥檛 a poet, but he knew how to use stirring language to put a punctuation mark on his approach to 2022. The mayor is the son of a housecleaner, a single mother, and his own story speaks of challenges faced 鈥 and defeated.聽

In a New Year鈥檚 Day speech on his first day in office, he conceded, 鈥淭he crisis tells us that it is in charge.鈥 But, the mayor defiantly vowed, 鈥渨e will not be controlled by crisis.鈥

Spoken with the enthusiasm of a newcomer who brings fresh, inspired thinking. And that鈥檚 something all of us can contribute in the year ahead.


A 海角大神 Science Perspective

About this feature

Each weekday, the Monitor includes one clearly labeled religious article offering spiritual insight on contemporary issues, including the news. The publication 鈥 in its various forms 鈥 is produced for anyone who cares about the progress of the human endeavor around the world and seeks news reported with compassion, intelligence, and an essentially constructive lens. For many, that caring has religious roots. For many, it does not. The Monitor has always embraced both audiences. The Monitor is owned by a church 鈥 The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston 鈥 whose founder was concerned with both the state of the world and the quality of available news.

At the turn of the year (and any time of year), how can we nurture a spirit of freshness and renewal in our lives? Receptivity to healing, rejuvenating divine inspiration, is a powerful place to start.


A message of love

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Koi swim in a pond at the Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Garden, on Dec. 30, 2021, in Dallas.

A look ahead

Thank you for starting your week, and your new year, with us. Come back tomorrow.聽We鈥檙e working on a story about ongoing Pentagon efforts, both public and quiet, to tamp down on extremism in the U.S. military ranks.

We hope you enjoyed last week鈥檚 audio offerings 鈥 writers and editors discussing their work 鈥 as well as our photo department鈥檚 year-ending video and a special holiday animation. To find them all in one place, you can go to our Meet the Monitor page.

More issues

2022
January
03
Monday

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