Friday, June 19, 2026

Hope Is Not Wishful Thinking — It Is Defiant Clarity

 

— ✦ —

Hope has been misrepresented. In much popular usage it has been collapsed into wishful thinking — a kind of benign self-deception, a comfortable delusion that everything will automatically turn out fine if you simply believe it strongly enough, as though the universe is responsive to optimism as a policy. This version of hope is understandably dismissed by serious people. It has no particular argument with evidence and no mechanism for engagement with difficulty. It simply floats above reality and hopes for the best.
But genuine hope — the hope that actually changes things, that has motivated every significant human progress and every personal redemption — is something entirely different and considerably more demanding. It is the clear-eyed, evidence-acknowledging, difficulty-facing decision to believe that things can be better than they currently are, and to act accordingly. It does not ignore the present state. It insists, despite the present state, that the present state is not necessarily the permanent state. This is less a comfortable feeling than a muscular stance.
Consider the kind of hope required to plant seeds in November, when the ground is cold and the visible evidence offers nothing but dormancy and frost. There is no comfort in that planting. The gardener is not deluding themselves about the current conditions. They are acting in faith in a future that the present moment gives no direct evidence of — a future they will work toward, tend carefully, and wait for with a patience that the seed itself exemplifies. This is hope as practice, not hope as feeling.
The philosopher Gabriel Marcel distinguished between optimism and hope in a way that remains useful. Optimism, he suggested, is a disposition — a more or less sunny assessment of how things are likely to go, grounded in temperament more than evidence. Hope is something else: a relational orientation toward the future, one that involves genuine engagement, genuine investment, and the willingness to be disappointed because the alternative — to stop hoping — is a form of death to the spirit that matters more than any particular outcome.
In the context of personal life, hope is what applies for the position after three rejections because the fourth might be different. What loves again after heartbreak has taught everything it has to teach. What continues to practise the thing you love even when the evidence suggests you may never be as good as you want to be. Hope is not the absence of evidence against it. It is the insistence that evidence is not the whole story, and that human agency — your capacity to act, to choose, to try again — is also part of the equation.
In the context of the world, hope is one of the most quietly radical acts available to any of us. To look at the state of things as they are and to continue to believe in the possibility of things as they could be — and to act from that belief — is not naivety. It is the only orientation from which genuine change has ever come. Cynicism builds nothing. Despair changes nothing. Hope, embodied in action, has an extraordinary record.

Hope is not blind. It is the bravest kind of vision — seeing what could be, clearly enough to work toward it.



Note: The above image and article were generated using AI tools for your refreshing.




Click here for How to find hope - BBC Dars, BBC World Service.


Click here for 32 Year Old Lawn Mower Sang 'Over The Rainbow' And Changed His LIFE | The Voice.


Click here for Where to Find Hope When You Feel Empty | Joseph Prince Ministries.




Thank you for reading Daily Refreshing!🌱 


Saturday, June 13, 2026

You Can Be Golden (Work Hard and Don't Give Up!)


Image credits: Vanity Fair

 

EJAE's story is one of the most inspiring examples of how a dream can come true—but not always in the way we first imagine.

As a child, EJAE (Kim Eun-jae) loved music and dreamed of becoming a K-Pop idol. At just 11 years old, she entered the highly competitive trainee system at SM Entertainment, one of the biggest K-Pop agencies in the world. For years she trained tirelessly—singing, dancing, performing, and sacrificing much of a normal childhood in pursuit of her goal.

Yet despite spending roughly a decade as a trainee, she never debuted.

The verdict was painful. She was told, directly or indirectly, that she did not fit the idol mold the company was seeking. Eventually, her trainee journey ended without the debut she had worked toward for so many years. For a young woman who had devoted her life to one dream, it felt devastating.

Many people would have concluded that they had failed.

EJAE chose a different path.

After leaving the trainee system, she attended the New York University Tisch School of the Arts and began exploring music from a completely different angle. She discovered the underground music scene, learned to produce beats, and started writing melodies and lyrics. What began as a way to heal from disappointment slowly became a new calling. Songwriting became her therapy.

Then something remarkable happened.

Her first songwriting opportunities led to bigger ones. Producers noticed her talent. Artists began recording her songs. Before long, she was writing for some of the biggest names in K-Pop, including groups such as TWICE and Red Velvet. The girl who had been told she was not the right fit to stand at center stage was now helping create the music that millions of fans were singing around the world.

Yet an even greater surprise awaited her.

Years later, while working on the animated phenomenon K-Pop Demon Hunters, EJAE co-wrote the song Golden. The song's themes of pain, perseverance, self-acceptance, and finally stepping into one's light mirrored her own life journey. She also became the singing voice of the film's heroine, Rumi.

In a beautiful twist of fate, the songwriter who had abandoned her dream of becoming a singer eventually found herself singing before the world.

Even more moving, EJAE revealed that she had not truly thought of herself as a singer anymore. Through writing and recording Golden, she rediscovered her own voice and vocal abilities.

The song became a global sensation. It won major awards, topped charts, earned Grammy and Oscar recognition, and transformed EJAE from a respected songwriter into a celebrated singer-songwriter in her own right.

At one awards ceremony, she reflected on her journey with words that have inspired countless people:

"I worked tirelessly for 10 years to become a K-pop idol, and I was rejected and disappointed that my voice isn't good enough... So now I'm here as a singer and a songwriter."

She summarized her life lesson in a simple phrase:

"Rejection is redirection."

That may be the most powerful takeaway from EJAE's story.

The dream she lost was not the end of her journey. It was the beginning of a larger one.

She wanted to sing on stage.

Instead, she learned to write songs.

Those songs opened doors she never imagined.

Those doors eventually led her back to singing.

And when she finally arrived, she was not merely another idol in a crowded industry. She had become a songwriter, producer, artist, and storyteller whose music touched millions of people.

EJAE's life reminds us that sometimes the road to our destination is not a straight line. A closed door does not always mean "no." Sometimes it means, "Not this way."

The seed did not become the tree it first imagined.

It became something even greater. 🌱✨

Note: The above article was generated using ChatGPT.

Click here for EJAE: How a Rejected K-Pop Trainee Made Music History.

Click here for How EJAE went from a K-pop trainee to topping charts with 'Golden' | GMA.

Click here for How EJAE and Mark Sonnenblick Created Oscar-Winning Song "Golden" | Vanity Fair.

Click here for How EJAE and Maggie Kang made HISTORY!


For further inspiration, here are some 'Golden' moments:

Click here for Golden (K-Pop Demon Hunters) - Brooklyn Duo.

Click here for GOLDEN – K-Pop Demon Hunters | Emotional Cover by Emma Heesters (Huntr/X, Ejae, Audrey Nuna).

Click here for Golden (Netflix K-Pop Demon Hunters) | One Voice Children’s Choir (Official Music Video).

Click here for No One Expected This Flashmob in Vietnam… (Golden - Kpop Demon Hunters).

Click here for HISTORIC VICTORY! GOLDEN TEMPO wins the 2026 Kentucky Derby! 🏆

Click here for Golden Tempo: From Last to First |The Story Behind a Historic Kentucky Derby Win.


Thank you for reading Daily Refreshing! 🌱

Friday, June 12, 2026

Snippets from Singapore and Around the World (13 June 2026)

Even though beet roots are not grown in Singapore, some of the finest in the world (ready to eat with love at first bite) are available from the local supermarkets as per the following sample:

Love Beets

Maison Allaire


Click here for Nutrition and Health Benefits of Beets.

Note: Usual advisory to eat all food in moderation applies as with follow your doctor's advice if you have a health condition.


For your refreshing, here are some internet postings from Singapore and around the world.

Click here for Why some Singaporeans are saying no to having children | Deep Dive.

Click here for He Left The Gaming Industry To Save His Family’s Failing Hawker Stall | On The Red Dot.

Click here for We Tried Four Forgotten Foods In Singapore | Singapore Hour.

Click here for We Tried Singapore’s Legendary Chili Crab | Street Eats | Bon Appétit.

Click here for The Yale Scientist Proving Music Heals the Brain (The Future of Medicine) | Dr. Mei Rui.

Click here for Stepping into the World of Aladdin: A Magical 8-Day Silk Road Journey ✨ | Uzbekistan.

Click here for I Visited Malaysia’s Forgotten Boomtown | Ipoh 🇲🇾.

Click here for Living in Switzerland: The Country That Feels Too Good to Be Real | 4K Documentary.

Click here for Inside London's Billionaire Food Scene - World's Most Expensive Tastes.

Click here for Come to Chelsea Flower Show 2026 with Me 🌷 Our favourite gardens, tips & interviews with designers

Click here for LONDON FOR BOOK LOVERS: Secret Bookshops, Quiet Cafés & Cultural Gems.

Click here for The Japanese Brand Currently Making the Most Elegant Watches in the World.

Click here for 13 LAKE COMO VILLAS You Were Never Meant To See.

Click here for BELLAGIO LAKE COMO 🇮🇹 The Pearl of Italy and Most Beautiful Village on Earth.

Click here for 8 Luxury Bags You SHOULD Buy Under $300 (No-Brainers!).

Click here for How “Emotional Value” Is Changing How People Spend In China | CNA Correspondent.


Thank you for reading Daily Refreshing! 🌱 

The Oak Tree Was Once a Seed That Did Not Rush

 

— ✦ —

We live in an age that has elevated speed to near-sacred status. Faster results, instant answers, next-day delivery, overnight success. The friction of waiting has been so systematically engineered out of daily life that we have, almost without noticing, recalibrated our expectations about how long things should take. And when reality — which is not particularly interested in our recalibrated expectations — delivers at its own pace, which is often significantly slower than we believe we can tolerate, the experience registers as failure rather than simply as time.

But the most enduring things in the world were not built quickly. The oldest tree in the world is thought to be approximately five thousand years old. It did not rush. It did not have a growth target or a quarterly review. It simply did, with extraordinary consistency, the thing it was designed to do — draw nutrients from the earth, reach toward the light, grow its rings one per year, imperceptibly but without ceasing. Over five thousand years, the result is something that has outlasted empires.

Patience is frequently misunderstood as passive — as waiting with folded hands for something to happen. But genuine patience is active. It is the disciplined, daily practice of doing the work before the results are visible. It is the writer sitting down to write on the days when nothing is coming. The parent tending to a child's development across the years when individual progress is almost impossible to detect. The scientist repeating the experiment for the hundredth time with the same careful attention as the first. Patience is the willingness to continue investing without being able to see the return yet — which is, when you think about it, what most worthwhile endeavours require for most of their duration.

There is a Japanese concept, ikigai, that touches on this: the idea that a life of deep meaning is lived at the intersection of what you love, what you are good at, what the world needs, and what you can be sustained by — and that this intersection is not discovered quickly, but built over years of paying honest attention to all four dimensions simultaneously. The people who have found their ikigai did not find it in an afternoon of reflection. They found it through the accumulated wisdom of years spent in patient, curious engagement with their own lives and with the world.

Patience also has a profound social dimension that is easy to overlook. The people who have most influenced your life — the teachers, mentors, friends, or family members who stuck with you through the long, unspectacular middle of your development — were practising patience as a form of love. They believed in a version of you that was not yet visible. They continued to invest when the returns were not obvious. Their patience was the very condition under which you became who you are.

What are you tending to right now that requires you to be patient? What seed have you planted that you keep digging up to check on? What work are you doing that will not show its results for months or years, and that the impatient part of you wants to abandon because the wait is uncomfortable? Let the oak tree remind you: slow is not the same as stalled. Invisible is not the same as not happening.

Slow is not the same as still. Patience is motion at the pace that something beautiful requires.




Thank you for reading Daily Refreshing!🌱


Note: The above image and article were generated using AI tools.


Saturday, June 6, 2026

Snippets from Singapore and around the World (7 June 2026)

If you wanna get up close to durian trees in Singapore, you could catch some at Lorong Lew Lian. 

"Lorong" in Malay refers to alley or lane while "Lew Lian" in the Hokkien dialect translates to durian.






For your refreshing, here are some internet postings from Singapore and around the world.

Click
here for How a boy and his eagle in Mongolia helped a grieving Singaporean son to let go – and create the book he needed.

Click here for We Tried Singapore's Only Michelin Star Street Food | Street Eats | Bon Appétit.

Click here for Can Gen Z Ideas Save My Struggling 30-Year-Old Light Shop? | On The Red Dot.

Click here for Going Viral Didn't Save Our Restaurant: Can My 18-Year-Old Manager Do It? | On The Red Dot.

Click here for The Day I Found Out She Wasn't My Birth Mum | Can Ask Meh?

Click here for From Abandoned Baby to Olympic Champion: Maggie Mac Neil's 20-Year Journey of Overcoming Adversity.

Click here for I Visited Paris's Oldest Pastry Shops 🇫🇷 (One Is Nearly 300 Years Old).

Click here for Our tiny apartment in Paris home tour.

Click here for BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA (2025) | 10 Awesome Things To Do In & Around Buenos Aires (+ Travel Tips).

Click here for Entering Argentina 🇦🇷 Some Things Are REALLY Strange Here (Northern Argentina Part 1).

Click here for Now you can hire people to carry your shopping bags in Delhi - will it work?

Click here for Wild Parrot Joins Man For Breakfast Every Day | Cuddle Buddies.

Click here for This 57 Year Old Chinese Billionaire's Advice Will Blow Your Mind...

Click here for Thai-American Billionaire on a New World Order, AI, and America’s Future.

Click here for How One of NYC’s Fastest-Growing Startups Scaled to $5 Billion.    


Thank you for reading Daily Refreshing! 🌱

                                   

The Moonlight Through My Window

Moonlight has a way of entering a room without asking permission. It does not knock, does not announce itself, does not demand attention. It simply arrives—soft as a remembered melody—and settles quietly upon the floor, the desk, the sleeping books, and the waiting heart.
 

The Moonlight Through My Window

Tonight the moonlight
slips through my window
like a silver river
that has forgotten how to hurry.

It pours itself across the room,
over the quiet chair,
the patient curtains,
the scattered thoughts of the day,
and everything it touches
seems willing to rest.

No trumpet sounds its arrival.
No applause follows its path.
Yet somehow the night
feels fuller because of it.

The moon asks for nothing.
It shines upon rooftops and oceans,
upon palaces and humble rooms,
upon the lonely and the beloved alike,
holding none above another,
forgetting none.

I sit beneath its gentle gaze
and feel the vast sky breathing.

Far beyond my window,
beyond the sleeping city,
beyond mountains, deserts, and seas,
the same moonlight
is touching another window,
another dreamer,
another soul looking upward
and wondering.

What a beautiful thing,
to belong to a universe
so immense
yet stitched together
by simple wonders.

The stars burn their ancient fires.
The planets wander their invisible roads.
Galaxies drift like lanterns
upon an endless sea of darkness.

And here I am,
a small heartbeat
on a small world,
wrapped in a blanket of moonlight,
connected to it all.

The night does not make me feel small.
It makes me feel included.

As though the universe,
in all its immeasurable grandeur,
has bent close enough
to leave a pale ribbon of light
upon my windowsill,
whispering:

"You are part of this.
You have always been part of this."

So I let the worries of the day
unclench their fists.
I let unfinished plans
rest until morning.
I let regrets drift away
like clouds crossing the moon.

And in their place
comes a quiet certainty:

That life need not always roar
to be meaningful.

Sometimes it is enough
to sit in the company of moonlight,
to listen to the silence between moments,
to feel wonder returning
to its rightful home within the heart.

The silver light remains,
warm in its own mysterious way,
cool upon the skin
yet kind to the spirit.

And beneath its calm radiance,
dreams gather courage.

Tomorrow's hopes
stretch their wings.

The soul remembers
its forgotten horizons.

Outside, the moon continues its journey.

Inside, peace quietly blooms.

And for one timeless moment,
the window becomes a bridge
between the heart
and the infinite.

May this moonlit hour leave you with a sense of stillness—the kind that does not empty the heart, but fills it with wonder. 🌙✨

To accompany your contemplation, please lend your ears to the following selection of music.

Click here for Alicia Keys performing Beethoven's "Moonlight Sonata" in honor of Kobe Bryant.

Click here for Norah Jones Is Playing Along with Lang Lang (Podcast Season 2 Episode 34).


Thank you for reading Daily Refreshing! 🌱

Note: The above image and poem were generated using ChatGPT.


What It Means to Be Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence

As machines become more capable, the most important question is no longer what AI can do. It is what human beings should become.


The Ancient Question Returns

For thousands of years, humanity has asked the same enduring question: What does it mean to be human?

Philosophers debated it in Athens. Poets explored it through verse. Religious traditions contemplated it through prayer and reflection. Scientists investigated it through biology and psychology.

Today, artificial intelligence has revived that ancient question with unexpected urgency.

Machines can now write essays, compose music, generate images, diagnose diseases, recommend investments, and converse with remarkable fluency. Tasks once considered uniquely human are increasingly shared with algorithms.

Yet as AI advances, a paradox emerges. The more capable our machines become, the more clearly we see what technology cannot replace.

AI can process information. Humans create meaning.

AI can optimize. Humans can care.

AI can predict. Humans can hope.

AI can simulate conversation. Humans can experience love, grief, wonder, courage, forgiveness, and moral responsibility.

The defining feature of humanity has never been our ability to calculate faster than machines. It is our ability to transform existence into significance.

Being human is not merely possessing intelligence. It is possessing consciousness, conscience, compassion, and character.

The Human Advantage

Throughout history, technological revolutions have repeatedly altered how people work.

The agricultural revolution reduced the need for hunters.

The industrial revolution transformed manual labor.

The digital revolution automated information processing.

AI may automate many forms of cognitive labor.

But humanity's deepest strengths remain profoundly difficult to mechanize.

The Capacity for Meaning

Humans do not simply ask, "How?" We ask, "Why?"

A machine can identify patterns in a million books.

A human being can read one sentence and have their life changed.

We seek purpose, belonging, identity, beauty, and transcendence. We tell stories because facts alone do not satisfy us. We search for significance because survival alone is insufficient.

Meaning is humanity's native language.

The Capacity for Moral Judgment

AI can identify options.

Humans must decide what is right.

A machine may optimize outcomes according to predefined objectives. Yet the questions that define civilization remain ethical rather than technical.

Should we do this?

Who benefits?

Who bears the cost?

What is just and equitable?

What is compassionate?

The future will require not merely smarter technology but wiser people.

The Capacity for Relationships

Human flourishing has always depended upon connection.

A friend who sits quietly beside us during loss.

A parent who sacrifices for a child.

A teacher who sees potential where others see failure.

A stranger who offers kindness at precisely the right moment.

Relationships are not transactions. They are encounters between conscious beings who recognize each other's dignity. No technological achievement can replace genuine human presence.

The Great Risk of the AI Age

The greatest danger posed by AI may not be that machines become more human. It may be that humans become more machine-like.

When efficiency becomes our highest value, we risk treating ourselves as productivity systems rather than living souls.

# We begin measuring our worth through output.

# We optimize every minute.

# We consume information without reflection.

# We communicate constantly yet connect rarely.

# We become increasingly informed but not necessarily wiser.

Technology excels at acceleration.

Humanity requires contemplation.

Civilizations thrive not only because they innovate but because they preserve the qualities that make innovation worth pursuing in the first place.

The challenge before us is not simply learning how to use AI.

It is learning how to remain human while using it.

Humane Self-Care in the Age of AI

Self-care is often misunderstood as indulgence or escape.

Its deeper purpose is stewardship.

To care for oneself is to protect the physical, emotional, intellectual, and spiritual capacities that enable a meaningful life.

Several practices are becoming increasingly important.

1. Protect Your Attention

Attention is the gateway through which life is experienced.

Algorithms compete relentlessly for it because attention is valuable.

Treat your attention as a precious resource rather than a public utility.

Schedule periods without notifications.

Read books that require sustained concentration.

Spend time in nature.

Allow your mind to wander without digital interruption.

A distracted life may be busy, but it is rarely profound.

2. Preserve Solitude

Human beings need moments when no one is performing, posting, reacting, or responding.

Solitude allows reflection.

Reflection produces insight.

Insight shapes character.

Many of history's greatest ideas emerged not from constant connectivity but from thoughtful withdrawal.

Silence is not emptiness. It is often where wisdom begins.

3. Strengthen Your Inner Life

Technology expands our external capabilities.

Human development requires strengthening our internal capacities as well.

Cultivate gratitude.

Practice reflection.

Keep a journal.

Pray if your tradition includes prayer.

Meditate if meditation resonates with you.

Engage regularly with literature, philosophy, art, and history.

A rich inner life provides stability amid rapid change.

4. Remember That Rest Is Productive

Machines operate continuously.

Human beings are not machines.

Creativity, resilience, empathy, and sound judgment all depend upon recovery.

Sleep well.

Take walks.

Spend unstructured time with people you love.

Protect moments of recreation and joy.

Rest is not the opposite of productivity. It is often the foundation of sustainable excellence.

Humane Interaction in an AI World

How we treat one another may become the defining ethical challenge of the coming decades.

The following principles can help preserve human dignity.

1. Prioritize Presence Over Performance

In many environments, people increasingly feel pressure to appear successful rather than to be authentic.

Choose genuine presence.

Listen without immediately preparing a response.

Maintain eye contact.

Give people your full attention.

Presence communicates value more powerfully than words.

2. Practice Deep Listening

Most people are not searching for perfect advice. They are searching for understanding.

Deep listening requires patience, curiosity, and humility.

Listen to understand rather than to win.

Listen to learn rather than to reply.

Being heard is one of the most healing experiences a person can receive.

3. Extend Grace

Digital communication often encourages rapid judgment.

Human beings are more complicated than their worst moments.

Extend grace when possible.

Assume good intentions before bad ones.

Allow room for mistakes, growth, and redemption.

A compassionate society is built through millions of small acts of mercy.

4. Protect Human Dignity

Never evaluate people solely according to their utility.

Every person possesses inherent worth independent of wealth, status, productivity, influence, or achievement.

The measure of a civilization is not how efficiently it processes information but how faithfully it honors human dignity.

Using AI Wisely

The ideal relationship with AI is neither fear nor worship. It is stewardship.

Use AI to eliminate drudgery.

Use AI to expand access to knowledge.

Use AI to accelerate learning.

Use AI to enhance creativity.

But never outsource entirely the activities that cultivate wisdom, empathy, judgment, and responsibility.

A calculator can assist arithmetic. It cannot teach integrity.

A language model can generate text. It cannot live a life.

Technology should remain a tool in service of humanity rather than humanity becoming a tool in service of technology.

The Future Belongs to the Deeply Human

The coming decades will undoubtedly produce astonishing technological achievements.

Yet the qualities that will matter most may be surprisingly ancient.

Kindness.

Wisdom.

Integrity.

Courage.

Humility.

Compassion.

Wonder.

These virtues have survived every revolution because they answer needs that no invention can eliminate.

In a world increasingly shaped by artificial intelligence, the future will not belong merely to those who understand machines. It will belong to those who understand people.

For all our flaws and limitations, human beings possess a remarkable capacity: we can transform knowledge into wisdom, power into service, suffering into compassion, and existence into meaning.

That is what it means to be human.

And that is why humanity remains irreplaceable.

In summary:

AI should amplify human flourishing, not replace the habits, relationships, virtues, and inner life that make flourishing possible. The more advanced our technologies become, the more valuable distinctly human qualities—wisdom, empathy, moral judgment, creativity, and love—will become.


Click here for FULL SPEECH: Pope Leo XIV Warns AI “Needs To Be Disarmed” In Explosive Vatican Speech | AK1B.


Thank you for reading Daily Refreshing! 🌱 

Note: The above image and article were generated using ChatGPT.