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Borrowing Hope

A small, practical recipe for borrowing hope today.

By Milan MilicPublished about 5 hours ago 1 min read

Start with a cup you don’t love anymore

the chipped one, the mug that tastes faintly of pennies.

~

Rinse it. Not perfectly. Let a little cloud stay.

~

Open the window two inches, even if the street

It's doing its loud, greasy thing.

~

Put one small object on the table: a button,

a smooth stone, that ticket stub you keep forgetting.

~

Breathe like you’re cooling soup, slow, then slower

until your shoulders stop arguing.

~

Name what you want: hope. Say it quietly,

like you’re not sure you deserve the syllable.

~

Boil water. Watch the first impatient bubbles.

They rise, they break; they don’t apologize.

~

While you wait, text one person a plain truth:

“Today is weird. I’m here.” (Don’t add a joke. Or do.)

~

Pour the water. Listen. The kettle is hissing is a hymn

that forgot half its words.

~

If dread shows up—smooth suit, fake smile

Offer it a chair, but not your lap.

~

Take one bite of something bright: orange, mint,

a tomato still warm from somebody’s hand.

~

Go outside for exactly three minutes.

Notice a leaf doing its best impression of gold.

~

When the small lift arrives, don’t grab it hard.

Hold it like a moth: gentle, almost nothing.

~

And if it doesn’t arrive, well

Leave the window cracked anyway. Something might.

Free Versehow toinspirationalMental Health

About the Creator

Milan Milic

Hi, I’m Milan. I write about love, fear, money, and everything in between — wherever inspiration goes. My brain doesn’t stick to one genre.

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