From the Heart of the Center: Feeling Hopeless? Let’s Talk About It

awareness_admin • April 21, 2025

The dictionary defines “hopeless” as “having no expectation of good or success,” but if you’re feeling hopeless, it can be hard to define and even harder to overcome. You should know that your feelings are valid. Life throws us many challenges, and it’s normal to feel down sometimes. We’ve been there, too, which is why we wrote this article.

Reasons Why You Might Feel Hopeless—and How to Cope

Abuse

There are many kinds of abuse, including physical, psychological, and emotional. If you or someone you know is being abused, you know just how debilitating it can be. Those experiencing abuse may have feelings of shame, guilt, powerlessness, and yes, hopelessness.

Ways to Cope

  • Create a safety plan: A safety plan is a personalized guide to help you manage difficult situations and keep yourself safe. There are wonderful free tools online like the plan-maker from the National Domestic Violence Hotline. Before you use online tools like this, make sure you are accessing the internet from a device that is not being monitored by your abuser. This safety plan will help you determine people you can rely on for support (more on that below), safe places you can go in times of crisis, and a list of items you need to bring when leaving home.
  • Safely reach out for help: Create a list (either on paper or in your head) of people you can text or call when you need support. Set up a “code” word or phrase you can say to those people so that they know you need help, even if an abuser is listening.

Addiction

More than 20 million people in the United States have a substance use disorder. But there are other kinds of addiction, like gambling. Being dependent on addictive substances and activities can make you feel out of control and hopeless.

Ways to Cope

  • Find a healthy replacement for addiction: Find an activity to help manage cravings and triggers, like exercise, meditation, spirituality, art, music, or volunteering
  • Communicate: Talk to friends and family, find a therapist, or join a support group

Anxiety

Whether you’re experiencing short-term anxiety over a certain situation or coping with regular anxious feelings as part of an anxiety disorder, you might have overwhelming feelings of impending panic, danger, or doom.

Ways to Cope

  • Avoid alcohol and recreational drugs
  • Eat lots of good things like veggies, fruit, whole grains, and fish
  • Practice mindfulness
  • Stay active
  • Make sleep a priority
  • Use stress management and relaxation techniques
  • Journal about your feelings

Bonus: A Quick Mindfulness Exercise for When You’re Feeling Anxious

The next time feelings of anxiety or hopelessness are weighing you down, find a quiet space and follow this exercise. Look around and notice:

  • 5 things you can see (like the sky or your hands)
  • 4 things you can physically feel (like your feet on the ground)
  • 3 things you can hear (like the wind)
  • 2 things you can smell (like coffee or your perfume)
  • 1 thing you can taste (like a mint or fresh air)

Breakups

Breaking up with a partner is hard. It is the end of your romantic future with them, and you might feel like you’ll be alone forever. But you won’t be. And there are tons of ways to overcome tough feelings after a breakup.

Ways to Cope

  • Let yourself feel your feelings; don’t ignore them
  • Reach out to friends and family
  • Do something calming every day
  • Try new things, like finding a new favorite restaurant or hobby

Bullying

Being bullied sucks—the person who wrote this article knows firsthand. It’s unfortunately very common, with one in five students reporting they’ve been bullied at some point. Bullying doesn’t just happen in person anymore, either. Lots of kids and teens experience bullying online.

Ways to Cope

  • If bullying is happening at school: Tell a trusted adult, like a parent or caregiver, teacher, school counselor, coach, or principal
  • If bullying is happening online: Block the person or people who are being bullies

You can also contact the website or social media platform where the bullying is happening. Most social media apps like Instagram and Snapchat allow you to report bullying.

Grief

Grief usually means something was lost, like someone or something you love. That sadness, fear, and anger can make it hard to see a positive future for yourself.

Ways to Cope

  • In the short term:
    • Stay hydrated
    • Avoid using alcohol and recreational drugs
    • Sleep as much as you can
    • Remember to eat
    • Do light exercise
  • In the long term
    • Be compassionate to others
    • Be gentle with yourself
    • Tell others how you feel
    • Acknowledge your new reality
    • Reflect on good memories
    • Try to stay open to new things

Illness and pain

Illness and pain are terrible things to deal with in the present, but they can also make you feel worried and hopeless about the future. You might wonder if this will be the new normal.

Ways to Cope

  • Work with a trusted healthcare provider on pain management
  • Practice breathing exercises
  • Explore alternative therapies like massage
  • Lightly exercise
  • Talk to others about how you feel
  • Let yourself rest when you need to

Loneliness

Humans are social beings, and feelings of loneliness and isolation can take a toll on your self-esteem and make you feel like the future will be more of the same.

Ways to Cope

  • Try to feel comfortable in your own company
  • Practice self-care
  • Start small—say hi to someone you see in your day-to-day life
  • Open up to people you know

Money

Whether you are dealing with unemployment or otherwise having trouble paying the bills, financial challenges can be a major source of stress and hopelessness.

Ways to Cope

  • If you’ve lost a job: Create a checklist and take action, including filing for unemployment
  • Get help: There are many government programs that can help with food, bills, housing, and more
  • Understand and plan for big financial goals: Explore these helpful guides

Stress

Stress feels different for everyone, but often, it can feel like everything is out of your control. For instance, it can feel like you have too many things on your list and not enough time to get them done. You could also feel stressed from any of the situations we’ve already talked about in this article.

Ways to Cope

  • Take breaks from news and social media
  • Spend time outdoors
  • Find relaxing activities that you enjoy
  • Get enough sleep
  • Go for walks
  • Limit alcohol intake
  • Avoid smoking, vaping, and the use of other tobacco products

Reach Out for Help—We’re Here for You

We’ve said it before, and we’ll say it again: you are not alone.

If you need help overcoming thoughts of hopelessness or just need a little support, text HOPELINE™ to 741741. The first two texts you’ll receive in reply will be automated, but then you will be connected with a Crisis Counselor who will ask questions and, of course, listen.

By awareness_admin May 28, 2025
From The Center for Suicide Awareness
By awareness_admin May 27, 2025
Healthline
By awareness_admin May 9, 2025
By Renee Kasuboski For some, I might come off as too honest or too raw—but that honesty has been the bridge between my pain and someone else’s healing. I don’t share for attention. I share because I know the cost of silence, and I want others to know they are not alone. I spent 14 years in a marriage with a narcissistic sociopath. The last five years of it, I was slipping deeper into a dark mental space—a void so deep it blocked out all emotion, all reason, and all connection to reality. It was as if my soul had been paralyzed. In those moments, nothing mattered—not my kids, not my family, not even my own life. That terrifying void convinced me that I didn’t want to be here anymore. And yet… something in me kept fighting. Sometimes it was the fear of what would happen if I failed. Sometimes it was a voice in my head from long ago, yelling, “Don’t you DARE give up. Don’t you DARE quit on me.” That voice helped me claw my way up, covered in emotional mud, exhausted and broken—but still climbing. There were nights I drove home from work on quiet country roads, death whispering in every thought. I felt numb. I remember considering just letting go of the wheel and ending it. I tried to pray it away. Tried to logic it away. Nothing worked. When I told my then-husband—who was a preacher—what I was going through, his response was: “Stop being stupid.” After that, he banned me from church, from seeing friends, and nearly from going to work. He’d switch off the radio if I found a preacher that gave me hope and put on someone who screamed about obedience and hell. Or having the children gather around the table with everyone's Bible open, he read the passage about Judas betraying Jesus and then went around the table and told the children to 1 by 1 "tell mom what you don't like about her". I remember one day, after being screamed at, we went to the YMCA with our six kids. He wanted a happy family moment. I sat on the edge of the pool—frozen. I wasn’t there. Almost catatonic. I couldn’t smile. I couldn’t pretend. I started off in the distance looking at nothing at all. He yelled at me again for not being happy and supporting him and the children. I walked in the door the days I worked, wondering what I could have possibly done wrong today. After I finally left him, I’d come home from work and lie in the dark, my dog Sam laying on top of me, trying to keep me grounded. I’d be frozen again—mute, paralyzed, unable to move or even hum. Other nights were tears and feeling completely empty, even eating or having an appetite was a challenge. Yes, I’ve been there. I understand why people end their lives. I understand the daily war. I carry horrific memories—including rape—that still echo sometimes and plagues my thoughts. It’s been 11 years since I left. And yes, he still tries to mess with my head. But here’s what else is true: I am nowhere near the person I used to be. Do I still have moments of struggle? Absolutely. But I have more wins now. More joy. More days where I feel whole. Every year brings more healing. Every day is another shot at life, another shot to break out of the shell. I’m here today because every attempt—by him or by me—failed. And I’m grateful. I don't feel sorry for myself, I think of it as an opportunity to help others in the same situation and try to give them skills to dig out of their holes of despair. If you're reading this and you're in that dark place, please hear me: you are not alone. You are not broken. You are not beyond hope. There is another side to this pain, and it is worth fighting for. And if you're still climbing—I’m here. I see you. I believe in you. Please don’t give up. Text the HOPELINE™ at 741741 if you're struggling and need someone to chat with. Sometimes it's easier to text vs talk.
By awareness_admin May 2, 2025
Mental Health America
By awareness_admin April 21, 2025
If you or someone you know is in immediate danger, please call 911.
By awareness_admin June 30, 2022
We know the hazards of spending too much time in the sun—like skin cancer, sunburns, and premature aging—there are also many benefits of sun exposure. From bone and immune health to depression and schizophrenia. The sun offers powerful restorative, protective, and healing effects. Those warm, yellow rays help the body make vitamin D, an essential nutrient the body needs to function properly, and the body can't absorb or process calcium without it. Vitamin D is essential for bone, heart, lung, dental, immune, nerve, and muscular health, as well as for optimal mental health. Deficiencies in vitamin D (and calcium) can cause serious conditions. Also, those with lower levels of vitamin D may be at higher risk of a range of diseases such as cancer, diabetes, high blood pressure, schizophrenia, and depression. Strong connections have been found between deficiencies in vitamin D and the risk of various mental health disorders including, depression, schizophrenia, and eating disorders. If you are heading out into the sun, make sure you protect yourself with sunscreen as many medications may cause you photosensitivity. Wear protective clothing also like a hat if you have it available.
By awareness_admin June 27, 2022
We ask ourselves questions with no answer in sight But if you just keep going forward then you might Find the solution to the problem at hand Find a person to understand The pain you may feel as you are not alone Sometimes we wish we could pick up the phone Call a person who support we could apply In our lives so we no longer cry The answer to the problem could be closer than you know There is often peer support anywhere you go They may not have a degree or a name tag on their shirt But it does not take education to know what it means to hurt So keep your eyes wide open and change will arrive It will help you remember why it is good to be alive! Written by: Jonathan Winfield Dedicated to: People in a pain. Despite the upbeat message I might express in this I feel quite down in my life probably more times than I feel up. Even with that said I know it is not a lifelong feeling and I WILL find what it means to be happy and in content with ones self. Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, however it will always be worth living just to see that day! To all those depressed like myself, STAY STRONG!
By awareness_admin June 24, 2022
To help one another not feel blue Some people just need to chat Others are not okay with that Although it's the last thing you should do Some remain quiet and always feel blue Because in their mind they just cannot believe They can find help so instead they grieve They just go on day after day Suffering in every possible way What they don't realize we all need aid And the stand in the background with progress delayed They just have lived in constant fear That nobody else could possibly care They are lost in this cycle of constant doubt And they lose sight of what life is really about So help one another feel they are needed When they feel better you know you've succeeded To make it so that a person can feel That it's actually possible for them to heal They can heal and clear their mind To leave all grief and pain behind Written by: Jonathan Winfield
By awareness_admin June 24, 2022
Better Sleep Can Help! Why is it important to practice good sleep hygiene? Sleep hygiene is important for everyone, from childhood through adulthood. A good sleep hygiene routine promotes healthy sleep and daytime alertness. Good sleep hygiene practices can prevent the development of sleep problems and disorders. Personal Sleep Hygiene: Avoid stimulants, especially caffeine, at least 6 hours before sleep Do not exercise 3 hours before sleep Avoid eating large meal before sleep Set a regular routine before going to bed. Avoid sleeping during daytime. Take analgesics (Tylenol) if pain is a problem. Do not watch TV late into the night. Arguments/Fights before sleep will interfere with your sleep. Use sleeping medications as prescribed. *These are personal habit to improve your chances of better sleep and may need to be combined with other measures*
By awareness_admin June 20, 2022
Show More