
Not everything can be awful, right? Not everything can be the worst. Anyway, I have just decided that I refuse to let everything be the worst and to succumb to the idea that no, it is, in fact, the worst. I feel a bit guilty about trying to grasp joy, but what choice does any of us have?
The baby fawns are back on the mountain where I live. I was driving downhill last week and two of them, and their mom, jumped into the road in front of my car. I stopped in plenty of time and watched them frantically scramble across to the other side. The deer must have been twins, because there was only one doe, and they sure were tiny. They were afraid, and small, and they wobbled as they tried to stay close to their mother while I rolled down the window to take photos. I was so happy to see them. I view them as a good omen. Spotted fawns are symbols of life and safety, and a wild representation of my younger daughter’s birthday this month.
Then I immediately felt bad about this flash of joy. There is so much wrong. Yes it is sunny today, and yes new deer were born, but the country is in decline and the world is falling apart, and what am I supposed to do, be happy about deer? For real? How can I hold this small joy in the same heart as the one breaking over the end of the world as I have always known it? Isn’t it ridiculous to worry about trying to hold both these truths? Moreover, is that something that I now need to also worry about, until there is recursive worry about anxiety over the wrong things outweighing the deserved anxiety about the Big Things? An oroborous of anxiety and doubt that eats itself?
There is much to be said about the juxtaposition of good and bad, joy and sorrow, throughout Christian tradition, and Buddhist tradition, and neuroscience too.
Joy is not the same thing as happiness. The latter is more transient, and the former is a state of being. Joy, in the Christian tradition I am familiar with, is a gift we have been given, as well as something that resides in us all. It is supposed to be something we can center and hold even in the worst times. At the Passover dinner before he was crucified, Jesus talked about joy: “I have told you this so that my joy may be in you and your joy may be complete. This is my commandment: love one another as I love you.” The word “joy” appears frequently throughout scripture in both the Hebrew and Christian books. Like hope, joy is a gift as well as a responsibility.

In Buddhism, joy is a practice. You might hear the concept “life is suffering” attributed to Buddha or at least Buddhism, though this is not a real quote, merely an oversimplification of the idea that existence involves suffering. In my limited experience, citing the equally important Buddhist principle of shared, sympathetic joy is a lot less common, especially online. It is called mudita, and it describes the pleasure of delighting in someone else’s delight. This feeling is something you can cultivate, and if you are like me, you probably have to work on it through something like meditation, because it is not always easy to attain. It takes work to find joy, and you should do the work, in other words. It is a gift, as well as a responsibility.
The third and probably best version of this juxtaposition comes from the place I get many good, lasting ideas: Daniel Tiger. “Sometimes / you feel two feelings at the same time / and that’s OK,” Daniel’s mom sings to him. This jingle, which is permanently part of my parental repertoire, comes after Daniel is disappointed he couldn’t take his preferred conveyance, Trolley, to a friend’s house. He was happy he still got to play, but he was also sad that it didn’t unfold exactly how he wanted, because this is how four-year-olds think sometimes.
Four-year-olds (like mine) are surprisingly capable of naming and feeling mixed emotions. I was curious, so I read some psychology literature. A 2015 study showed that children as young as 3 years old are able to recognize mixed feelings, showing that mixed-emotion understanding arises earlier than people thought.
I also learned that the brain regions that carry out mixed feelings are those usually involved with advanced functions. The anterior cingulate and ventromedial prefrontal cortex apparently activate in people watching a bittersweet film, in a more recent study. We are literally built to feel more than one feeling at the same time. So it is OK — advanced, even — to be both happy and sad.
It helped a bit to know there are physical and metaphysical ways to understand what I am dealing with here.
I am trying to hold on to joy, despite the burning sensation of anger and doubt that rises like bile when I read the news, my chosen profession. Innocent children in a giant Texas jail are expected to eat maggot-infested food, Russia keeps bombing Ukraine, Jannik Sinner lost shockingly early because it was dangerously hot at Roland Garros, the bark beetles are infesting Ponderosa pines, my mom is still gone.
And yet. Courts have held back or even remedied some of the offenses. At least one congressman is trying to shut down the concentration camp in Texas. Serena Williams is back. The trees in my woods are healthy. My almost-5-year-old is learning how to read. The forest is full of bears and wildflowers, and the baby deer have arrived. There is joy here, too.
At the very least, I am trying to cultivate a feeling of OKness about cultivating joy. Can I be happy, though I do not feel like it is ok to do so? As a wise friend put it to me recently, I prayed not to be healed, but to want to be healed.
Life in 2026 is A lot of this is bad, but not everything is bad, and I am allowed to seek and find the good. The baby deer are good.
Sometimes, you feel two feelings at the same time. And that’s OK.









