WIZER
đ¤ âThis just in⌠the future has not been canceled! In fact, it appears to be showing signs of emotional intelligence and heart.â
Good News for a Change
Letâs be honest for a moment.
If you scroll the news long enough, itâs easy to believe the world is unravelingâŚ
that kindness is fadingâŚ
that the next generation is overwhelmed, disconnected, or lost.
But today, I want to offer good news for a change.
Because something quietly beautiful is happening â
and itâs coming from the youngest among us.
đą The Kids Are Doing More Than Alright
Across the world, children and teens are not waiting for adulthood to start making a difference.
Theyâre already doing it.
In schools and communities, kids are forming peer-led support groups â safe spaces where they talk openly about anxiety, emotions, friendship struggles, and mental health without shame. These arenât therapy rooms or adult-directed programs. Theyâre youth-created circles rooted in listening, empathy, and shared humanity.
In many schools, teens are trained as peer mentors, learning how to notice strength instead of just symptoms â offering encouragement, connection, and hope before someone reaches a breaking point.
And on a global scale, young people are leading mental health initiatives through organizations like Born This Way Foundation, where youth-designed projects focus on emotional well-being, self-acceptance, and community care â not from theory, but from lived experience.
Theyâre not waiting to be âfixed.â
Theyâre creating their own healing ecosystems.
đ Kindness as a Way of Life (Not a Buzzword)
In classrooms around the world, children are learning emotional literacy as part of everyday life.
Programs like Jesse Lewis Choose Love Movement are teaching courage, compassion, gratitude, forgiveness, and love â not as abstract ideals, but as practical skills for navigating life.
Meanwhile, global youth movements like Kids for Peace are empowering kids to take kindness beyond the classroom â organizing community service, cross-cultural connections, and acts of peace that remind us how naturally unity arises when fear isnât the driving force.
Whatâs striking isnât just what these kids are doing â
itâs how theyâre doing it.
Not through dominance.
Not through outrage.
Not through fear.
But through:
listening
empathy
inclusion
honesty
heart
đ A Different Kind of Leadership
This generation is showing us a different model of leadership.
One that looks like:
checking in on a friend
creating emotional safety
talking openly about feelings
choosing kindness even when itâs uncomfortable
This isnât softness.
Itâs strength with a nervous system that feels safe enough to stay open.
And that matters â because openness is where healing, creativity, and connection live.
As Wizer so perfectly puts it:
âTurns out the kids skipped the memo about being âhardened by the worldââŚ
and went straight to being heartened FOR the world.â đŚđ
⨠Focus on the Light
So if youâve been feeling discouragedâŚ
or wondering whether things are truly getting betterâŚ
Let this be your reminder:
The future isnât broken.
Itâs becoming.
And in many ways, itâs already here â
learning emotional fluency, practicing compassion, and leading with heart.
Wizer:
âIf youâre worried about where the world is headedâŚ
maybe take a look at whoâs already lighting the way.â â¨
This Fridayâs Invitation
Today, instead of focusing on whatâs falling apart,
letâs focus on whatâs coming together.
Because when we choose to notice the light,
we strengthen it.
And sometimes, hope doesnât arrive with a headline.
Sometimes it shows up in sneakers, backpacks,
and young hearts that never agreed to shut down.
â¨đâ¨
đ 1. Youth Initiative Peer Support Groups
There are youth-driven peer support groups where young people create safe spaces to talk openly about challenges, share what theyâre going through, and work together to reduce mental health stigma. These are not adult-led classrooms, but youth-led support circles encouraging growth and connection. Kidsâ Minds Matter
⨠Focus on the Light Angle:
Young people are not waiting to be âfixedâ â theyâre creating their own healing communities where vulnerability is strength and shared experience builds courage.
đ 2. Youth-Led Global Mental Health Projects
Across the world, youth-led mental health initiatives are popping up through programs like Lady Gagaâs Born This Way Foundation â which funds and supports youth-centered mental health projects internationally. These programs include mental health education, peer support training, and outreach that come directly from young peopleâs lived experiences. World Economic Forum
⨠Focus on the Light Angle:
Young people are not just participating â theyâre leading solutions and shaping the future of mental wellness globally.
đ 3. âSources of Strengthâ Peer Mentorship Programs
Programs like Sources of Strength train teens to be peer mentors focused on positivity and upstream prevention â encouraging teens to notice whatâs good and strong in their lives rather than just reacting to crisis. These groups exist in schools, churches, and even detention centers. WPR
⨠Focus on the Light Angle:
Not waiting for crisis â young leaders are cultivating resilience, hope, and strength before trouble arrives.
đ 4. Choose Love & Character-Building Programs in Schools
Movement organizations like the Jesse Lewis Choose Love Movement are teaching emotional intelligence, compassion, and connection across schools in all 50 U.S. states and over 120 countries. These character and social-emotional programs help kids learn connection, courage, gratitude, forgiveness, and love. Wikipedia
⨠Focus on the Light Angle:
Kids today are learning emotional literacy in educational systems around the world â not because itâs trendy, but because itâs becoming essential.
đ 5. Global âKids for Peaceâ Chapters
Kids for Peace is a global, youth-driven nonprofit with chapters on six continents. They promote peace, kindness, and unity, organizing community service, cross-cultural partnerships, and direct acts of kindness like sending âPeace Packsâ to other kids worldwide. Kids for Peace Website
⨠Focus on the Light Angle:
Young people arenât just dreaming of peace â theyâre practicing it in action and community.
đ 6. Choose Kindness in Schools
Organizations like The Choose Kindness Project partner with nonprofits to help kids prevent bullying, promote inclusion, and support youth mental wellness â inspiring environments where every young person feels empowered to be themselves. The Choose Kindness Project
⨠Focus on the Light Angle:
Kindness isnât passive â itâs something we practice, teach, and design into the world weâre building for the next generation.
When we choose kindness for our children,
weâre choosing the kind of world we believe is possible.
This is an act of refusing to be hardened by the world,
and choosing instead to be heartened FOR the world.
âHeartened FOR the Worldâ
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Rays of Light is where inspiring stories, songs, thought-raising ideas, and the occasional wise llama, offer gentle reminders to help us raise the lightâwithin ourselves and in the world. ⨠PS I only send one email a week, a summary/links to all the Rays of Light Posts of the week - You choose which Light is calling youâŚ








