Keep hope alive Without possessing the insight to foresee the future and its eventual outcome, we tend to conjure up a solution that we believe will better suit our expected outcome. We rely on the intangible idea of hoping, because ingrained in us, it is spontaneous and seems to be the best course of action that hopefully will fulfill our selfish and wanton desires. Hope is a feeling of optimism consumed by anticipation and held together with a strong belief with the expectation that something pertaining to your desired outcome will happen. Good or bad, hope has a distinctive and personal meaning to each of us. Hope instills confidence and the likelihood that can provide an unwavering amount of strength that forms an unswerving will toward accomplishing an objective or goal. Moreover, hope removes doubts and provides a gleamer of restitution that is befitting of our given problematic situation. Hope is not solely reserved for certain people but is boundless in nature and available to all that has the need and wanton desire for something unique to them. For so many of us, God is the beacon of hope, while others may rely on another unknown and unseen force to bequeath upon them a favorable outcome. Regardless of our disposition, we still hope. When consumed with despair or sicken with an illness, there is a tendency to hope for the best. Hope is neither a faith nor is it a religion, but a mere internal belief based on a moment of need toward satisfying an immediate and urgent situation. On the other hand, believing and asking God to intercede, can be describe as your faith and a testimony in and to God, and of course, a better and healthier path toward achieving a resolution. It is evident that the spirit and mindset of having hope are immensely powerful with the effects of securing a hopeful reconciliation. Although hope is not entirely a definition for faith, it has the effect of sustaining a belief that a resolution is forthcoming.