Opinion | Quiet courage of ordinary people can rebuild a world in crisis
It’s easy for us to feel powerless as deadly wars rage on, but the resilience of ordinary men and women gives us hope for the new year

My son, who is almost four, has recently become obsessed with the universe. He can recite the planets of the solar system and tell anyone who will listen that Pluto – his favourite – was once a planet but was reclassified as a “dwarf planet” in 2006.
“And we are the people on Earth,” he said one evening as we looked at a picture of the Milky Way. “So we are very small. We are like ants.” His logic was impeccable. His conclusion was unexpectedly philosophical.
Being a mother is a process of growing together with your children: discovering how their fresh eyes can become our own source of enlightenment. A simple idea from a child can unlock a perspective we, as adults, have forgotten.
My son’s intuition – that human beings are small and vulnerable – has never felt more painfully true than it does today.
As 2025 draws to a close, the global landscape is scarred by crises whose scale dwarfs individual lives. Armed conflicts, humanitarian catastrophes and geopolitical confrontation have all made individuals feel smaller than ever, as if ordinary people are merely specks, swept aside by the shifting plates of power.