Hope isn’t just a feeling you get when things are going well. It is a mental and spiritual skill you can deliberately build long before life blindsides you. That is one of the biggest themes in Episode 132 of The Mental Mettle Podcast, “The Power of Hope with Derek Gordon,” and it has huge implications for athletes, coaches, parents, and anyone trying to stay resilient in a chaotic world.

What Is Hope, Really?

Most people use “hope” like a soft, vague word: “I hope this season goes well,” “I hope my health improves,” “I hope things get better.” But in this conversation, hope shows up as something much more concrete and muscular. Derek Gordon, a Ministry Coordinator at a men’s homeless shelter in Peoria, describes hope as the inner drive that keeps people walking through the shelter doors instead of giving up completely—even after addiction, prison, job loss, or devastating grief. That simple act of walking in and asking for help is evidence of a belief, however small, that life does not have to stay the way it is.

For Coach Matt Thomann, hope carried a similar weight during his own battles with cancer, stroke, and the long rehab that followed. Even when anxiety and fear were high, the combination of faith, family support, and small daily progress kept him from losing the conviction that a better future was still possible. In both cases, hope is not fantasy; it is the decision to move, ask for help, and take the next step when nothing is guaranteed.

From a mental toughness perspective, that kind of hope is critical. It fuels effort when results are unclear, lets athletes and leaders tolerate discomfort, and keeps people from interpreting every setback as a permanent verdict. Hope-oriented people still feel pain and disappointment, but they see themselves as active participants in their story, not passive victims of it.

Why Hope Is a Core Mental Toughness Skill

On the surface, Derek’s world at the shelter might look very different from the world of sports. But the underlying mental patterns are surprisingly similar. The men he serves are often overwhelmed by a long list of problems: no housing, no ID, no income, strained family ties, legal issues, addiction, untreated mental health conditions. When they focus on all of it at once, they freeze. When they narrow it down to one actionable step—get a Social Security card, make a phone call, attend a meeting—progress and hope both increase.

Athletes and coaches fall into the same trap. Instead of focusing on controllables, they obsess over rankings, politics, referees, and outcomes. Instead of stacking small wins, they stare at the entire mountain and decide it is too high. Hope, in this context, is the mental commitment to:

  • Believe that effort can make a difference, even if not immediately.
  • Break big problems into one or two winnable actions.
  • Interpret setbacks as data and direction, not destiny.

This is also where hope overlaps directly with grit, growth mindset, and resilience—terms teams love to put on locker room walls. Hope is the engine under all of them. Without it, “keep going” talk becomes empty noise. With it, challenges are still hard but no longer pointless.

How Gratitude and Perspective Feed Hope

One of the most compelling insights from Episode 132 is how tightly hope is tied to gratitude. Derek and Coach Matt talk about gratitude not as a cheesy feel‑good practice, but as a way of training the brain to notice what is still available when something important has been taken away. That shift in attention is crucial.

When people are in pain—whether it is a losing season, a career‑ending injury, or a total life collapse—the natural pull is toward threat scanning: what is wrong, who is to blame, how bad it might get. Neurologically, that bias toward negativity is part of how humans survive. But it makes thriving almost impossible. Gratitude interrupts that loop by forcing the mind to look for evidence of stability, support, and possibility.

At the shelter, that might be something as simple as:

  • “I have a safe bed tonight instead of the street.”
  • “Someone is willing to walk this process with me.”
  • “I still have the ability to work, think, and choose.”

For an athlete, it might be:

  • “I still have a body that can move and adapt, even if I’m hurt right now.”
  • “I have teammates, coaches, or family who care enough to challenge me.”
  • “I get another practice tomorrow to correct what went wrong today.”

Gratitude does not deny reality; it widens it. It creates enough emotional space to see options, which is exactly what hope needs in order to grow.

Building “Hope Skills” Before You Hit Rock Bottom

A crucial takeaway from Derek’s work is that waiting until life collapses to think about hope is like waiting until the fourth quarter to start conditioning. You can still make some progress, but everything is harder than it needs to be. The better approach is to treat hope like any other high‑performance skill and train it deliberately.

Here are several practical “hope reps” drawn from the themes of Episode 132:

  1. Shrink the problem.
    When you feel overwhelmed, write down everything you are worried about, then circle one thing you can act on in the next 24 hours. Do that, celebrate it, then pick the next one. Derek uses this approach with men who have 20 different crises hitting at once; the same method works for overloaded students, coaches, and parents.
  2. Stack small wins.
    Decide on one simple non‑negotiable you can complete daily even on bad days—making your bed, going for a 10‑minute walk, journaling three sentences, or doing a focused warm‑up. Each completed rep is proof to your nervous system that you still have agency.
  3. Practice honest gratitude.
    Once or twice a day, list three specific things you are grateful for—not vague “family, faith, food,” but concrete moments: a text from a friend, a body that let you train, a coach who challenged you. This is exactly the kind of perspective that keeps Derek’s guests (and Matt during his stroke recovery) from drowning in what they’ve lost.
  4. Tell the truth about your condition.
    Derek emphasizes real conversations with his guests, not sugar‑coating. Progress starts when someone is willing to say, “I’m depressed,” “I’m addicted,” or “I’m scared.” The same is true in athletics: ignoring burnout, anxiety, or identity issues does not make them disappear. Hope grows in environments where people can admit struggle without being dismissed or shamed.
  5. Borrow other people’s hope.
    At the shelter, some men keep going simply because Derek and his team refuse to give up on them. In sport and life, this looks like surrounding yourself with teammates, mentors, and coaches who can believe in your capacity for change when you temporarily can’t. Their steady belief gives you something to lean on until you rebuild your own.
  6. Anchor hope in something bigger than outcomes.
    Both Derek and Matt speak from a Christian framework, grounding their hope in God’s character and promises rather than performance, status, or comfort. Whatever your spiritual lens, the principle holds: if your hope is entirely attached to results—wins, scholarships, income, health—you will live on a mental roller coaster. If it’s rooted in deeper values and identity, you can absorb more hits without losing your sense of direction.

Why This Matters for Coaches, Leaders, and Parents

Episode 132 is not just an inspirational story; it’s a blueprint for how environments either choke or cultivate hope. Derek’s shelter is intentionally structured to be clean, orderly, and relational. There are clear expectations, but also clear messages of, “You are not alone; we will walk with you, but you must walk too”. That mix of support and accountability is exactly what high‑performing teams and families need.

For coaches and leaders, this raises hard but important questions:

  • Do your athletes or employees feel safe admitting when they are overwhelmed or sliding, or do they hide it until crisis hits?
  • Are your standards paired with practical pathways (small steps, resources, feedback), or do people hear, “Figure it out or you’re done”?
  • Do you celebrate incremental growth and resilience, or only visible achievements and outcomes?

Cultures that answer those questions well become breeding grounds for realistic, gritty hope. People learn that failure is data, not death; that community is a resource, not a threat; and that their current chapter does not have to be their permanent identity.

Putting “The Power of Hope” Into Your Life

You may never set foot in a homeless shelter or face the exact challenges Derek’s guests encounter. But the mental skills that pull those men forward—gratitude, honest self‑assessment, small wins, supportive relationships, and a bigger story to live into—are the same skills that will determine how you handle injuries, job loss, family stress, or quiet mid‑life dissatisfaction.

If there is one message to carry from Episode 132, it is this: hope is not reserved for the ultra‑positive or the ultra‑religious. It is available to anyone willing to practice seeing possibilities, acting on small steps, and staying connected to people and principles that outlast circumstances.

You cannot always control what happens next. But you can control what you believe about your ability to respond, who you invite into the process, and which voice you give the microphone to—fear or hope.

Are you ready to forge your mettle?

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