
Youth Month: Why Hope Is the Most Powerful Gift We Can Give Young South Africans
Every June, South Africa reflects on the courage, sacrifice and determination of the young people who helped shape our country’s history. Youth Month is a time to honour that legacy, but it’s also a moment to ask an important question:
What are we doing to ensure that today’s young South Africans still believe in tomorrow?
Because if there’s one thing I’ve learned through more than a decade of sharing good news stories, it’s this: hope isn’t a luxury. It’s a necessity.
Hope is what helps someone submit one more CV after countless rejections. It’s what encourages a young entrepreneur to launch a business despite the odds. It’s what motivates a student to keep working towards their dreams when the future feels uncertain.
And right now, our young people need hope more than ever.
South Africa’s youth face real challenges. Unemployment remains a significant obstacle. Many are navigating financial pressures, social challenges and an increasingly overwhelming digital world. It would be easy to focus only on what’s broken.
But that’s exactly why hope matters.
Hope isn’t about ignoring reality. It’s about recognising the challenges while still believing that solutions are possible. It’s understanding that setbacks are part of the journey, not the end of the story.
At Good Things Guy, we’ve spent years sharing stories that remind South Africans of that every day. Stories of resilience, innovation, kindness and ordinary people doing extraordinary things. And recently, I came across a statistic that gave me even more reason to feel optimistic. Over the last 90 days, Good Things Guy content on Facebook and Instagram generated more than 19 million views. When we looked at the audience data, we found that 3.2% of viewers were between 18 and 24 years old, while 15.5% were between 25 and 34. When we looked at TikTok, it was even more interesting: 13.5% of our audience was 18 to 24, while 21% was 25 to 34.I may be slightly biased, but I think that’s incredibly encouraging.
In a world where negativity often dominates news feeds and algorithms, millions of people are actively choosing to engage with positive stories. They’re seeking out examples of people making a difference, overcoming obstacles and creating change.
To me, that’s proof that young South Africans haven’t lost their appetite for hope.
But I think there’s an even more important story behind those numbers.
Many of the people consuming our content are parents, grandparents, teachers and mentors. They’re reading these stories and sharing them around dinner tables. They’re discussing them on school runs, during car rides and in family WhatsApp groups.
And that’s where hope becomes truly powerful.
Because young people don’t form their view of the world solely through headlines or social media. They build it through conversations with the people they trust most.
When a parent shares a story about a young South African innovator, a local hero or someone who has succeeded against the odds, it changes the conversation. It shifts the focus from what’s wrong to what’s possible.
Those moments matter.
Imagine if more South African families spent a little more time talking about solutions and a little less time dwelling only on problems. Imagine if we celebrated local success stories with the same enthusiasm that we discuss crises.
That doesn’t mean pretending our challenges don’t exist. It means balancing reality with possibility.
Because possibility is where hope begins.
One of the biggest misconceptions about optimism is that it’s passive. The truth is the opposite.
Hope inspires action.
People who believe they can make a difference are more likely to volunteer, start businesses, pursue education, support community initiatives and become part of the solution. Hope gives people a reason to keep trying.
That’s why stories matter.
Stories shape beliefs. Beliefs shape actions. And actions shape futures.
As we celebrate Youth Month, I believe we need to become more intentional about the stories we tell our young people. Not because we want to shield them from reality, but because we want to equip them to face reality with confidence.
The next generation deserves honesty about the challenges ahead. But they also deserve reminders of the opportunities that exist, the progress being made and the extraordinary people who are proving every day that positive change is possible.
South Africa’s future won’t be built by fear. It will be built by people who believe they can make a difference.
And that starts with hope.
So this Youth Month, let’s continue to honour the legacy of those who fought for a better future by investing in the hope of those who will shape the next one. Let’s share more stories of possibility. Let’s have more meaningful conversations with the young people around us. Let’s remind them that while the road ahead may not always be easy, it is still full of opportunity.
Because hope isn’t just something we feel.
It’s something we pass on.




