Perhaps the most telling theme across Sunday papers was emotional rather than analytical: exhaustion.
The public mood is no longer panicked. It is no longer outraged. It is simply tired.
Stability has returned — but so has fatigue.
People are no longer asking for miracles. They are asking for predictability. For rules that hold. For policies that last beyond press conferences.
Survival mode has dominated Sri Lanka’s recent years. That mode is effective in crises. It is corrosive over time.
When survival becomes the goal, ambition disappears. Reform feels risky. Change feels threatening. Stability becomes an achievement in itself.
Sunday papers reflect this psychology. Good news is celebrated cautiously. Bad news is accepted with resignation.
This is the most dangerous phase of recovery: when a country stabilises just enough to stop demanding more.
Sri Lanka does not need perpetual crisis. But it also cannot afford permanent pause.
Stability is not the destination. It is the platform. What comes next determines whether this period is remembered as recovery — or simply as the calm between cycles




Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.