Table of Contents >> Show >> Hide
- Why Comics Can Be a Legit Mood Booster
- How to Use Comics Like a Positivity Playlist
- 17 Uplifting Comics and Comic Strips to Help You Stay Positive
- Peanuts (Charles M. Schulz)
- Calvin and Hobbes (Bill Watterson)
- Garfield (Jim Davis)
- Mutts (Patrick McDonnell)
- Zits (Jerry Scott & Jim Borgman)
- Baby Blues (Rick Kirkman & Jerry Scott)
- Get Fuzzy (Darby Conley)
- FoxTrot (Bill Amend)
- The Far Side (Gary Larson)
- Sarah’s Scribbles (Sarah Andersen)
- Strange Planet (Nathan W. Pyle)
- xkcd (Randall Munroe)
- The Oatmeal (Matthew Inman)
- Hyperbole and a Half (Allie Brosh)
- Poorly Drawn Lines (Reza Farazmand)
- The Awkward Yeti: Heart and Brain (Nick Seluk)
- Zen Pencils (Gavin Aung Than)
- How to Build a “Stay Positive” Reading Habit That Actually Sticks
- of Experiences Related to Staying Positive With Comics
- Conclusion
If the last few years have taught us anything, it’s that “just stay positive” is not a plan. It’s a bumper sticker.
Real positivity is smaller and more practical: a deep breath before you snap at someone, a tiny laugh when your day
goes sideways, and a reminder that your brain is allowed to enjoy something even while the world is being… the world.
That’s where comics come in. Not because they magically fix everything, but because they offer something we desperately
need right now: reliable, bite-sized relief. A good comic can make you grin in 10 seconds, and that little
shift in mood can be enough to help you take the next right step.
Why Comics Can Be a Legit Mood Booster
Humor is one of the most common “everyday coping tools” people use to handle stress. It helps you step back, reframe,
and remember that you’re more than your current doom-scroll tab.
Comics are especially powerful because they combine words and visuals, so your brain can “get it” quicklyno long
attention span required. Plus, many comics turn hard feelings into something shareable and human. That sense of
“oh wow, it’s not just me” is its own kind of comfort.
How to Use Comics Like a Positivity Playlist
- Save your favorites (screenshots, bookmarks, or a “good vibes” folder) for rough days.
- Pick by mood: gentle + wholesome, silly + absurd, or thoughtful + inspiring.
- Share one with a friend. Laughter is better when it’s passed around like snacks.
- Use a “two-comic rule”: read two, breathe, then decide what you’re doing next (instead of spiraling).
17 Uplifting Comics and Comic Strips to Help You Stay Positive
Peanuts (Charles M. Schulz)
“Soft” doesn’t mean shallow. Peanuts is funny, but it’s also quietly wise about friendship, insecurity,
and trying again tomorrow. It’s a comfort comic for anyone who needs reassurance that imperfect people still
deserve good days.Calvin and Hobbes (Bill Watterson)
When life feels heavy, this strip hands you imagination like a flashlight. Calvin’s wild ideas and Hobbes’ calm
presence are a reminder that play is not childishit’s restorative. Bonus: it can make ordinary days feel less
ordinary.Garfield (Jim Davis)
Sometimes positivity looks like admitting you’re tired and want a nap. Garfield is relatable, snack-friendly humor
that doesn’t demand emotional energy. It’s the comic equivalent of sweatpants: not fancy, but deeply comforting.Mutts (Patrick McDonnell)
If your heart needs a gentle reset, Mutts is a warm hug in ink. The love between pets and peopleand the
kindness tucked into everyday momentscan make you feel human again (in a good way).Zits (Jerry Scott & Jim Borgman)
Growing up is awkward. Parenting is awkward. Existing is awkward. Zits makes that awkwardness funny instead
of shameful, which is a surprisingly helpful form of positivity: laughing at life’s weirdness without feeling alone.Baby Blues (Rick Kirkman & Jerry Scott)
Family life is chaotic, loud, and occasionally sticky for reasons science cannot explain. Baby Blues finds humor
in the mess and turns it into “we’re all figuring it out.” Perfect for anyone who needs permission to laugh at the chaos.Get Fuzzy (Darby Conley)
Pets are tiny therapists with fur (and questionable ethics around stealing your seat). Get Fuzzy leans into
that dynamic: sarcasm, sweetness, and the kind of everyday silliness that can pull you out of a funk.FoxTrot (Bill Amend)
This strip mixes family comedy with nerdy joytech, science, and pop culture included. It’s a reminder that being
enthusiastic about something (anything!) is still allowed, even when the news is exhausting.The Far Side (Gary Larson)
When your brain feels stuck, absurd humor can unstick it. The Far Side is delightfully weird, often hilarious,
and great at breaking rigid thinking. It’s like a mental stretchyour imagination may pop like bubble wrap.Sarah’s Scribbles (Sarah Andersen)
Social anxiety, introvert energy, and the eternal struggle between “I should” and “I can’t” have rarely been this funny.
These comics turn modern stress into laughter, which can make hard feelings feel lighter and more manageable.Strange Planet (Nathan W. Pyle)
Watching blue beings describe human habits in hilariously formal language makes your life look… surprisingly adorable.
This comic is great for perspective: it reminds you that many of your daily stressors are weird, normal, and survivable.xkcd (Randall Munroe)
Smart humor can feel like a brain cleanse. xkcd blends science, tech, relationships, and logic into jokes that
reward curiosity. It’s a good pick when you want positivity that says, “Your mind is still interesting. Keep going.”The Oatmeal (Matthew Inman)
Big feelings, big jokes. The Oatmeal does exaggerated humor that can make your stress feel smallerespecially when
you need a laugh that’s not “polite chuckle,” but “snort-laugh, now I have to explain myself.”Hyperbole and a Half (Allie Brosh)
Some comics don’t just entertainyou feel seen. With raw honesty and hilarious storytelling, this one shows how
humor and hard emotions can exist in the same room without fighting. It’s validating in a way that still makes you laugh.Poorly Drawn Lines (Reza Farazmand)
Absurd, thoughtful, and sneakily tender. These strips often take existential feelings and turn them into something
funny enough to carry. It’s a great option when your positivity needs a side of “life is weird, but also kind of beautiful.”The Awkward Yeti: Heart and Brain (Nick Seluk)
If you’ve ever argued with yourself in the shower, congratulationsyou’ve met the Heart and Brain.
These comics are relatable, gentle, and surprisingly useful for naming emotions and making peace with your inner chaos.Zen Pencils (Gavin Aung Than)
This one is less “punchline” and more “inspiration you can actually read.” Zen Pencils adapts meaningful quotes and
big ideas into visual stories. When you want hope that feels earnednot cheesythis is a strong choice.
How to Build a “Stay Positive” Reading Habit That Actually Sticks
The goal isn’t to force happiness. The goal is to give your brain a dependable on-ramp back to steadier ground.
Try pairing comics with an existing routine: morning coffee, lunch break, after-school decompress, or that moment
when you’re about to open social media “for one minute” (famous last words).
And if a comic hits you in a tender spotbecause it reminds you of something hardtake that as information, not failure.
Humor can be gentle, but it can also be honest. Either way, it’s doing its job: helping you feel, process, and move forward.
of Experiences Related to Staying Positive With Comics
People don’t usually set out thinking, “Today I will heal my emotional state with a cartoon.” It’s more like:
they’re tired, they’re overwhelmed, their brain is buzzing, and they need something small that doesn’t demand a lot.
That’s why comics work so well in real lifethey’re easy to start, and they give quick feedback: a laugh, a grin, a quieter chest.
One common experience is the “tiny reset” moment. Someone reads a Peanuts strip where a character worries about being
good enough, and the humor makes the fear less intimidating. The feeling doesn’t vanish, but it loosenslike a knot that finally
gives a little. That’s often enough to help a person do the next thing: send the email, start the homework, make the appointment,
or simply drink water and try again.
Another experience is using comics as a social bridge. Friends will text each other a Sarah’s Scribbles panel because it
perfectly captures “I want to be invited, but I also want to be alone.” The shared laugh turns into a shared understanding:
“You’re not weird. I’m not weird. We’re just people.” In stressful times, that sense of belonging can be a powerful form of positivity.
Some people lean on absurd humor for perspective. A single Far Side cartoon or a Poorly Drawn Lines strip can
break a mental loop by reminding you that your brain is not a courtroom where every thought is a fact. It’s more like a crowded café
where some thoughts are helpful, some are dramatic, and some are just yelling because they like the sound. Laughing at the loud ones
can make room for calmer thinking.
Others use “thoughtful humor” as a grounding tool. Strange Planet can make everyday routines feel oddly preciouslike,
wow, I did my “nutrient consumption” and my “rest mode,” and that counts. Zen Pencils can do something similar but in a
more reflective way: it turns inspiration into a visual story that’s easier to remember when life gets noisy.
The most encouraging experience people describe is realizing that positivity isn’t one huge emotionit’s a stack of small choices.
Reading two comics instead of doom-scrolling for twenty minutes. Sending one funny strip to a friend instead of isolating. Letting a
moment of laughter remind you that your life still contains good things, even on hard days. Comics won’t solve everything, but they
can help you keep your footing while you solve what you can.
Conclusion
If you’re trying to stay positive in stressful times, you don’t need perfect vibesyou need practical relief.
These 17 comics offer quick laughs, gentle perspective, and the kind of “I can handle today” energy that adds up over time.
Save a few favorites, share them with someone you trust, and let small joy do what it does best: keep you moving forward.
