Are there any two words in the English language more depressing than “closed indefinitely”? If there are, I’m certainly not aware of them.

As our nation struggles to deal with the government’s response to the COVID-19 virus, many have lost jobs, many have lost patience, and – perhaps most importantly – many have lost hope. That means one of the most important things our national leaders can do – and, yes, I’m looking at you, President Trump – is to speak to us in positive terms about the hopeful future they see for us when we come out of the current crisis.

The good news is that over the last two weeks, President Trump and his White House staff have begun to shift the conversation in Washington and around the country from the negative to the positive. No longer are Drs. Fauci and Birx expounding at length from the White House podium on the latest depressing twists and turns in the coronavirus crisis; instead, the president himself is leading the conversation away from the coronavirus, and toward what it takes to reopen America, surely a more positive subject of conversation.

And he’s got a not-so-secret weapon to do it. In addition to the bully pulpit that traditionally inheres to the occupant of the Oval Office, President Trump has an advantage no previous president had at his disposal – a Twitter feed with almost 80 million followers. Added to the traditional accouterments of the position, that Twitter feed gives President Trump the means to speak directly to the American people, and transmit to them a positive, hopeful message about the future – a positive, hopeful message that bypasses the traditional, anti-Trump media.

The fact is, we don’t have to wait for a vaccine to live our lives. We can continue to work toward that end, but we do not have to cower in fear, sheltered inside our homes, while waiting for the scientists to do their thing. To that end, here are seven suggestions for strengthening and expanding upon President Trump’s positive communications efforts. He should:

The American people are a resilient people. We get knocked down, we get up and dust ourselves off, and we get back to it. During the two world wars, the civilian population, to help with the war effort, planted, tended, and grew “Victory Gardens” in just about every corner of available arable land. And this was no small effort – by 1944, those small-time private gardens were generating 40 percent of the fresh fruits and vegetables consumed in America.

We can do this. President Trump has already begun changing the conversation. With a determination to remind us that we are Americans, and we can do anything we set our minds to, he can revive not just our opportunities and our futures, but our hopes.

Jenny Beth Martin is honorary chairman of Tea Party Patriots Action.