In addition to the "theft-by-gerrymandering" Democratic myth I discussed above, these results debunk at least two other popular narratives about this election that are already, or on their way to becoming, myths:
1. The "voter fraud" myth on the Right. There's simply no widespread voter fraud: not now, not ever, not anywhere, and certainly not everywhere. If there were, then Republicans wouldn't have won as many races as they did. If Nancy Pelosi were some kind of deep state mastermind, then surely she would have somehow engineered her way into remaining Speaker. So, stop it. Get some help. Put down the snake-oil being peddled by sore losers.
2. The myth of a Republican "meltdown." No, the GOP isn't "melting down." While the 2022 midterms didn't match sky-high expectations for a "red wave" this cycle, the GOP coalition remains highly competitive. Democrats continue to have deep problems in connecting with a broad slice of the country, and aren't on their way to becoming a permanent majority. There's still room for "candidate quality" to make a difference, and Republicans could run much better ones in many of these races next time.
There are still deep divisions in our country that won't be healed, and giant problems that won't be solved, any time soon. But, in spite of everything, somehow, our democracy works. That's something we can all cheer.