I often have wondered about the seasonal changes and how they affect each-and-every one of us differently. After an unusually long sub-zero cold spell that left most of us yearning for something a little warmer and more bearable…nature did an abrupt turn and treated us to nearly sixty-degree weather. A reminder that warmer weather is right around the corner.
The sudden temperature surge brought out street walkers, short sleeves, motorcycles, car washes, and a subtle genuine smile on many faces. I personally enjoy the fall and winter months with the cooler temperatures they bring, but the sunlight does feel good.
Winter does not leave all at once. It loosens its grip gradually, like a guest lingering in the doorway, reluctant to admit the party is over. The passing of winter is not a dramatic ending but a quiet negotiation between cold and warmth, shadow and light, and wind and quiet. It happens in small, almost forgettable moments that only later reveal their intentions.
At first, when the days lengthen by minutes, no one notices. Morning light arrives earlier, softer, as if testing the room before committing. Snow that once felt permanent slowly begins to thin and retreat, shrinking into gray and dirty patches along sidewalks and fence lines. The air still bites, but not with the same confidence. Winter is still present, yet it has begun to doubt itself.
When you start to hear the sound of winter’s passing it will come first in the dripping of melting snow and ice from rooftops, the hush of snow turning to slush, the return of running water that was long frozen into silence. Every living thing becomes more active, the streets grow louder and footsteps splash instead of crunching. The world becomes messier, a lot less pristine, and more alive. What winter preserved in stillness, spring will soon disturb.
Emotionally, winter’s departure carries a strange duality for me. There is relief in its leaving and giving relief from the darkness that arrived too early, from cold that seeped into my bones, from days that demanded endurance rather than enjoyment. Yet there is also a subtle loss. Winter gives us permission to slow down, to retreat inward, to be quiet without explanation. As it fades, so does that excuse. The world begins, gently but insistently, to ask for motion again.
Nature senses this before we do. Trees bud tentatively, not yet trusting the warmth. Birds return in scattered groups, and the deer seek out the grassy patches that have sprung up. The earth softens. Beneath the surface, roots awaken and stretch, preparing for a season of effort after months of rest. The passing of winter is not death but transformation… a shift from conservation to creation.
For me, the passing of winter mirrors something internal. Winter is a time of reflection and often isolation. Winter can be a time to plan, or sometimes just to stay at home and practice nesting. As it passes, there is an invitation for us to re-emerge, to bring what was learned in stillness back into the world. Thawing exposes what was hidden.
Eventually, winter leaves without ceremony. We eventually stop checking the forecast for snow. We stop bracing ourselves for the Canadian vortex and sub-zero temperatures. The passing of winter reminds us all that nothing…no season, no feeling, no hardship stays forever. It teaches patience, resilience, and the quiet faith that change, even when slow, is always underway.












