The crack of color. The air smells of smoke and memory. Summer’s arrogance is humbled by the first cool breeze. This is the season of letting go. We watch the leaves—once our trophies—turn gold, then brown, then dust. Harvest becomes reckoning. Did we plant enough? Did we love enough? Fall is not sad; it is honest. It strips the tree to its bone so the tree can remember what it truly is. Here, we learn the art of release.
The white silence. The world holds its breath. We look under the snow and see nothing. No green, no gold, no fruit. Just bone and root. This is the season of reflection and regret. The old man sits by the stove. The lover stares out a frosted window. In Winter, we meet our ghosts. We feel the cold of what we broke, who we left, who we failed to become. It is a hard teacher. But Winter does not kill; it preserves. It forces the seed to wait. Spring- Summer- Fall- Winter and Spring
The cycle whispers a secret: There is no final season. The end of one thing is the underground beginning of another. So whatever you are in right now—whether you are blooming, burning, falling, or freezing—hold on. The wheel is turning. And after the long, dark rest, there will always be an and . The crack of color
Life does not move in a straight line. It spins. It is a wheel, groaning under the weight of seasons, each one bleeding into the next. We are taught to name them: Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter. But the most important season is the one that comes after the end—the and . This is the season of letting go