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In the scenery of spring,
nothing is better, nothing worse;
The flowering branches are
of themselves, some short, some long.
Ryōkan
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1st day of Spring. I have always had this crazy idea that we should celebrate the first day of spring instead of New Year’s Eve.
I say that because I sometimes find it odd we celebrate new year’s day which seems to be associated with regrets and leaving
‘things’ behind and ‘starting anew’ as if you completely throw out the old and start with a clean slate <which sounds good but is not really possible>.
And, yet, Spring is actually all about new from existing, growth from that which is and, well, hope <not regret>.
To me, as nature begins to throw off the cold thoughts of winter and days get longer, it seems natural to think of possibilities. And <returning to my crazy thought on ditching new years’ eve> it seems like it would also be much easier to become the change we seek in ourselves in Spring than when you are in the dead of winter and you have to fight off not only last year’s regrets but the grayness and coldness of winter days.
Spring abounds with, well, a life to come.
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Hope springs eternal in the human breast;
Man never Is, but always To be blest:
The soul, uneasy and confin’d from home,
Rests and expatiates in a life to come.
Alexander Pope, An Essay on Man
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Spring begins what could be called the narrative of hope. The narrative can be religious or philosophical or both intertwined. Regardless. The narrative revolves around a speculation of what could be.
This I am today.
That I will be tomorrow.
I say this knowing full well that speculation is not an end in itself.
Speculation must involve some meaningful application.
While you have hope for growth in a belief of freshness and emerging growth from what already exists, you have to water the plant <you get the metaphor>. You have to do some shit in order for all the ‘hope shit’ to happen.
Spring isn’t about putting aside old habits and things it is about using them as stepping stones to grow and move forward.
I would argue that Spring helps us with hope because it suggests possibilities. This is good because far too often hope tends to stunted in pragmatism.
In other words, fulfillment of hope is much much easier in spring then in the dead of winter.
Behaviorally speaking, the pragmatic constructs of life and improvement seem much colder and stricter and harsher and less attainable in the winter.
And, yet, those same pragmatic constructs of life seem more open and warmer to adapting to change in the onset of spring and, most importantly to attitudes & behavior, more attainable.
And, yes, I do believe pragmatism and possibilities have a symbiotic relationship.
Now.
While you actually have to do some shit to make change and growth happen, Hope is a pretty powerful thing. Hope, which actually offers nothing more than mere speculation, actually provides us with the very basis of living.
Seriously.
Think about it.
What is existence without the hope for a better tomorrow or expectation of things to come?
<answer: not much>
We long for meaning which is certainly intertwined with hope — a hope for being as good as we can. A hope for being better today than I was yesterday and better tomorrow than I am today.
All that said.
“Dum spiro spero”
(While I breathe, I hope)
Alexander Pope
As long as we breathe, hope breaths.
Spring is about, well, breathing. Breathing life into hopes & dreams.
I would argue New Year’s Eve is about suffocation and is grounded in the despair of past dreams.
Ponder that a bit.
How often have you stood on the threshold of a new year looking to discard things <to start anew> and felt this?
“From where you are you can hear their dreams.
The dismays and despairs and flight and fall and big seas of their dreams.”
Dylan Thomas
Conceptually, for New Years to exist it means some dreams have died. Yeah. On New Year ’s Eve we put to rest some of our dead dreams … and create new ones.
<please note: I do not believe any dream should die>
On the first day of spring we let the seeds of our dreams burst forth from the ground and grow.
Now that, my friends, is something worth celebrating.
Spring is here.
Hope lives.
Think of the possibilities.





That said.
could be.



I would be remiss if I didn’t point out that for older folk the desire to scream is … well … shit … almost the same as a younger person <go figure>.
It is about yourself, but it is more about going on the offensive rather than defensively protecting yourself against the squeaking issues.
less than important squeaking. I believe it encourages noise just for noise sake. I believe it encourages morons to be more loudly moronic.
maturing into adulthood. Life, left to its own devices, will more than likely try and smother ‘hope’ with ‘harsh reality.’ what this does is make things just a bit darker, a little less brighter and sparkly. which leads me back to the movie. Mr. Magorium suggests to Mahoney: “you have a sparkle”, i.e., something reflective of something bigger trying to get out despite Life suggesting otherwise.
“Your life is an occasion. Rise to it.”



Not first impressions, but first words.
I do not sit here today writing to suggest anyone should be more careful with regard to what they say first. I do not because I believe most of us are pretty careful with our first words.
I say that recognizing it is tough to be optimistic these days. And I don’t mean because of what is actually happening in today’s world, but rather because if you are optimistic you run the significant risk of being trampled by a herd of cynicism, pessimism and those unwilling to believe the future can be better than the past. That said. I believe the bigger challenge we face is a general reluctance to believe people can change or should be forgiven.
Can someone actually leave the old baggage behind and move on to do better things? <a question we should all be asking ourselves in today’s world>
Far too many people today do not see much to be upbeat about. They simply see a lot of existing problems getting worse. And because of that they are tending to gather around anyone promising a return to an imaginary past era of greatness.

<and the self identities that are inevitably attached to these beliefs>. Needless to say much of that backlash is a bit unhealthy and a lot unmoored to accepted reality.
Far too many loudmouthed people have ripped the meaning out of the word, twisted the value of the word making it seem valueless, and ultimately created an environment in which we demonize the entire process of trying to reach compromise.
compromise on a specific issue>. What this means is that, as with most things in Life, we enthusiastically embrace the conceptual behavior and balk at the actual behavior.



The balance of actually getting a glimpse of that ‘something’ and not having rushed thru some important moment versus the missing feeling.
This sure sounds like something you may have heard on CNN or BBC from someone talking about what is happening in the Middle East or Russia.
This is the craziest aspect.
In addition sometimes new people provide new perspective on their growth (success & failures) experience. The new people possibly have just seen “from the other side” and discern different learnings. They see what Taleb called “half invented ideas” and know how to fully invent them.
Why?