WEATHER

A person standing in shifting sunlight and shadow, symbolizing emotional weather and attachment in Maryland and DC.

WEATHER

How External Storms Reflect Our Internal Moods and Attachments

Weather isn’t just atmospheric—it’s emotional. For individuals in Maryland and DC, this reflection explores how our moods mirror the climate around us, and how attachments to people, places, and things shape our emotional forecasts. Just as we prepare for storms, we can learn to navigate our inner weather with care and clarity.

The Weatherman on our local station is quite handsome and seems to be passionate about all things weather. I think he particularly likes this east coast part of the country. Apparently, we are situated to receive all kinds of weather but none so severe as to cause the devastation that we witness in other parts of the country. So that got me thinking about a different form of weather. As humans, we have our own internal weather that we call moods.

As humans, we are capable of a full range of moods. The loss of a loved one can bring us to devastation and fear. What will happen next? How will we be able to keep going and move forward? I believe that each one of us has experienced this mood. Perhaps you were grieving the loss of a spouse or a dear friend. One of the worst losses is the loss of a child. That loss is just out of sync with reality. Children are not supposed to die. They are supposed to live, experience life, enjoy relationships and grow old. The loss of other things that are precious to us can be equally difficult. Losing a pet can be extremely painful. Sometimes, we do not realize how powerful that relationship is until we cannot experience it anymore.

We were born connected to another human being, and we spend our lives continuing to make connections. We get attached to people, places, or things. The point is that attachment is natural and necessary. When we lose our sense of attachment, we lose our will to continue living. We move into a dark storm that can overwhelm us. Look at your attachments. Set some time aside to consider each of those three categories: people, places, things. Write down the attachments that are of value to you in each of those categories.

I find when working with people that their attachments are incredibly valuable. The primary attachment is a bellwether, a leader of their life. The original meaning of bellwether was the bell on the lead sheep in a flock. The leader showing the path ahead is a good way to think about your attachments. Where are you headed? What do your primary attachments do to move you further ahead?

If your emotional weather feels unpredictable, therapy can help you find steadiness. Explore individual therapy in Maryland and DC or learn more about therapeutic approaches that support emotional regulation and attachment healing. For insights into how weather affects mood, see The Psychology of Weather from the Bureau of Meteorology.

BACK TO SCHOOL!

A child reading after going back to school waiting for friends, symbolizing emotional memory and seasonal transition in Maryland and DC.

BACK TO SCHOOL!

How Childhood School Memories Shape Our Present

Back-to-school season isn’t just for kids, it’s a powerful emotional marker for many adults. For individuals in Maryland and DC, this post explores how early school experiences continue to influence our routines, relationships, and emotional responses. Whether joyful or anxious, these memories matter.

How many of you still organize your year around the school calendar? If you were a good student, the end of August was a time of excitement and a time to gear up for a new year. You looked forward to seeing your schoolmates and telling all the summer tales of adventure.

If you were a not-so-good student, your anxiety started to gear up about mid-August, and you looked for ways to escape. Suddenly your clothes did not fit, and your backpack was nowhere to be found. You prayed for snow, even knowing that the thermometer was in the 90’s.

If you have school-aged children, you need to function on the school calendar. However, many still organize their year around that activity and have a deep emotional response to this time of year. You may be aware of this cycle and take it to heart, or you may be completely unaware and wonder why this time of year is disquieting.

Whether we realize it or not, our early school experiences stay with us in some way.

Some of us have maintained friends from elementary school. You may not have regular contact, but when you do meet or call, the sense of connection reappears automatically as though you were young again and no time has passed.

Early school experiences can make a deep impression. I remember my second-grade teacher because she put a large wire cage in the center of the room and placed a hen in the cage. We watched in awe as that hen laid eggs and sat on them until these little chicks hatched. We had a lottery to see who would get to take the chicks home. Of course, our parents were not as excited as we were, but that teacher was brilliant. We learned about the circle of life and about caring for another creature. And yes, we were required to clean out the cage!

What school memories stand out for you? As a young child, your school experience can be powerful and set the stage for future experiences and feelings. Take a moment to go back in time and ponder the influences of early childhood on who you are now.

If back-to-school season stirs up old emotions or questions about identity, therapy can help. Explore individual therapy in Maryland and DC or learn more about therapeutic approaches that support emotional insight and personal growth. For nostalgic reflections, see Education Elements’ Top 20 Back-to-School Memories.

Anesthesia and Sleep!

Journaling notes after anesthesia and sleep, symbolizing sleep recovery and cognitive healing in Maryland and DC.

Anesthesia and Sleep!

How Surgery Reveals the Brain’s Hidden Storage Systems

Sleep after anesthesia isn’t just rest—it’s recovery from a chemical storm. For individuals in Maryland and DC, this post explores how anesthesia affects memory, sleep, and the brain’s preferred ways of storing information. From picture reels to lullabies, it’s a journey through cognition and healing.

If you have had surgery recently, you know the effects of flushing this stuff out of your body for a few days afterward. I don’t think that the anesthesiologist does a proper job of explaining what is going to happen in your brain over the next few days. He talks about the potential physical effects, maybe some nausea, drowsiness, or sleeplessness, but he does not tell you that your brain may function differently and will be weird for a few days.

Anesthesia puts you to sleep, but this is not normal sleep. This is a chemical sleep that bathes the cells in your brain in such a way that they are pickled in something new and different. After surgery, this “pickling juice” must be washed out of your brain. No one prepares you for this transition. The IV in your arm is part of this flushing mechanism. Drinking lots of water is an important part of this flushing system, and that plastic breathing thing that you struggle to suck out of is a part of this too.

The interesting part for my brain was the exposure to the system that my brain uses to store information. I did not do much sleeping after surgery. Again, a part of the information you should know is that sleep changes with these chemicals trying to run out of your brain. But when I did close my eyes the show was really weird. I know that I store information in pictures. That has always been my preferred processing format. Ask me if I know someone and their picture pops into my brain. When I try to communicate that I know someone, I see them but cannot find their name. If you could watch this on a screen, you would know immediately who I am talking about. So, with these chemicals activating my brain, the photos of others were wild. I went through a movie screen role of 38mm film of every person I have ever encountered. Trying to sleep, and the pictures just kept rolling. Saw my 3rd-grade teacher and remember that she raised a hen in a cage in the middle of the room all year: “Biddy Hen” but have no idea of the teacher’s name but a great pic.

When I taught college, I made a very strong effort to learn a student’s name on day one. I went around the room and asked everyone to say their name and tell one important or unusual thing about themselves. I could picture them and use the detail to grab their first name. I required them to stay in the same seat all semester. Rolls and rolls of those students went through my head.

Trust me. I am going someplace. I have a sleep system that I have used for decades to quickly and easily put myself to sleep, but it is based on music and not on pictures.

We encode data in 3 main ways: images, sounds, and motion. The first two are easy to understand. The third is something like this: you move through space, and let’s say you are walking someplace, and your brain records the action, or you are learning to swing a bat, and your brain has to focus on the motion and nothing else to make you a good batter.

We each have preferences for the storage of information. As I have said, mine is picture storage. Did you know that emails can be stored as images? Recovering from anesthesia, I close my eyes, and a white circle appears filled with fast-moving images of emails. Come on! Who knew?

My storage systems are first pictures, then motion, and the last is sound. So, of course, the best sleep process for me is the weakest system. If I focus on sound, then the other two busy systems get lulled to sleep. The anesthesia completely blocked my access to the sound system. When that path was opened again, I could drift off to sleep.

Lullabies that my mother sang to me as a child, that I sang to my child, and that she sang to hers. Lovely to know what works. Try figuring out how your brain encodes things and pick the weaker one to start a sleep routine.

If anesthesia has disrupted your sleep or memory, therapy can help you recalibrate. Explore individual therapy in Maryland and DC or learn more about therapeutic approaches that support cognitive recovery and emotional clarity. For more on how anesthesia affects memory and sleep, see MedicalHubNews’ guide to reversing memory loss after anesthesia.

THE HEAT, THE HEAT!

A teenager sitting in the heat, symbolizing emotional reflection and relief in Maryland and DC.

THE HEAT, THE HEAT!

Facing the Temperatures Outside—and the Ones Within

Extreme weather can feel overwhelming, but sometimes it mirrors the emotional heat we carry inside. For individuals in Maryland and DC, this reflection explores how oppressive temperatures and childhood memories both challenge us—and how facing them can lead to healing and relief.

I don’t know where you live, but in the Washington, DC area the heat has been constant and oppressive. I have this great deck and patio, and they stand empty, day after day, because it is too hot to sit outside. I am convinced that global warming is real. Also, when I see the huge floods and storms in the Midwest, I know the climate is changing. This is not the first time that the weather has been devastating. Remember the dust storms of the 1930’s? The pictures of walls of dirt traveling across the Plains are frightening. Houses were buried, and people died when they could not outrun the walls of dust and dirt or find safety in their homes.

What are you trying to outrun or avoid? We all do it.

One of the most common things to outrun is our childhood history. Before we reach puberty, our brains think in binary terms: yes/no, right/wrong, good/bad. We divide our experiences into absolute opposites. That means that early life experiences get stuck in that place of absolute negative or absolute positive. Each of these can lead to problems later on. For now, I want to focus on the absolute negative.

When the first child in a family is replaced by the second, danger lurks. The sense of loss and rejection that can overwhelm the first child is akin to a form of panic. When you move from receiving the full attention of both parents to having to share that attention, the hurt and loss are real. Many times, parents do not realize how powerful this loss is, and they fail to find ways to continue the older child’s experience of being special. When we are replaced by another, we are in pain. The accompanying confusion and grief are disorienting. The older child is destabilized.

That sense of “I can be replaced” stays with you even if it is buried in your memory bank. The fear and instability associated with that thought can cause us to fear connection or overreach for connection and importance. When we fear connection, we miss out on opportunities to build friendships and support networks. When we overreach for connection, we alienate others and become burdens. Facing the early childhood injury can help us to reorient and change our view of ourselves and others.

We all carry early childhood memories with us, and they influence how we behave in the present. We cannot outrun them, but we can turn and face them without the fear of being buried. Understanding our early experiences and their influence on the present opens us up leading to cooler times.

If you’re ready to explore the emotional heat you’ve been carrying, therapy can help. Learn more about individual therapy in Maryland and DC or explore therapeutic approaches that support emotional clarity and healing. For more on the connection between climate and emotional stress, see Psychology Today’s reflection on The Heat and connection.

Baseball

A man reading about baseball, symbolizing emotional resilience and performance in Maryland and DC.

Baseball

Memory, Emotion, and the Mental Game Behind America’s Pastime

Baseball isn’t just a sport, it’s a soundtrack, a ritual, and a mirror for emotional resilience. For individuals in Maryland and DC, this reflection on transistor radios, childhood giggles, and the ups and downs of pitching reminds us that the game is as much about heart as it is about skill. This post explores how baseball shapes memory and how emotional coaching might just be the next great strategy.

I have always liked baseball. I have no idea why. Maybe it was the invention of the transistor radio. The transistor was invented in 1947, and I would not have been old enough to know what it was. But by 1957, when the transistor radio was invented, my parents might have been able to afford one. The radio at that time would have been expensive and truly a luxury item at about $130. I know we had one.

How do I know? My sister and I shared a room, and we managed to sneak the radio in at night and listen to the ball games under the covers. I don’t think we really understood the game itself, but the sneaking was great fun. “Settle down, girls!”. “Don’t make me come up there!” would echo up the stairs and lead to more giggles under the covers. I do not remember my Dad ever following through on those threats, but they sounded serious.

The baseball announcer was a hoot. Big voice with lots of crescendos and excitement, and I remember an organ playing at certain times. Of course, they played the National Anthem at the beginning and “Take Me Out to the Ball Game”. The 7th inning stretch was usually “God Bless America” so we learned all the words by heart. George Steinbrenner is credited with making it a tradition as he instructed the organist to play it at every ball game for the New York Yankees until other clubs adopted it. Of course, we all wanted to sound like Aretha Franklin. Watch her on YouTube and tell me if it does not make you cry.

As an adult, my husband and I lived in Baltimore, and it was easy to find a balmy night to go to the park, and at that time, it was cheap to get box seats on the first base line and watch Jim Palmer pitch. Sometimes I think about how a pitcher needs to be trained to handle the ups and downs of performance. I think I would like to be an emotional trainer for high school pitchers. I would sit on the sidelines and yell, “Great pitch” when they are doing well, and “You stink” with the throw one way outside. I think that would be good training and serve them well in college and beyond. The pitcher has to take in the good stuff and let it fill him up and strengthen him and sluff off the bad at the moment but not forever. The pitcher needs to hold a place for the bad stuff, like putting it in a spot behind home plate where it can be picked up later but not affect his game. Later he can sort through it for the good stuff to work on.

Maybe we all need hecklers and cheerers for that very reason.

If you’re exploring emotional resilience or want to coach others through performance highs and lows, therapy can help. Learn more about individual therapy in Maryland and DC or explore therapeutic approaches that support emotional regulation and growth. For insights into the mental game of baseball, see The Mental Game of Baseball from OurBallSports.

THE FED HAS RAISED INTEREST RATES

ChatGPT said: A woman reading about neuroscience and personal balance, symbolizing economic shifts and emotional equilibrium in Maryland and DC.

THE FED HAS RAISED INTEREST RATES

What Economic Shifts Can Teach Us About Personal Balance

When the Federal Reserve raises interest rates, it’s not just about inflation, it’s about restoring equilibrium. For individuals in Maryland and DC, this moment offers a metaphor for personal reflection. Just as the economy adjusts to new pressures, so can we. This post explores how financial policy mirrors our need for emotional and relational balance.

This week the Federal Reserve decided to raise interest rates in an effort to stave off rising inflation. The process goes like this. When prices are climbing, a rise in interest rates makes purchasing those things more difficult. The idea is that as purchasing goes down, the producers of things will lower prices so more things will be bought. The ebb and flow of the economy depends on this balance. How is this balance maintained? How is it helpful?

Balance in the economy is important and perhaps critical. The same is true for our lives. Balance is life-giving. When we are out of balance, we are in trouble. We are at risk for falling. Who or what will be there to catch us? The Federal Reserve trusts that when they raise interest rates, there will be a corrective response, and prices will adjust and come down, consumers will start buying again, and then interest rates can come down, and the merry-go-round continues.

This is all about balance. How do you put balance into your life? If we were to do a factual report of your time for the past week, what would we see? Take that challenge and lay out a timeline on the page. Where did you go? What did you do? Who did you experience? What drew your attention? What did you accomplish? How we invest our time can give us clear information about our priorities.

You say you love your family, and your calendar shows that you never made it home for dinner in the past week. You missed your daughter’s swim meet for a client call. You value your physical health, and the treadmill in the basement is a place to hang coats. You fancy yourself an intellectual, but you have not read a book in the past 6 months, and you fall asleep in front of the television every night.

How would you rate your interest in you? Your family? Your spouse? Your children? Your health? Your intellect? Examine these carefully. It is time to raise your own interest rates.

If you’re feeling out of balance, therapy can help you recalibrate. Explore individual therapy in Maryland and DC or learn more about therapeutic approaches that support emotional clarity and intentional living. For more on how interest rates affect your financial life, see Forbes’ explainer on Fed rate hikes.

CAN’T SLEEP?

A bookstore with a storybook nearby, symbolizing sleep routines, emotional comfort, emotional development, and emotional attachment in Maryland and DC.

CAN’T SLEEP?

Why Sleep Routines Matter—For Children and Adults Alike

Sleep is essential for physical and emotional health, yet many struggle to get enough of it. For families in Maryland and DC, this post explores how early sleep routines shape lifelong habits, and how intentional rituals can help both children and adults find rest.

Our bodies need sleep for a variety of reasons: development, energy conservation, brain waste clearance, modulation of immune responses, cognition, performance, vigilance, disease, and psychological state. That is quite a list. In fact, that is intimidating enough to keep you awake!

Think of everything that is going on in your body while you sleep. Yet, many of you have trouble falling asleep and cannot figure out why. One would think that this is a simple task. Lie down. Close your eyes. Count sheep. Remember the mattress commercial that had all those sheep jumping over fences? Seems simple enough.

Sleep training takes place very early in life. If you have children, you remember this process vividly. You feed the baby, rock the baby, and gently put the baby in the bassinet. Voila! Well, almost. For some parents this process is easy, and the baby cooperates. For others, this process is its own nightmare followed by various attempts, conversations with the relatives, and feelings of utter failure. Each of us has our own story.

Helping your child find a sleep routine is important. The key here is routine. Children benefit from repetition. The order of events is not as important as the fact that there is an order: a ritual that can be depended on. There are only a few don’ts: no screens at least one hour before bedtime, no overstimulation prior to bedtime, and no conflict prior to bedtime. There are some really important do’s: do the same thing every time in the same order, do spend time so that your child feels your attention and interest, do relax and expect your child to cooperate, do calming activities, do make it special for you and your child.

Here is a simple example: start with a bath because they probably need one and good conversations happen; keep the same hygiene routine of tooth brushing, hair brushing, etc.; talk, read a story, sing a song; have a special way of saying good night; leave!

Your child does not have to fall asleep. A mistake that many parents make is that they stay until the child falls asleep. That teaches a child that they must have you nearby to fall asleep. Your message should be that you are a grown-up, and you now need time off from being a parent. They do not have to fall asleep. They do have to stay in their bed so that you can have time to yourself, time with your partner, time to work or play or just do nothing.

Sleep training is an important responsibility and can serve your child for a lifetime. You would be surprised how comforting it is to have a routine that leads to sleep regardless of how old you are!

Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

If sleep struggles are affecting your family, therapy can help. Explore therapy for adults and families in DC or learn more about therapeutic approaches that support healthy sleep routines and emotional wellness. For practical tips, see Restful Solutions’ guide to things to do when you can’t sleep.

What Is In My Genes.

A child reading about genes, symbolizing emotional inheritance and family history in Maryland and DC.

What Is In My Genes

Exploring Emotional Inheritance and Generational DNA

Genes carry more than physical traits—they may also hold emotional echoes from generations past. For individuals in Maryland and DC, this reflection explores how ancestral experiences shape our sensitivities, reactions, and even our fears. Understanding your genetic story can offer insight into your emotional landscape.

Ok. I know when you hear that you are not certain about whether I am asking about your Jeans or Genes. Rest assured that I am asking about the genetic makeup of your being. GENES. Did you know that your genetic makeup has a generational history? Approximately three past generations are present in your current genetic makeup. So, if I trace this for myself. On my father’s side, I am looking at an English pauper farming to sustain his family who put himself on a boat hoping for a better opportunity, an American farmer who found working the dirt in the Midwest as a good gig and a machinist son who left the farm to find his way in the city.

Three past generations are present. What does this mean? I am not just talking about physical characteristics, family stories, or traditions though those are important. I am talking about emotional experiences that get embedded in our DNA and then find their way into the next generation. Studies of DNA have shown that emotional experiences modify the DNA and that these modifications get inherited and can be found to travel forward for at least three generations. Ever wonder why you are afraid of snakes and your neighbor has one as a pet? Given my father’s heritage, I should be a pretty good gardener, and guess what? I am!

Your temperament, reactivity to different stimuli, expression of feelings has a genetic history to it. The more we know about that history in terms of the emotional experiences of our ancestors, the easier it is to address our own emotional habits, reactions, and sensitivities. Perhaps my neighbor’s great-grandfather was a snake charmer!
Yes, I said three past generations. Research has shown us that our genes get modified by experience and that the modification gets passed down to future generations. We can look at this in two directions: the past and the future.

First, let’s examine the past.

How much of your family’s history do you really know? Today we all have the opportunity to learn about past generations through these systems where you spit in a tube and mail it off to receive a detailed description of your ancestry. Researching your family history can be fun. This research can also help you understand yourself and your emotionality. Do you have any old documents gathering dust in the attic? Can you find one of your parent’s report cards? Do old photos stir some emotion for you?

Think about the emotional sensitivities that you have. Have you ever been curious as to why certain people and characteristics get a rise out of you when others do not? I seem to have a vivid, intense reaction to narcissistic qualities, while numerous others can enjoy the flamboyance and not be negatively affected. Hmmm. What lurks in my gene pool? I guess I should spit in a tube and find out.

If you’re curious about your emotional inheritance or family history, therapy can help you explore it with insight and compassion. Learn more about individual therapy in Maryland and DC or explore therapeutic approaches that support emotional awareness and generational healing. For more on inherited trauma, visit Psych Central’s guide to genetic trauma.

Chinese “New Year”

A calm woman reading about Chinese New Year and her zodiac chart, symbolizing curiosity and cultural connection in Maryland and DC.

Chinese “New Year”

What the Zodiac Teaches Us About Belonging and Vulnerability

Sometimes, the smallest moments, like learning your Chinese zodiac animal, can reveal deeper truths about connection, identity, and the discomfort of not knowing. For individuals in Maryland and DC, this reflection invites us to embrace curiosity and recognize the universal longing to belong.

Ok, ok. I know it is not Chinese New Year. However, I was just thinking about it And, even though it is out of sync, my brain is going there. Trust me, it will make sense.

During the month of Chinese New Year, I had the privilege of being with a group of elementary school children. Oh! To be in elementary school again. I remember so clearly the square brick building with the concrete playground. The teeter-totter was my favorite spot. The thrill of going up and down was worth the bone crushing bump on the tailbone when you struck the concrete on the down stroke. What shocked me as I spent time with these children, and I do mean “shocked me” was that each of them knew their Chinese animal, and I had no clue of my own. How could this be!

Have you ever been in that place where the “other” knew so easily and comfortably the thing that you should have known and did not?

In just that moment, you are isolated. They know, and you do not.

What next?

Of course, I looked up my animal. The Chinese Zodiac calendar rotates in 12-year cycles. So being born in 1946 makes me a “dog”.

Now, I grew up in a family that always had a dog. There are stories of me as a toddler and the Great Dane that lived with our family. The story goes that he would drag everyone around the block on walks, but if I came along and they put the leash in my hand the giant beast would modify his stride to walk along side of me no matter the distraction. Such a powerful sign of protection. The year of the dog stands for; loyalty, sincerity, and honesty. You may already know your animal, or you may look it up. No matter.

The point is that we all have the experience of being with others who know things that we don’t know. A feeling of fear and shame wells up in us. What happens when you feel afraid in this way? Left out of the loop? Less informed than the others? How do you respond?

One of the hardest things for people to do is to acknowledge that they do not know. In that moment, we experience ourselves as “outside” or “other”.

We all long to belong. We want to be connected. We want to know what the others know.

Look up your Chinese New Year animal and let me know!

If moments like these stir feelings of isolation or curiosity, therapy can help you explore them with compassion. Learn more about individual therapy in Maryland and DC or explore therapeutic approaches that support emotional insight and belonging. For more on Chinese zodiac meanings, visit ChineseNewYear.net.

My Favorite Month

A woman reading at home in the rain, symbolizing renewal and emotional growth in Maryland and DC during April.

My Favorite Month

Why April Feels Like a Gentle Invitation to Begin Again

April is more than a month—it’s a metaphor for renewal. For individuals in Maryland and DC, this post reflects on how April’s subtle shifts in light, warmth, and community can inspire personal growth and emotional connection. From crocus blooms to sidewalk smiles, April invites us to reemerge with intention.

Do you have a favorite month? Is that a silly question?

I have a favorite month, and April is it. Growing up in the Midwest and now living in the East, the seasons are so obvious as the weather changes dramatically. April brings so much promise of new life with crocus pushing their way through the hard winter ground and proving once again that they cannot be beaten. They have just been waiting for that gentle shift in temperature to soften the soil and remind them to emerge again. They are encouraging.

After a long winter, and the dark days of February and the cruel temptations of March, I need encouragement. Funny, perhaps, to look to the weather for encouragement, yet, the change that takes place in April seems to be more than the weather. People are moving about again. Bicycles are spinning by the house, and people seem to be happier. They stop to chat on their walks around the block, and they wave at each other when passing. The winter posture of head down and plowing forward has given way to a lighter sense of being and an opening to receive from others.

Just like the flowers pushing up out of the ground to greet the sun, the people are opening to engage each other. They stop and chat with the fellow dog-walker. They ask about the baby in the stroller. They wave at each other with smiles and a sense of openness. April brings a sense of connectedness and the promise of new beginnings.

What will be new for you? How will you emerge from the winter and begin a new thing. I know lots of people make New Year’s resolutions that have long ago fallen by the wayside. I tend to avoid those for that very reason. They never lasted long and seemed to come with shame-based experience anyway. But Spring is somehow different. April holds a promise of growth that is gradual, possible. I can poke through old parts of myself and see the potential for new directions and the gradual, steady reach for changes that will have meaning and sustain me moving forward.

April is my favorite month, and that is not silly at all.

If April inspires you to begin again, therapy can help you explore what’s next. Learn more about individual therapy in Maryland and DC or explore therapeutic approaches that support seasonal renewal and emotional growth. For more spring reflections, see 71 Inspirational Quotes for the Month of April from Good Good Good.