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It’s in these simple, almost unnoticed changes that something shifts in us too. A reminder to look up. To breathe slower. To take pleasure in the moment, cold fruit on a warm afternoon, bare feet on the ground, laughter with no agenda, silence with no guilt.
Summer doesn't ask much of us in its early days, only to be present. And maybe that’s the gift. To start the new season not with plans, but with presence. Not with pressure, but with a return to what feels grounding and real.
These small joys, these fragments of stillness, can bring us back to ourselves. They help us reflect on what really matters, what we’ve been carrying that we don’t need, and what we want to hold more dearly in the season ahead.
What are the simple pleasures that early summer brings you? And what are you hoping to leave behind, or carry forward, this season?
'Golden Summer, Eaglemont', 1889 painting by Arthur Streeton. 0 reply
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