The ground at the Ranch is still waking up (Half-Frozen), but the arrivals have begun. We’ve spotted our first tree swallows back from the south. They dive right back into their work, moving with a quick, clean grace against the spring sky. Along with the busy chickadees and the chatter in the brush, they bring a much-needed sense of movement back to the eaves and the open woods.Down at eye level, the Lenten Roses (Hellebores) are doing something remarkable. After months of being pinned down by the frost and 3′ of snow, they are finally pushing through following the heavy, warm rain from Monday’s storm. They don’t bloom upward like a tulip reaching for sun; they open toward the earth—quiet, resilient, and blooming exactly where the mud is thickest.

If your life feels a bit like that thick mud right now—heavy, cold, and slow—take heart in these flowers. They don’t wait for the “perfect” day to start. They just start.

“Take a breath. Let the weight of your shoulders drop just a fraction of an inch.”

Lenten Roses
Lenten Roses in the Upper East Lawn Garden (2025).

A 2-Minute Me Moment

At Rest-Stop-Ranch, we know that when you are in the thick of long-term care, you don’t have an hour to “retreat.” You have two minutes. You have a “Me Moment.” Today, as the swallows arrive and the Lenten Roses lift, try this small act of reconnecting with your own spirit:

  • The Hopeful Spring Gaze: Look out the window or step onto the porch. Don’t look for “perfection.” Look for the movements of spring—the dip of a bird or the muted purples of the Lenten Rose. Acknowledge that beauty can be small, sturdy, and a little bit muddy.
  • Center Your Purpose: Like those Hellebores lifting their heads, we often carry the “weight of the world” in our necks. Take five seconds to look up at the trees where the birds are preparing to build. Let your gaze go wide and your chin rise.
  • The “Grounding” Scent: If you can reach a flower, a patch of thawed earth, or an open window, take one deep breath. It is the smell of transition. As we often say: “Nature doesn’t hurry, yet everything is accomplished.”

Why This Matters

The swallow doesn’t return because the weather is easy; it returns because it is time to build. The Lenten Rose doesn’t bloom because the winter is over; it blooms because it has the strength to face the thaw. You are doing the same work. You are winter-hardy. You are allowed to raise your head, take your two minutes, and breathe in the shift.  Now with the ground mostly mud and free of snow I’m preparing for spring…

Support and sanctuary for all touched by long-term illness is found in the small flash of a swallow’s wing and the quiet opening of a flower in the mud.

Tree Swallow
Tree Swallow – A welcome sign of spring’s return.

Ready to breathe in the spring air?

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