Anymore spring just hits me to my core.
Every bit of it.
Watching the deliberate greening of the woods behind our backyard feels like having a front-row seat as a miracle unfolds in slow motion.
How it starts from the bottom and patiently works its way all the way up to the tops of the trees.

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Thursday after work my son and I rode over to the high school track together.
Checking the weather I mentioned to him the rains on the way.
He asked how long we would go if it started raining.
I told him I imagine the question will answer itself.
On Thursdays a youth fitness program meets at the track. A few adults break the kids into groups, from teenagers down to elementary schoolers, and run them through exercises and drills.
Was barely a lap in when it started raining.
The rain picked up speed quicker than me, and soon was coming down pretty good. No thunder or anything, just a hard, heavy shower.
I checked to see what the coaches would do with the kids. Figured I’d follow their lead. I assume they know more than me.
It was raining so hard, I fully expected them to call it … maybe take the kids inside the school if not cancel out of an abundance of caution.
But they didn’t.
They proceeded to line ‘em up and on-your-marks’d ‘em.
Made me smile while my nose dripped.
I was glad they decided to stay.
The rain kept up the whole time we were there, but the heavy part only lasted a few minutes.
For the remainder … it was just a quintessential Southwestern Pennsylvania spring shower.
By which I mean … the question answered itself.
I was glad for the kids … that they got to experience the gift of running in the rain.
The kid in me was grateful to be reminded, too.
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Yesterday after work I went back to the track for some easy loops at the end of a long week.
My running shoes were still soaked from the night before.
It was pushing 7 p.m. on a Friday … and I was the only one there.
Only human, I mean.
The track sits below the school, so you walk down a hill to get to it.
On the grassy slope by the entrance, a robin was posted up … practicing her signature tune.
Robins are so common around here, sometimes I forget how beautifully they sing.
You catch one by herself, though, and God pulls up a chair.
Her song cut the still air so clear and crisp.
Every time I circled back to where she was practicing, I slowed down and gushed compliments.
It was like being in the front row of an empty amphitheater while the evening’s soprano was dry-running her arias.
If I’da had flowers, I’da laid ‘em at her feet.
All by herself singing a song she’s sung hundreds of times and singing it new for the first time again.
By which I mean … spring.