The Small Graces of an Early Tennessee Spring

There are seasons when gratitude feels like something you must search for. And then there are weeks like this one in Middle Tennessee, when it seems to be rising quietly from everywhere.

This morning I stepped out onto the back porch with my coffee, and the air held that particular softness that only comes when winter finally loosens its grip. Not the thick humidity of summer. Not the sharp chill of January. Just that gentle, almost hesitant warmth that says, spring is on its way.

All around the neighborhood the trees are beginning to stir.

The Bradford pear trees are the first to announce the change, bursting into bright white blossoms before their leaves even arrive, like scattered clouds caught in the branches. They are one of the earliest bloomers each year, their flowers appearing suddenly and dramatically across Tennessee landscapes as winter fades.

Drive down almost any road this week and you’ll see them, whole streets dusted with white.

The redbuds are beginning to blush purple along the edges of the woods. The maples are pushing out tiny red buds. And if you look closely, the bare gray limbs that felt so lifeless just a few weeks ago now hold the faintest haze of green.

It is that quiet miracle that happens every year and somehow still surprises me.

And as I sat there this morning, I realized how many things I am grateful for in this particular season of life.

I’m grateful that Lowell is healing well. There is a deep kind of relief that comes when someone you love comes through a medical scare and begins to mend. Healing has a quiet rhythm to it, slower than we wish sometimes, but steady.

I’m grateful for Macon. For his steadiness. For the way he carries things calmly when life gets complicated. For his loyalty, his patience, and that quiet strength that doesn’t make a lot of noise but somehow holds everything together.

I’m grateful for simple days that hold no great drama. Today was one of those, just a good day of shopping, moving through errands without hurry, and the kind of ordinary day that reminds you life doesn’t have to be extraordinary to be good.

I’m grateful for the warmer weather this past week. For windows cracked open. For sunlight lingering a little longer in the evenings. For the way the light falls across the patio furniture that sat unused all winter.

That back porch and patio have become small sanctuaries again. A place for coffee in the morning. A place for quiet conversations in the evening. A place where the birds seem to hold committee meetings in the trees while the neighborhood dogs offer their occasional commentary.

Spring in Middle Tennessee doesn’t arrive all at once. It unfolds. First the light changes. Then the air softens. Then one morning you realize the trees are waking up.

And if you’re paying attention, gratitude seems to bloom right alongside them.

Not because life is perfect. But because grace often arrives in the small, ordinary moments — the ones we might miss if we aren’t looking.

A healing body.
A steady husband.
A warm afternoon.
White blossoms on the roadside.
Coffee on the porch.

Sometimes that is more than enough.


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