
When the magnolias bloom,
the world remembers how to soften.
White petals open like quiet forgiveness,
thick with scent and patience,
unhurried by whatever we rushed through.
They bloom after the cold
as if it never owned them,
as if survival didn’t leave marks.
No announcement.
No apology.
Just beauty insisting on itself.
I think about timing then—
how some things wait until they’re ready,
how some hearts don’t open
until the frost finally loosens its grip.
How blooming late
doesn’t mean blooming wrong.
When the magnolias bloom,
I let myself believe in return.
In second chances that don’t explain themselves.
In tenderness strong enough
to come back every year
without asking who stayed to see it.
And for a moment,
everything feels possible again—
not because life is easy,
but because something beautiful
chose to open anyway.