Life, Like Cherry Blossoms
There’s a moment in Korea—brief, almost fragile, when the world softens. It doesn’t arrive with fanfare. No announcement. No warning. One morning, you step outside and something has changed. The air feels lighter. The light itself seems gentler, as if it has passed through something delicate before reaching you. And then you see them. Cherry blossoms. They appear almost overnight, clinging to branches that only days before looked bare and tired from winter. Pale pink. Sometimes nearly white. Sometimes deeper, like a blush you weren’t meant to notice. They don’t demand attention. They simply exist —and in doing so, transform everything around them. Walk down a street lined with them and it feels as though you’ve stepped into a different world. Apartment complexes you’ve passed a hundred times take on a quiet elegance. The ordinary becomes cinematic. Even the concrete seems to soften under the weight of petals drifting down like slow, delibera...



