🌟 경이
봄이 벚나무에게 하는 것을 당신과 함께 하고 싶어요, 모든 꽃봉오리에서 경이를 깨우는 것을요
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Bibiduck healing duck illustration

봄처럼 서로에게 경이를 깨워주는 관계가 아름답사옵니다

There are some words that don't just speak to you — they bloom inside you. Pablo Neruda's line, "I want to do with you what spring does with the cherry trees," is exactly that kind of language. It doesn't shout or demand. It simply arrives, like the first warm breeze after a long winter, and something inside you quietly opens. Neruda is describing a love so gentle and so powerful that it awakens the most hidden, beautiful parts of another person — the way spring coaxes a cherry tree into an explosion of soft pink blossoms it didn't even know it was capable of.

Think about what spring actually does to a cherry tree. It doesn't force anything. It doesn't rush or push. It simply creates the right conditions — warmth, light, tenderness — and the tree responds by becoming the most radiant version of itself. That's the kind of love Neruda is writing about. Not love that controls or possesses, but love that nurtures and reveals. Love that says, "I see something extraordinary in you, and I want to help it come alive."

BibiDuck thinks about this often, waddling through the world and watching the way certain people light up around those who truly see them. Imagine a young woman who has always kept her paintings hidden in a drawer, convinced they weren't good enough for anyone's eyes. Then someone comes along — a friend, a partner, a mentor — who asks to see them with genuine curiosity and wonder. Suddenly, she's painting again. Bigger. Bolder. The canvases multiply. That person didn't create her gift. They were simply her spring. They created the warmth that let her blossom.

This quote also invites us to reflect on how we show up for the people we love. It's easy to love someone by staying close, by being loyal, by being there in hard times. But Neruda is pointing to something even more tender — the act of actively drawing out someone's wonder. Of asking questions that make them think. Of celebrating the small, strange, beautiful things that make them uniquely themselves. Of being the kind of presence that makes the people around you feel more alive, more curious, more capable of blooming.

So here is a gentle nudge from one small duck with a big heart: think of someone in your life who makes you feel like a cherry tree in spring. Tell them. And then ask yourself — whose spring are you? Who in your life is waiting, quietly, for a little warmth and wonder to help them bloom? You might be closer to being someone's season of awakening than you ever imagined.

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