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Why Development Often Stirs in Spring

  • Writer: Hannah Macintyre
    Hannah Macintyre
  • 1 day ago
  • 2 min read
Close-up of vibrant green grass with sunlight streaming through, creating a warm and serene atmosphere. Background is softly blurred.

Many people notice that spiritual or personal development seems to shift as spring arrives.

There’s often a subtle restlessness, a renewed curiosity, or a sense that something wants to move — even if nothing specific has changed. This can feel confusing, especially if the winter months felt quiet or slow.

Spring doesn’t cause development, but it often reveals what has been quietly preparing beneath the surface.

Spring Is a Season of Emergence, Not Sudden Change

Spring is often described as a time of new beginnings, but in reality, very little begins in spring.

Most of what emerges has already been forming:

  • roots established in winter

  • rest and consolidation completed

  • internal shifts already underway

The visible change comes last. Development works in much the same way.

Why Things Feel Different After Winter

Winter tends to draw energy inward.

People often:

  • reflect more

  • withdraw slightly

  • feel quieter or less motivated

  • integrate experiences rather than seek new ones

When spring arrives, the outward world becomes lighter, brighter, and more active — and that contrast can make inner changes more noticeable.

It’s not that development suddenly starts. It’s that awareness becomes easier to access.

Sensitivity Often Increases With Light and Movement

Longer days, warmer temperatures, and more movement naturally affect the nervous system.

As energy lifts, people may notice:

  • stronger intuition

  • heightened emotion

  • renewed curiosity

  • a desire to explore or practise again

  • questions resurfacing that felt dormant

This doesn’t mean you need to act on everything you feel. Noticing is enough.

Spring Can Bring Both Excitement and Uncertainty

For some, spring feels hopeful. For others, it can feel unsettling.

Development stirring doesn’t always arrive as clarity. It can show up as:

  • restlessness

  • dissatisfaction

  • gentle discomfort

  • a sense of “something more”

  • uncertainty about next steps

These feelings don’t require immediate answers. They’re signals of readiness, not instructions.

Growth Doesn’t Mean Pushing Forward

One of the common traps at this time of year is mistaking energy for urgency.

Just because things feel lighter doesn’t mean you need to:

  • accelerate development

  • make big decisions

  • add more practices

  • force momentum

Spring supports organic movement, not pressure.

Development Moves in Cycles, Not Straight Lines

Spiritual and personal development isn’t linear.

It moves through:

  • contraction and expansion

  • quiet and activity

  • rest and engagement

Spring is part of that rhythm. It’s a transition, not a destination.

Honouring the cycle matters more than trying to stay permanently “open” or motivated.

What Helps When Development Stirs

If you notice something shifting as spring arrives, gentle responses tend to be most supportive:

  • spend time outdoors

  • notice rather than analyse

  • allow curiosity without commitment

  • return to simple grounding routines

  • let ideas surface without acting on all of them

Development doesn’t need managing — it needs space.

In Summary

Spring often brings a sense of movement because it follows a season of integration.

What stirs now has usually been forming quietly for some time. You don’t need to chase it, define it, or act on it immediately.

Like spring itself, development unfolds best when it’s allowed to emerge naturally.

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Hannah Macintyre is an evidential medium, author and spiritual teacher. Explore Mediumship Matters, online courses, readings and Spirit Social.

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