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We tend to assume the way we see time, light, and seasons is the way everyone sees them. But the Earth is a spinning, tilted miracle, and no two places experience it the same way. The person celebrating New Year’s on a beach in Chile is not “out of sync” — they are simply in a different dialogue with the sun.
In the north, winter is often framed as a season of endurance, of holidays bundled against the cold, of darkness that invites introspection. Summer is childhood, freedom, the crescendo of the year. southern and northern hemisphere seasons
But in the south, December means beach trips, Christmas barbecues, and the smell of sunscreen. July means wool socks, early sunsets, and the quiet comfort of soup. Their emotional arc is flipped. Their metaphors are different. We tend to assume the way we see
Maybe that’s a quiet metaphor for everything else. Our truths are tilted too. What feels like a peak for you might be a quiet low for someone else — and that doesn’t make either of you wrong. Just differently angled. In the north, winter is often framed as
The seasons aren't dictated by our calendars or our nostalgia. They are the result of a slow, 23.5-degree tilt — Earth’s quiet rebellion against orbital symmetry. When the Northern Hemisphere leans toward the sun, it receives more direct light: long days, high sun, the wild rush of life. But in that same moment, the Southern Hemisphere is tilted away: shorter days, softer light, winter’s hush.
And then — six months later — the pendulum swings.
We grow up thinking the solstice in June is “the start of summer.” But for nearly half the world, June is the first breath of winter.