first robin of spring

First Robin of Spring: What Early Signs Teach Us About Growth

March 04, 20266 min read

Here's the thing about growing up in Southeast Michigan: winter settles in and stays awhile.

It's cold and it's gray. It feels endless. And then one day, you're standing outside in 37-degree weather and you spot it - a little flash of red perched on a bare branch.

A robin. The first robin of spring!

As a kid, I didn't need to know anything about migration patterns or soil temperature. I just knew that feeling. The one that rises up from somewhere deep inside. Spring was coming.

Except it wasn't; not really and not yet.

There were still weeks of cold ahead. Snow could still fall. The trees were still bare. But something had started. That robin wasn't the finish line. It was the first quiet signal that things were shifting.

And that matters more than you might think.

Table of Contents

  • What Early Signs of Spring Really Mean

  • How This Connects to Creative Growth

  • Why We Often Say "I'm Not Creative"

  • Small Steps That Signal Change

  • Patience Is Part of the Process

  • FAQs About Early Signs and Creativity

  • Final Thoughts

What Early Signs of Spring Really Mean

Robins don't show up just because the calendar says March. They appear when the ground softens just enough for earthworms to surface. When surviving outside becomes possible again. When conditions quietly shift in ways we can't quite see yet.

By the time you spot the robin, a whole lot has already been happening underground.

We tend to want change to feel big and obvious and dramatic. But most real growth is subtle. It's a slightly longer stretch of daylight. A gentle thaw that doesn't even look like much yet. A small shift that seems almost too insignificant to count.

The robin doesn't promise that everything is fixed. It just shows that something is in motion.

And honestly? That's enough.

first-robin-of-spring

How This Connects to Creative Growth

Creativity works in much the same way.

You know those moments when you suddenly feel like cleaning your desk? Or reorganizing your art supplies? Or finally clicking on that watercolor tutorial you bookmarked months ago?

That's your robin.

That little urge isn't you transforming overnight. It's an early signal. A quiet beginning. Creative growth almost never arrives fully formed. It starts with something small, like:

A random idea. A single sketch. Fifteen minutes with paint. One curious question.

These small moments aren't nothing. They're the ”first robin of spring”. They don't promise a masterpiece tomorrow, but they do signal that something is moving.

Why We Often Say "I'm Not Creative"

Here's a question worth considering: when did you decide you weren't creative?

Most people can actually trace it back, if they think about it. It usually didn't happen recently. It happened years ago, often when you were young and not really equipped to question it.

Maybe someone compared your drawing to another child's. Maybe an art teacher corrected you in a way that felt less like guidance and more like judgment. Maybe creativity just wasn't emphasized in your home, so you quietly filed it under "not for me." And besides, weren't artist destined to "starve?"

And here's what happens: that belief just stays. Long after the moment that caused it is forgotten. Long after the conditions have changed.

But beliefs aren't facts. They're stories we've repeated so often they started to feel true.

The first robin of your creative life might simply be the moment you decide to question that story. To try something small. To pick up a brush or a pencil and see what happens - without old judgments hanging over you.

You might genuinely surprise yourself. Not because you suddenly became creative, but because it turns out you always were.

Small Steps That Signal Change

If you've been waiting to feel "ready," consider this your sign.

You don't need perfect conditions. You don't need a fancy studio or expensive supplies or the ideal moment.

You just need to take one small step. Here are a few gentle ways to begin:

  • Try one short watercolor session - 10 to 15 minutes is plenty.

  • Use just three colors. Fewer choices mean less overwhelm and more actual creating.

  • Paint something simple - a robin silhouette, a bare branch, an abstract shape.

  • Focus on the process, not the result. The robin's job isn't to bring summer single-handedly. Its job is just to show up.

Think of these as early signs. Not the final bloom. You're not expected to leap straight into spring. You just take one step toward it.

Patience Is Part of the Process

After you spot the first robin, winter doesn't immediately leave. There are still cold mornings. Muddy yards. Maybe one last snow.

But something feels different now. You've seen the sign. You know something is happening, even if you can't see all of it yet.

Creativity works the same way, and this is where many people stumble. We try something once, don't immediately produce something impressive, and conclude we were right all along - we're just not creative. We quit before the real shift can happen.

Real growth doesn't work on our timeline. It starts small. Then it builds. Then one day you realize you've been creating consistently for weeks, and it stopped feeling hard and started feeling like just something you do.

That's spring. And it started with one quiet robin moment.

FAQs About Early Signs and Creativity

What does the first robin of spring symbolize?
Early signs of change. Not the end of winter, but the beginning of a shift.

Do robins really return in early March?
In Southeast Michigan, many start appearing in late February or early March, when temperatures reach the high 30s and the ground begins to soften.

How does this relate to creativity?
Creative growth almost always begins with small signals - a curious idea, a brief experiment, or simply the willingness to try again. Those little moments matter more than they appear to.

What if I still feel stuck?
Feeling stuck doesn't mean nothing is happening. Sometimes growth occurs beneath the surface before it becomes visible. Give yourself grace and one low-pressure creative experiment.

How do I start creating again?
Keep it simple. One small project, a few colors, no pressure to impress anyone. Just show up and let that be enough.

Final Thoughts

The first robin of spring doesn't arrive announcing that everything is magically warm and wonderful now.

It just shows up - a little early, a little brave, a bit of red against all that gray - and says quietly, "Something is starting."

If you've been waiting for a sign to begin again - creatively, or in any part of your life that feels stuck - consider this yours.

You don't have to arrive in full bloom. You don't have to be ready. You just have to take one small step in the direction of spring.

It has a way of catching up.


If you'd like to paint your own robin scene, the full tutorial is available on YouTube:

And if you're not yet receiving The Creative Heart Journal in your inbox every Friday, I'd love for you to join us - it's free, seasonal, and designed to help you slow down just a little. You can sign up at creativewannabes.com/sign-up, and you'll receive my Whimsical Bird Trio watercolor starter pack immediately as a welcome gift.

If you'd like to join a welcoming, non-judgmental beginner community of women learning to paint with watercolors, you can join us here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/createwithmissusmidlife


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