I've been especially resonating in recent days with one of those songs in particular -- "Rubberband Man" by the Spinners. The song is actually about a novelty musician, but it's the elasticity I've been feeling lately, stretching in one direction only to be boinged back in the opposite one.
We are, I'll readily admit, still firmly within the embrace of winter. Having begun in earnest some time in late November, our last average freeze date is April 26. Sitting here in early March, we still have several weeks to go. But weather is a mercurial phenomenon, especially in these climatically challenged days. This winter we have gone from 50-degrees above zero to double-digits below overnight. We've had no snow, only to be buried beneath blankets of it several days running. It's been hard to know what to expect.

And then yesterday it snowed.
All day.
The temperature, though colder than prior days, was yet tolerable; but having stretched our way forward into spring, we have rubberbanded back into the throws of winter with gloved hands and coats retrieved.
Looking at the forecast ahead, we will see still more of this slingshotting rhythm -- whipped between the mild and the mess, the beckoning and the forbidding. I am, indeed, the "rubberband man", stretching back and forth between the seasons.
But that is nothing new. I routinely ride that rubberband between hopes and memories, imaginations and recollections, passing through present reality on the way and pausing just long enough to drink in the wonder of what is...
...and to plow a little more fresh ground. It can be a little dizzying, but all in all, it's not a bad trip.