There are four times throughout the average year, each correspond to the feelings we human beings feel.
First, we have autumn, the season that represents guilt. We begin to remember things we’ve done throughout the year, as an important holiday is coming. The noticeable drop in temperature makes us realize what we’ve done, and what is to come.
Secondly, we have winter; cold and dark, rather depressing really, with the harsh chill of the winter air. That is what this season symbolizes; sorrow and depression, we are simply letting out the guilt we’ve been hiding within ourselves throughout the year.
Next we have spring. This is the season where we begin to feel better about ourselves, as we know warmth is coming, which we generally relate to happiness and safety. With a new year just starting, we have a “clean mind” of sorts, one that is no longer full of our grief and sorrows.
Finally, we have summer. Summer is the time of year that we relate to good memories and fun. At this point of the year, we still don’t have anything to be sorry about, but it’s also the time of year where we realize autumn is arriving, meaning we will begin to “receive” sorrows. So, to compensate for this, we try to live our lives to the fullest during the summer, not caring about a thing in the world, which ultimately leads up to our sorrows, but we never learn this, for if we did, we would never be happy.