Once upon a time, in a village nestled between a shimmering river and a deep, whispering forest, lived a young woman named Leona. Leona had a peculiar problem. Every time it rained, she felt a deep, unexplainable sadness. The villagers called it the "Rainy Day Blues." They would shrug and say, "The gray sky steals her smile."
As the storm began to soften, a pale sunbeam broke through the clouds. And there, arching across the valley, was a magnificent rainbow—so bright it seemed to hum.
And the rain no longer felt like sadness. It felt like the world watering its own garden—and her heart, at last, learned to bloom in every storm.
Irainature smiled. "You misunderstand the rain, child. You see tears. I see a giver of life. Come. Walk with me."
From that day on, whenever Leona heard the first drops on her roof, she didn’t pull the curtains closed. She opened her window, breathed in the sweet, wet air, and whispered, "Thank you, Irainature."
Leona sighed. "Because the rain makes everything dull. It traps me indoors. It feels like the world is crying."
One afternoon, as dark clouds gathered over the mountains, an old woman with eyes like mossy stones appeared at Leona’s door. Her name was Irainature.
Nature’s moods are not against us. Even the grayest rain carries the seed of green life. Change your perspective, and a storm becomes a song.
"Why do you hide inside when the sky weeps?" Irainature asked, her voice a soft rumble like distant thunder.