Most of the time, weather remains in the background.
It is there without needing to be considered. Light, air, temperature, the movement of clouds—all part of the day without standing apart from it.
Then, sometimes, it becomes more noticeable.
A change in brightness. A shift in the air. Rain heard more clearly than before.
Nothing dramatic needs to happen.
Even a familiar kind of weather can seem briefly more present than usual.
The feeling does not always come from looking upward or stepping outside.
It can begin indoors, through a window, or while moving through an ordinary task when the condition of the day suddenly feels closer.
For a moment, the weather is not just surrounding the scene.
It becomes part of what is being noticed inside it.
Then attention shifts again, and the day continues without holding onto it.