Storms in nature actually serve a really valuable purpose; they are nature’s reset button. They cleanse the air, washing dust and pollution from the sky so the morning feels clearer and lighter. They redistribute heat across the planet, carrying energy from the equator toward the poles and quietly stabilizing the climate. They refill rivers and aquifers, turning brittle ground into green promise, and they stir oceans and forests, mixing nutrients, spreading seeds, and pruning weak growth, so stronger life can rise. What feels violent from inside the storm is often the restoration of balance from above, disruption in service of renewal.