Spring in Japan is also the season for farewells and new encounters due to graduation, admission, employment, etc. Cherry blossoms are always a part of celebrating the beginning of a new year, but I've read somewhere that for people overseas, the sight of falling cherry blossom petals suggests the end and is viewed negatively. It is true that the sight of scattering may be viewed as negative or ephemeral, but this may be a feeling unique to the Japanese people who live in this land. Although it is a symbol of the long-awaited spring after a long winter, the flowering period is very short, and this work was created by linking the "hope and transience'' of cherry blossoms with the once-in-a-lifetime "encounters and partings.''
May your once-in-a-lifetime experience be wonderful.