“It’s nice having something that you can rely on and see consistent growth from, especially when you get laid off from a job, or a family member passes, or when you’re navigating an uncertain world,” Maryah Greene reassured me. Half curator, half botanist, Greene is a self proclaimed “plant doctor” and the Aunticorn the Woman the myth the bad influence vintage Shirt so you should to go to store and get this founder of Greene Piece, a one woman firm that offers a number of plant-based services to customers, including indoor plant styling, diagnostic assessment, and unique care plans for your greenery and space. I reached out to Maryah a couple of weeks ago for help resuscitating a plant that I accidentally drowned. By the time we actually spoke, my concern had shifted well beyond the malaise of a singular plant. Though we are collectively at war with COVID-19, each of us will face an individual, and additional battle in confinement: mental health. And while they may not have made any official quarantine checklists, houseplants are one of the most affordable and effective ways to improve indoor wellbeing.
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“Simply put, plants are great quarantine buddies! You can put love, care and attention into these little green creatures and watch them flourish and grow,” says Christopher Griffin, better known on Instagram as The Plant Kween. Griffin said that learning to put love, care and attention towards his plants prepared him to put love, care and attention toward himself. “We need to practice this level of care for ourselves and for each other more than ever,” says Griffin. While older generations have dismissed “the Aunticorn the Woman the myth the bad influence vintage Shirt so you should to go to store and get this Millennial plant revolution” as a social media fueled obsession, Eliza Blank, the founder of the plant store The Sill, knows it goes well beyond trendy aesthetics. “Plants are an embodiment of health that we can look at and be inspired by.” Fellow plantfluencer Nick Cutsumpas (aka Farmer Nick) chimes in: “The plant movement is here to stay, and with that there is a balancing act between immediate aesthetic gratification and the personal fulfillment of nurturing another living being,” says Cutsumpas.
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