Rooted and Uprooted: What Trees Teach Us About Human Change

There’s a skinny Beech tree about 10 feet tall outside my window that I hastily transplanted last night. I dug it up from a shaded patch of woods surrounded by 70 foot mature Maple and Oak trees. It was at my property that’s 15 minutes away from my house.

My husband got Persimmon tree starters from a neighbor and he wanted to plant a grove at the property. I saw the established Beech tree and knew I had to have it in our backyard. We built a house two years ago and there are no mature trees, which hurts my nature-loving heart.

My dad worked in the veneer industry and I spent my life observing trees. It’s my safe place, my home. He taught me that the root ball is the most important part of digging up a tree if you want it to survive. He taught me that you should dig up a new tree with a diameter of at least three to five feet in order to preserve the root ball. Well, the Spring sun was getting ready to set in an hour and my husband wanted to test out his new boomerang that his sister brought home from Australia.

Since the tree cost nothing and we have hundreds of them, I told him to dig it up quickly, so we only dug a one to two foot root ball. My dad was probably rolling over in his grave.

We got on the four wheeler hauling our ten foot tree and threw it in the pond so the roots didn’t dry out until we were ready to leave after his failed attempts at getting the boomerang to circle back.

We rushed home and immediately dug the hole. It was pure clay, which isn’t good. We dug it up from a sandy, loamy soil. Tree roots need air pockets to survive. I pushed it into the ground and smothered it in the clay, watering it with a rooting hormone. So much of me feels like it won’t take, but I will try everything to get it to survive because if I love something enough it will work out, right?

It looks beautiful in the morning light, but the leaves look droopy upon closer inspection. My heart sunk. That image won’t leave me because I’ve felt like that tree—cut off from what was familiar, stunned by the cold air of change, and unsure whether I’d survive the move.

Transplanting, whether of trees or of people, isn’t just a moment. It’s a season. One full of pain, patience, and quiet becoming.

As trees prepare for transplant, change begins long before the move. A tree must be pruned and roots partially loosened. The timing must be right—the soil prepared. You don’t just rip something out of the ground and expect it to thrive.

We’re the same. We know when something no longer fits—a relationship, a job, a version of ourselves—but leaving takes more than awareness. It takes readiness. When we rush, we tear something vital. When we delay too long, we risk shrinking in place. The body knows when it’s time and learning to listen is part of the work.

Even in perfect conditions, a tree experiences shock because of the root disturbance. It stops absorbing nutrients. It drops leaves. From the outside, it looks like it’s dying.

So do we.

When we leave the known behind, even for something better, we often fall apart before we rebuild. There’s grief, guilt, and that whisper of, “Maybe I made a mistake.” But that isn’t failure. It’s a natural part of the process. The old roots have been severed. The new ones aren’t established yet. It’s okay to feel lost in between.

Replanting requires the right soil. Where the tree lands matters. It needs sunlight, good drainage, and protection from wind. Without the right conditions, the transplant won’t take. I made all of those mistakes with my new Beech tree because I had no time or patience. I thought I could wing it on a hope and a prayer.

Humans need nourishing environments, too. Safe people. Quiet mornings. Gentle structure. You don’t owe anyone speed. You don’t need to prove your worth by blooming fast. Healing asks for presence, not performance.

Adaptation happens underground. For a while, nothing seems to happen. The branches stay bare. The growth is invisible. But underground, the roots are reaching, rebuilding, and testing the new soil.

We live this too. We think we’re stuck, but really we’re re-rooting. What looks like stillness is often transformation in disguise.

Eventually, if conditions are right, the tree adapts and thrives in it’s new location. The roots grow deeper. The trunk grows stronger. The stress of the move becomes a memory as the bloom returns.

And maybe, in time, you will feel that too—that this new place was not just an escape, but an arrival. You will feel that you are not just surviving, but thriving and that you’re not who you were before the transplant happened.

If you’re in a season of uprooting, know this: there is nothing wrong with you. This discomfort is not a mistake. It’s your system adjusting. Keep resting. Keep reaching. Let the roots take hold.

The bloom will come.

The Peace Lily and the Power of Stillness

A Lesson in Quiet Resilience

If you’ve ever been to a funeral, you know exactly what a Peace Lily is. It represents the rebirth of the departed soul from the physical world to a more peaceful place. They’re striking with the dark green leaves and bright white blooms. I have been to many houses that have that single houseplant and they speak reverently about who passed and how they’ll never get rid of it or let it die.

I love Peace Lilies. They’re upfront about their needs. They love bright, but indirect, light. It throws a tantrum when it’s distressed by dramatically drooping its leaves. They reward us with graceful white blooms when we care for them just so. It’s imperative to create a relationship with this plant. They’re like an easy baby; as long as you follow a schedule and give it what it asks for, it’s happy.

I think this plant is a wise teacher. It draws parallels from the plant world and our lives. It reminds us that humans need gentle environments, emotional attunement, and patience in personal growth too.

Sensitivity isn’t a weakness. The Peace Lily thrives in soft light and wilts when neglected, much like sensitive people who need mindful surroundings to flourish. Instead of labeling sensitivity as fragility, this plant shows us it’s a strength that demands deeper care and understanding.

A prominent lesson is that signs are subtle, but honest. A peace lily doesn’t scream when it needs water—it droops. Humans, too, often give quiet signs of burnout, sadness, or stress. Learning to recognize these subtle cues in ourselves and others is a practice in empathy and emotional intelligence.

I’m a natural empath and people pleaser. I can be the Giving Tree. However, I have learned my limits. I used to burn out by giving so much of myself to others that I didn’t have anything left. I get a short fuse when I’m emotionally depleted. I start resenting people and start to isolate. It took a long time for me to look inside of myself and set boundaries. It felt awkward telling people no and I was ridden with guilt for a couple years. However, I have noticed that I’m much happier now that I learned to strike balance.

I recognized that blooming takes time. The white bloom doesn’t appear overnight. It comes only with sustained attention and the right conditions. Just like healing, creativity, or growth—it can’t be forced. You can’t rush a Peace Lily into flowering, nor can you rush your own transformation.

I started to understand that I need to take care of myself first to be useful to others. If I’m operating from a place of obligation, it doesn’t feel good to me or the people I love. When I’m attending to my needs, I naturally want to help others bloom. I feel a lightness about me when the conditions are right. I can’t operate at full capacity 24/7. Just like plants need darkness to recharge, I do too.

The peace lily is a cleanser of air and calmer of spaces. Peace Lilies are natural air purifiers. They silently cleanse what’s unseen—just like how certain people calm rooms with their presence, or how stillness itself can detoxify the chaos in our lives.

In a world that prizes speed, noise, and toughness, the Peace Lily invites us to embrace softness, slowness, and care. It reminds us that peace isn’t passive—it’s a powerful, living thing that must be nurtured.

Lavender Remedies for the Soul

I was hiding in the cold garage, berating myself for smoking. It’s a naughty habit that I only succumb to in times of immense stress. I was hurling the most vile insults at myself. I felt like I couldn’t breathe as the panic started to hit my chest. The plumes of smoke became too dense to find oxygen.

Even though I’m allergic to the sun, I ran outside unprotected. I needed fresh air to level my head out ASAP. I walked to my dinky garden, which never got finished since I was in the throes of figuring out my blistering skin disease this summer. There were only a few wildflowers that were strong enough to survive complete neglect and clay soil that had never been amended. I couldn’t help but be embarrassed of it. It was another reminder of my failures.

I hung my head low in defeat. A bit of royal purple caught my eye. It was the last remnants of the sugary sweet butterfly bush flowers and lavender. They were releasing a mesmerizing scent. I stopped and picked the mostly dead flowers to enjoy before the freeze.

The scent soothed my angry heart.

As I took deep breaths of nature’s perfume in, the negative self-talk was pushed out.

My mind stopped racing. I was able to feel the warm Fall breeze blowing my freshly cut hair. I noticed how comfortable the river rock wall was beneath my bum. I felt the strong Autumn rays connecting with my born-again virgin skin. I saw my beautiful dog rolling in the green grass to scratch his back, bringing a smile to my lips.

Each time I put my nose in my hands, which were cupping the fragrant blooms, my mood improved. My internal dialogue ceased and nature commanded my full attention.

All I thought about was lavender, honey, green grass, and clear blue skies.

I filled my lungs with the cleanest air.

It felt like Nature was giving me CPR.

I realized that whatever state I’m in, I’m beautiful and whole. I cycle just like plants do.

The nearly rotting flowers were ugly, but their scent made up for their appearance. The end of October is not their time to shine. It’s a time of preparation. The plants know to let their exposed parts die off because they won’t survive the cold, harsh elements. They focus on retaining sugar in their roots to act as an anti-freeze so they can have the energy to withstand the Winter and be ready to bloom in Spring.

Unlike humans, plants trust their instincts. They have observed their environment and know which steps to take. They have patience and resilience. They accept imposed limitations and give it their best shot, no matter what.