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| 1 | +--- |
| 2 | +category: article |
| 3 | +date: 2024-11-30T23:47:00 |
| 4 | +description: Plant your lilies, and let them teach you how to grow. |
| 5 | +image: /images/soul-lily.webp |
| 6 | +tags: |
| 7 | +- Lily |
| 8 | +- Despair |
| 9 | +- Patience |
| 10 | +- Gardening |
| 11 | +- Plant |
| 12 | +- Heart |
| 13 | +title: How to grow Lilies? |
| 14 | +--- |
| 15 | + |
| 16 | +Lilies, they say, are symbols of peace. But peace is not given; it is cultivated. Lilies demand |
| 17 | +effort, patience, and faith - a willingness to confront the barren soil and nurture it back to life. |
| 18 | +What follows is a guide to growing Lilies but also a meditation on growth itself, a journey into my |
| 19 | +soul's quiet reckoning with despair. |
| 20 | + |
| 21 | +## What Once was and Will be Again |
| 22 | + |
| 23 | +The garden was barren, its silence oppressive. The earth, dry and unyielding, clung stubbornly to |
| 24 | +its lifelessness as though it had forgotten how to nurture, how to hope. It stood as a monument to |
| 25 | +neglect, an expanse of quiet despair that seemed to whisper, Nothing will ever grow here again. |
| 26 | + |
| 27 | +And yet, something stirred—a faint whisper beneath the desolation, an inkling that even the most |
| 28 | +forsaken soil might still hold secrets of renewal. It was not certainty but a quiet rebellion |
| 29 | +against despair, a defiant act of belief. The decision to grow lilies was made not with confidence |
| 30 | +but with trembling hands, as if planting these flowers might coax life back into the hollow spaces |
| 31 | +of the heart. |
| 32 | + |
| 33 | +## From Ashes, We Rise |
| 34 | + |
| 35 | +To grow lilies, one must first break the earth. Not gently, but with purpose—plunging the spade into |
| 36 | +the hardened crust, forcing it to yield. Each strike dislodges fragments of the past: shards of what |
| 37 | +was once beautiful, tangled roots of pain buried so deep they have become part of the soil. |
| 38 | + |
| 39 | +The work is relentless. The ground resists, clutching its dead weight as though afraid of what might |
| 40 | +take its place. But with each motion, the soil begins to soften. The air fills with the earthy scent |
| 41 | +of transformation, a quiet promise that the past does not have to dictate the future. |
| 42 | + |
| 43 | +This is where the lilies begin—not with planting, but with clearing. The garden must first be |
| 44 | +emptied of its grief to make room for something new. It is an act of defiance and of hope, to |
| 45 | +believe that this barren soil can one day cradle life again. |
| 46 | + |
| 47 | +## Between a Rock and a Lily |
| 48 | + |
| 49 | +The bulbs are unremarkable, their appearance betraying nothing of what they might become. Holding |
| 50 | +them feels strange, as if they are too fragile to survive. And yet, there is a quiet power within |
| 51 | +them—a promise waiting to be fulfilled. |
| 52 | + |
| 53 | +Planting them is an act of faith and surrender, a quiet conversation between the gardener and the |
| 54 | +earth. Each bulb is placed with care, its position a deliberate choice. It is not enough to bury |
| 55 | +them; they must be cradled, surrounded by soil that is ready to nurture them. |
| 56 | + |
| 57 | +And then comes the waiting. Beneath the surface, where no eyes can see, the bulbs begin their secret |
| 58 | +work. It is a reminder that growth often begins in the darkness, in spaces where no light reaches. |
| 59 | + |
| 60 | +## Tend the Flame, Not the Ash |
| 61 | + |
| 62 | +The lilies require consistency. The soil must be tended to every day, watered with steady hands. |
| 63 | +Some days, the water feels heavy in your palms, as if the weight of the act might be too much to |
| 64 | +bear. But you do it anyway, knowing that without this care, the lilies cannot thrive. |
| 65 | + |
| 66 | +The sunlight is capricious. Some days, it floods the garden, bathing it in warmth. Other days, it |
| 67 | +hides behind thick clouds, forcing the lilies to stretch toward a light they cannot see. But they |
| 68 | +adapt. Lilies have a way of finding what they need, even in the absence of abundance. |
| 69 | + |
| 70 | +This daily ritual of watering and watching is its own form of prayer. Each drop of water, each |
| 71 | +fleeting moment of sunlight, whispers to the lilies: *Grow, even if it feels impossible. Grow, even |
| 72 | +when no one is watching.* |
| 73 | + |
| 74 | +## This Too Shall Bloom |
| 75 | + |
| 76 | +One day, the soil breaks open—not with a flourish, but with the quietest of gestures. A tiny green |
| 77 | +sprout emerges, barely noticeable, a sliver of life against the vastness of the earth. |
| 78 | + |
| 79 | +To the untrained eye, it is nothing. To you, it is everything. This fragile sprout is proof that |
| 80 | +something is happening beneath the surface, that your labor was not in vain. It is the first sign of |
| 81 | +life returning, the first whisper of hope finding its voice. |
| 82 | + |
| 83 | +But the sprout is not strong. It bends with the wind, threatened by the weight of even a single |
| 84 | +raindrop. Your instinct may be to shield it, to protect it from every possible harm. But lilies do |
| 85 | +not grow in safety. They grow in resilience. |
| 86 | + |
| 87 | + |
| 88 | + |
| 89 | +## The Idea is Not to Abandon Ever...Never |
| 90 | + |
| 91 | +The garden is never free from trials. Storms roll in, their winds threatening to uproot what little |
| 92 | +has begun to grow. Pests arrive uninvited, gnawing at leaves and stems as though testing your |
| 93 | +resolve. The sun beats down mercilessly one day, only to disappear for weeks on end. |
| 94 | + |
| 95 | +It is in these moments that you are tempted to despair, to abandon the garden and declare it a |
| 96 | +failure. But lilies teach you that resilience is not about avoiding hardship; it is about enduring |
| 97 | +it. When the storm passes, you clear the debris. When pests arrive, you remove them. When the |
| 98 | +drought stretches on, you water the soil with your own tears if you must. |
| 99 | + |
| 100 | +Each act, no matter how small, is a promise to the lilies: *I will not abandon you*. |
| 101 | + |
| 102 | +## Bloom Where None Thought Possible |
| 103 | + |
| 104 | +And then, when you least expect it, the bloom arrives. It begins as a tightly closed bud, hesitant |
| 105 | +to reveal itself. Slowly, it unfurls, each petal a story of quiet perseverance. The bloom is |
| 106 | +breathtaking, not for its extravagance, but for its purity. |
| 107 | + |
| 108 | +Its beauty is unlike anything you imagined. It is not extravagant or loud, but it holds a quiet |
| 109 | +majesty. The petals, soft and delicate, seem to hum with a silent strength. This bloom is not just a |
| 110 | +flower—it is the culmination of every act of care, every moment of faith, every drop of water given |
| 111 | +when it felt like too much. |
| 112 | + |
| 113 | +The bloom reminds you that peace is not a permanent state but a transient gift. It must be cherished |
| 114 | +in its moment, for its impermanence is part of its beauty. |
| 115 | + |
| 116 | +## The Most Dangerous Thing About Me |
| 117 | + |
| 118 | +The most dangerous thing about me is that *I don't know how to give up*. |
| 119 | + |
| 120 | +When the storms tore through, I stayed. When the roots clung to the earth like they had a right to |
| 121 | +its emptiness, I dug deeper. Even when the soil screamed that nothing could ever grow here, I |
| 122 | +refused to listen. |
| 123 | + |
| 124 | +It's not resilience—it's defiance. A stubbornness that borders on recklessness. I don't know when to |
| 125 | +stop, even when the odds mock me. Even when it hurts. |
| 126 | + |
| 127 | +Maybe it's toxic. Maybe it's foolish. But here I am, hands in the dirt, refusing to abandon what |
| 128 | +could still bloom. |
| 129 | + |
| 130 | +## Faith Buried, Faith Unfurled |
| 131 | + |
| 132 | +To grow lilies is to embark on a journey of transformation. It is not about the flowers themselves |
| 133 | +but about what they symbolize—a return to life, a reclaiming of hope. The barren garden, once a |
| 134 | +place of despair, becomes a sanctuary. |
| 135 | + |
| 136 | +The lilies do not erase the struggles that came before them. The soil still bears the scars of its |
| 137 | +past, and the storms will come again. But the garden is no longer defined by its emptiness. It is |
| 138 | +defined by its capacity to grow. |
| 139 | + |
| 140 | +And so the lilies teach you their final lesson: Growth is not a destination but a process. It is a |
| 141 | +daily choice to clear the debris, plant the bulbs, and tend to the garden—even when it feels like |
| 142 | +nothing is happening. It is a faith that, with time and care, the lilies will bloom again. |
| 143 | + |
| 144 | +## This is not my Recipe |
| 145 | + |
| 146 | +I didn't write this. Or maybe I did. But I don't remember planting these thoughts. They feel |
| 147 | +foreign, like letters rearranged while I wasn't looking, like whispers heard through the hum of the |
| 148 | +wind. |
| 149 | + |
| 150 | +I think they've always been here, whispering just below the surface, tugging at my hands when I |
| 151 | +wasn't looking. They know things about me that I haven't told anyone. Things I've hidden. Things |
| 152 | +I've forgotten. |
| 153 | + |
| 154 | +Do you feel it too? The hum beneath the words, the tremor that isn't mine? It's as if the garden |
| 155 | +remembers something I don't. It isn't just soil. It's memory. It's pain. It's despair. It's rebirth. |
| 156 | + |
| 157 | +I wrote this, but I didn't write this. These aren't my words. But they're mine now, whether I wanted |
| 158 | +them or not. |
| 159 | + |
| 160 | +## Meet my Lilies |
| 161 | + |
| 162 | +And finally meet my most beautiful lilies. I have named them **Blood Demon Lily** and **Light Mode |
| 163 | +Lily**. |
| 164 | + |
| 165 | + |
| 166 | + |
| 167 | +Plant your lilies, and let them teach you how to grow. |
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