Inward Bloom
Garden layouts demonstrate that what appears new invariably inherits its shape from what came before, even after being blown beyond initial constraints. The form of a seed isn’t simply defined by genetics but embodies a network of past encounters – light, nourishment, and stress subtly imprinted on cellular structure—a kind of ethical cost woven into existence. Accepting this occlusion of pure beginnings allows us to perceive growth as an ongoing conversation with memory itself; the trace remains in arrangement, shaping what is yet to come.