There is a particular kind of sadness to a dying office plant.
You know the kind. A fiddle-leaf fig in the corner of a conference room, leaves browning at the edges, soil pulled away from the sides of the pot. A green wall installed during an office renovation three years ago that now features patches of grey where something quietly stopped living. A row of snake plants by the reception desk that nobody waters consistently and everybody walks past without noticing anymore.
You’ve just walked into your office, and the lush greenery immediately softens the space. The plants don’t just decorate; they breathe life into the environment, improving air quality and lifting spirits. But then, as days pass, you notice some leaves yellowing, others wilting. The vibrancy you admired is fading. It’s a quiet frustration, one that many face but few talk about openly. How do you keep these living elements thriving, not just surviving?