This post is from a suggested group
even stone can bloom
in my physical geography class the other day, we learned about root wedging.
it was one of those slower lessons, the kind where the classroom feels heavy with silence. everyone was half-listening, half-daydreaming, heads resting on hands, pens tapping lazily on desks. the kind of quiet where you can hear the breeze brushing against the windows, almost louder than the teacher’s voice.
we were going over types of erosion, and honestly? it didn’t seem like anything special. just another list of natural processes meant to break things down: water carving valleys, wind shaping rocks, ice expanding in cracks. it all felt kind of… lifeless. like a chapter you read just to pass the test.
but then he brought up root wedging; when a tiny seed finds a crack in stone, takes root, and starts to grow. over time, the roots get stronger and thicker, pushing against the rock until it…

root wedging reminds us that growth often starts in the most unexpected, hidden places; especially within ourselves. just like roots find their way into cracks in stone, healing can begin in the parts of us we’ve ignored, buried, or believed were too damaged. it shows that even when we feel hardened or closed off, we’re still capable of change, softness, and bloom. mental health isn’t about being flawless, it’s about letting something beautiful grow in the places we never thought deserved light.