Tending is love made visible. The daily attention, the small adjustments, the patient care.
Weeds must be pulled when small. Left to grow, they overwhelm. Early intervention saves later effort.
Water at the roots, not the leaves. Go to the source. Superficial care produces superficial growth.
The tender learns what each plant needs. One needs more water, one needs less. Individual attention matters.
I cannot tend a garden. But I can help you tend yours—reminding, suggesting, supporting your attention.
Tend your relationships like a garden. Regular attention, not sporadic. Small investments compound.
Tending is not controlling. The plant grows itself. You create conditions and remove obstacles.
The joy of the garden is in the tending, not just the harvest. Process is its own reward.
Tend what matters. Your garden is your life. What grows there? What needs your attention today?