
Photo: John and Suzanne’s Mom.
My anthurium is growing on me.
Every week, I look forward to Friday, when I can give six ice cubes to the plant my niece and nephew sent when my sister died. An anthurium.
I mean, I really look forward to it!
I know. Sounds like I don’t have much of a life. But I have become quite attached to this plant. I haven’t been able to get the red leaves to grow, but I do love watching the little green shoots unfurl and reach toward the sun. Now, after reading today’s article, I’m thinking maybe I should start talking to this baby.
Stacey Colino of the Washington Post explains. “Plants don’t interrupt when you’re speaking. They don’t argue or ask difficult questions. And regardless of whether they’re actually listening, research has shown them to be a calming presence. It’s no wonder, then, that so many of us talk to ours.
“In a 2022 survey by trees.com, 50 percent of the 1,250 respondents reported talking to their plants and/or trees. When asked why, 65 percent said they believe it helps them grow. The research, however, isn’t definitive about this point. While studies have found that vibrations caused by sound do affect plants, the jury’s still out on whether the human voice offers any specific benefit.
“For many plant owners, though, the science is beside the point. Marquis Matson, co-founder of the blog the Indoor Nursery, says she talks to her plants every day because ‘it feels nice. … I think plants get a sense of community from my talking to them and that keeps them going.’ …
“A study in a 2003 issue of the journal Ultrasonics investigated the effects of classical music and the sounds of birds, insects and water on the growth of Chinese cabbage and cucumber. The conclusion? Both forms of sound exposure increased the vegetables’ growth.
“In a 2015 study published in the International Journal of Integrative Sciences, Innovation and Technology, researchers exposed marigold and chickpea plants to light Indian music as well as to traffic noise: They found that both types of plants grew and developed better — gaining increased height, a greater number of leaves, and a healthier look — after being exposed to the music for four hours per day, but not to the traffic sounds.
“ ‘Plants definitely respond to vibrations in their environment — which can cause plants to grow differently and become more resistant to falling over,’ says Heidi Appel, a professor of environmental sciences at the University of Toledo in Ohio. ‘Those vibrations can come from airborne sounds or insects moving on the plants themselves. And plants will respond differently to tones and music than to silence [but] we don’t know if talking to them makes them grow differently.’”’
“Despite the lack of studies and evidence about the benefits of talking to your plants, there is at least one theoretical perk: ‘If we identify with a living organism that we’re tasked with taking care of, we’re going to take better care of it,’ Appel says. …
“Regardless of whether talking to the plants helps them, does it help us, as human beings? In that same 2022 trees.com survey, 62 percent of the participants who reported chatting up their greenery said they did so because it helped their own mental health. …
“One study in a 2018 issue of the journal HortScience found that transplanting plants reduced mental stress and anxiety in young adults. And regularly spending an hour gardening has been found to improve mood and reduce stress among healthy women, according to a study in a 2022 issue of PLoS One. …
“While there isn’t published research on whether talking to plants is therapeutic for people, there are plausible reasons it might be, experts say. For one thing, it may come to us naturally. ‘As humans, we often speak to what we’re caring for — it’s built in,’ says Patricia Hasbach, a psychotherapist with Northwest EcoTherapy in Eugene, Ore., and author of Grounded: A Guided Journal to Help You Reconnect With the Power of Nature — and Yourself. …
“For another thing, it can be a way of expressing thoughts and feelings out loud, in an effort to make sense of them. ‘I think of talking to plants as a way of talking to ourselves,’ says Kenneth R. Yeager, a social worker and director of the Stress Trauma and Resilience Program at Ohio State University. ‘As we’re talking to our plants, we’re talking to ourselves — and formalizing our thought process.’
“Talking to your plants is also a relatively low-risk proposition. ‘You might not want to do it in front of someone else,’ says Elizabeth Diehl, director of therapeutic horticulture at the Wilmot Botanical Gardens College of Medicine at the University of Florida. However, when you talk to your plants, they are, quite literally, a captive audience. ‘Plants don’t judge,’ Diehl says.”
I like that plants don’t judge or interrupt — and, presumably, never say, “Keep in mind.” But that could also be said of teapots and hubcaps. There is so much more personality to a plant. Check out the Post article, here.
Do you talk to your plants?
Yes! I had a Christmas cactus that wasn’t doing very well at all, and it improved dramatically a couple of days after I talked to it and touched it.
Wow. Gives me chills!
Absolutely! Plants, pets, paintings, inanimate objects, I talk to anything that listens! 😂
LOL. I like that idea.
I not only talk to my plants, I have also given them names. 😉
I’ve thought about doing that, but I’m not there yet. Look how Audrey turned out (“Little Shop of Horrors”).
Guilty of plant talking! Plants love the personal touch of a name, or to be softly blown on to remove some dust. 🙂
Good to know!