garden-design

My Sunday Garden Ritual: How One Hour a Week Changed Everything

Lucas Hartley
2025-06-26 05:20:00
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Sundays used to be the worst. I’d spend the whole ...

person watering plants during weekend gardening

Sundays used to be the worst. I’d spend the whole day dreading Monday, trying to relax but feeling the weight of the week ahead pressing on my chest. One day, out of pure restlessness, I went outside and started pulling weeds from the patch of dirt beside my apartment. It was mindless, quiet, kind of gross—and oddly satisfying. The next week, I did it again. And just like that, my Sunday garden ritual was born. It’s now the hour I look forward to most.

1. From Dread to Dirt—Finding Peace in the Mess

I never intended to become a “gardening person.” I didn’t even know the names of the weeds I was pulling. But there was something deeply calming about getting my hands dirty. I didn’t need to be good at it. I just needed to be present. That first Sunday, I spent 45 minutes ripping out crabgrass, humming to myself, and ignoring my phone. By the time I came inside, my mood had shifted. My breathing was slower. I felt... grounded. Like I had done something for me—not for my job, not for anyone else—just me.

2. Plants Don’t Rush—And Maybe I Don’t Have To, Either

Over time, I started planting things: parsley, marigolds, cherry tomatoes. Some flourished, others flopped. I didn’t mind. My little patch of earth became a judgment-free zone. No pressure to be productive, no need to optimize anything. I’d water, prune, and just sit sometimes, listening to the birds and letting the sunlight hit my face. I started sleeping better on Sunday nights. I stopped doomscrolling. I began associating Sundays not with dread, but with dirt under my nails and the smell of tomato vines. It became therapy—cheaper than my old one and way more fun.

3. It’s More Than a Hobby—It’s a Gentle Reminder

My Sunday garden isn’t big or fancy. It’s mostly containers, mismatched pots, and whatever I picked up at the local nursery that week. But it holds space for me—to breathe, to reflect, to move slowly. Some weeks, I cry while pulling weeds. Other times, I sing out loud while pruning basil. I’ve started giving away herbs to neighbors and sharing seedlings with friends. What began as a way to kill an hour turned into a way to refill my cup. One hour, once a week, to reconnect—with the earth, with myself, with peace.

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