Sunflower
and Love-Lies-Bleeding:
by Richard Katz
Both of these plants have been well known in the repertory of FES flower essences for several decades. Yet each time we make an essence or sit with a plant, we try to approach it with "beginner's mind." We want to see and experience anew just how the form, color, growth pattern, and other characteristics of the plant express its essential qualities, what we call the "gesture" of the plant (in the tradition of the natural science of Johann v. Goethe).
Yet, with all its majestic grandeur, the Sunflower is not exempt from the law of gravity. As the disk florets ripen, Sunflower heads bulge with hundreds of seeds, and the top-heavy weight becomes too much for the stalk to bear. In a gesture of surrender, the Sunflower bends with its weight into the bosom of the Earth, bearing its prodigious gift of seeds for the future (and for our bird friends!). Beholding the signature of the Sunflower helps us understand how it speaks as a flower essence to the human soul. The Sunflower essence is a catalyst for developing one's personal identity in relation to a larger spiritual Self. It is helpful for those whose sense of self is weakly developed and cannot shine. As well, the Sunflower balances the insecure ego that tries to be too grand or, literally, "aggrandizing." Sunflower is the picture of the healthy, integrated individuality, with a vertical alignment of soul that is inwardly radiant and self-assured. Yet the realized Sunflower archetype also knows that there is a higher light, a higher collectivity to whom one "bends" in service and sacrifice. This is a teaching of all great spiritual traditions: One's strength of self would become only inflated personality unless aligned with a higher spiritual Self. The personal "I" must meet a greater "I am." While making the Sunflower essence, I was reminded of the poem by Juan Ramón Jiménez, Yo no soy yo ( I am not I ).
![]() The Love-Lies-Bleeding plant, in its gesture of letting go, reminds us of the healing power of spiritual surrender. Describing Sweet Chestnut essence, Dr. Bach emphasized the surrender of one meeting the "dark night of the soul." Love-Lies-Bleeding addresses suffering and pain that has penetrated even more deeply into the psyche and body, often approaching the threshold of death. This is a theme in many spiritual traditions, epitomized in the prayer Christ offered in the garden of Gethsemane: "Not my will, but Thy will be done." By allowing a process of surrender, the soul can experience the reality of a Higher Will working within it. As I contemplated both of these plants, reaching their peak blossom at the same time in late summer, I was impressed by their perfect companionship in the garden. One could sense that each plant had a message that supported the other in a complimentary manner. The Sunflower and Loves-Lies-Bleeding give us images of the masculine and feminine aspects of surrender. Like the Sunflower, it is necessary to develop a radiant, upright ego structure, but we must then learn to bend, to give the fruit of that spiritual strength to others in a gesture of humility and selflessness. On the other hand, the Love-Lies-Bleeding, with its curving and graceful form, is the picture of feminine surrender. When we surrender the self by allowing suffering to find its way to spiritual transcendence, a greater awareness and strength of the true spiritual Self is anchored in the soul. |
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