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PLANT WHISPERER / THERAPIST, MARYAH GREENE
As one of Brooklyn's most passionate plant consultants, Maryah Greene — founder of the nature-centric Greene Piece — knows her job is part greenery advisor and part therapist. The main thing she wants would-be plant owners to know? "You don't have to be a 'plant person' to have plants in your home," she says.
The way I explain it to clients is that it's similar to how we have an idea in our society that either you're good at math or you're bad at it — and my experience in the classroom has really taught me that that's not true. It's the same thing for our spaces. We all have different needs, and schedules, and sunlight in our homes. It’s not your fault if you’re super busy at work and the plants didn’t get watered — you just didn’t have the right plants for your space." Greene's job is to intuit what her clients need — and what their schedules and homes will permit. She practices a philosophy that, for plant novitiates, begins with self-forgiveness: “You don't need a 'green thumb'. You just need what works for you." |
" The way I explain it to clients is that it's similar to how we have an idea in our society that either you're good at math or you're bad at it — and my experience in the classroom has really taught me that that's not true. " Greene’s stance is the product of a cross-cultural experience with nature. She moved with her family to Japan following 9/11, when Greene was just six. There, she grew up within a culture with a thoroughly different — and more holistic — concept of the organic world. "Growing up in Japan, I didn't have a really strong connection to houseplants — it was more about having a really strong connection to nature." Greene and her family wouldn't return to the United States for nearly a decade, when she was 15. During that time, she developed an appreciation for greenery and the role it can play in shaping a home environment. Greene returned to those ideas — setting up a home, using greenery to enhance it — after she completed her bachelor's degree at George Washington University in Washington D.C, and moved to New York, into an apartment in Manhattan's upper reaches — on 211th Street in the city's Inwood neighborhood. "It was a very quiet building with not a lot going on, and I became really interested in creating my own space,” she says. “It felt like the only places where greenery is valued in New York were little community gardens and Central Park. That was really different from what I'd grown up with in Japan, where nature wasn't so separate from everyday life." " In Japan, my parents had the chance to think about how we could make a space purposeful — and they really had to, since living spaces in Japan are so small. Intentionality and purpose were the key to furnishing our home. That was when I really started to see how they appreciated the space we were living in. "
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