A brief discussion on the symbolism and implications of the Gesang flower's language

What does the language of Gesang flowers symbolize?

The editor introduces the language of Gesang flowers and the brief understanding of the meaning of maintaining green plants, and next, the editor of this site will introduce it to everyone.

Bai Lao Mei said: Waiting for a colorful花event is happiness, dreaming with someone you love in the sunlight is happiness, and slowly aging while guarding a period of time mixed with warmth and cold is also happiness.

What is happiness? There are a thousand interpretations for a thousand people, and the only thing in common is that everyone is looking for happiness. There is a beautiful legend among the Tibetans: whoever finds an eight-petaled Gesang flower has found happiness.

The blooming Gesang flowers in Tibet are a sacred place in the hearts of countless people, a sanctuary for the soul. In Tibetan, "Gesang" means happiness, and the language of Gesang flowers is "cherish the person in front of you." Being able to encounter a colorful flower event with the person you love and watch the Gesang flowers bloom may be the happiest thing in this world.

In early summer, at the foot of Dabie Mountain, by the Bashui River, the Gesang flowers in Sanli fan hot spring are blooming beautifully, one by one, in clusters; pink, white, red, and purple compete for beauty. As the breeze blows, the flowers sway, and they are the sprites of early summer, waiting for you, waiting for me, waiting for all those who seek happiness to stop their hurried pace and enjoy this garden of flowers together...

What does the language of Gesang flowers symbolize?

Human flowers and trees seem indifferent, but they actually have feelings. For example, these Gesang flowers become more upright after experiencing风雨 and more colorful after being exposed to the scorching sun, always thriving and blooming in their own season. As long as a flower has bloomed, it has no regrets. So, how should life, the longest among all things, be?

In this era, we are all used to hurrying with heavy burdens on our backs, speaking insincerely and acting against our will, so that leisure and rest have become the most luxurious aspirations.

The mortal world is a training ground that encompasses everything. Some people turn encounters into partings, some write brief encounters into lifelong connections, some live a real and simple life, and some live a pretend and greedy life... According to Buddhism, life has eight sufferings: birth, aging, illness, death, separation from loved ones, union with enemies, unattainable desires, and the burning of the five aggregates. All sentient beings suffer from them.