That line has a quiet, almost alchemical feel to it—something small and ordinary (a spoon, a pot) meeting something delicate and seemingly finished (a dried orchid), and then unexpectedly life returns.
A dried orchid would normally suggest something past its bloom, even discarded. But here it “fills the pot with new, green roots,” which flips the expectation: instead of decay, there’s regeneration. The image suggests patience and minimal intervention—just a spoon, maybe implying careful watering, gentle tending, or even simply the passage of time.
There’s also an interesting tension in scale: a spoon is tiny, precise, almost domestic; a pot is contained; and yet the outcome is expansive, alive, and persistent. It reads like a meditation on recovery—how something that looks finished can still be quietly rebuilding itself underneath the surface.
If you wrote it, there’s a strong sense of restraint in the language that actually makes the transformation feel more believable.