You lack the necessary energy or you have a "Monday morning feeling," wanting to put off until tomorrow what you could do today.
The Bach flower Hornbeam, also known as hornbeam, is a somewhat unusual flower: it only germinates after two or three years. Unlike many other plants, it therefore doesn't bloom every spring. Despite its slow flowering, it can be sudden and very beautiful. Some species of Hornbeam, for example, produce superb purple flowers from April to June. However, catkins, a type of hanging yellow and green flower, are most often found at the tips of hornbeam branches as soon as the warmer weather arrives.
The hornbeam maintains a beautiful appearance regardless of the season. While its serrated, pleated leaves are a soft green in spring and summer, they take on beautiful yellow and orange hues in autumn and remain attached until the foliage renews. Very hardy, it adapts to all soils and doesn't require much light. Its roots, very dense and deeply anchored in the soil, allow it to live up to 150 years and is very resistant to disease.
Adults: 2 drops in a glass of water or on the tongue 4 times a day.
Non-medicinal ingredients: Grape alcohol 27% v/v, aqueous solution of Populus tremula L. flowers (dilution 1/500).