Username: Fukase
Name: Kaiso
Fave Part of Nature: I would say his favorite part of nature is it's resilience. When a forest fire wipes out a forest, plants grow up from the ashes, when concrete threatens to smother it, it grows between the cracks, when the land is dry and has no water it dares to grow anyway, and nature pulls through at high altitudes and very deep depths. It is his favorite because he himself is resilient and he sees himself in every part of nature and nature is a part of him. Seaweed is a very hardy and resilient plant that grows under the water and he feels at home in its graceful waving kelp forests with the sun shining down in filtered green light. He is content knowing that no matter how long the world turns and what happens on it, there will always be some sort of plant life holding out, or some tiny piece of nature that the world couldn't snuff out. He is comforted by these thoughts as kelp fronds gently caress his flanks and he feels reassured that he will always have a home within the world as long as there is that tiny hope. He also likes nature because of its adaptability. Because it is resilient, it is able to adjust to its surroundings and create something beautiful. If there is a building, vines will grow up its sides, if there is too much rain and water, forests will give way to swamps. All of the traits and things about nature that have kept it going this long are his favorite. All the qualities that make nature the force that it is, all come together to make it one unstoppable force that makes it powerful and long lasting, time being natures close companion, because while humans structures and cities slowly decay and must be repeatedly rebuilt as its torn down by the elements/nature and time, nature is the ultimate cause but it still thrives on despite it.
Gif:

Extra: It's a poem!
Grass by Carl Sandburg
Pile the bodies high at Austerlitz and Waterloo.
Shovel them under and let me work—
I am the grass; I cover all.
And pile them high at Gettysburg
And pile them high at Ypres and Verdun.
Shovel them under and let me work.
Two years, ten years, and passengers ask the conductor:
What place is this?
Where are we now?
I am the grass.
Let me work.
Extra 2: A German song translated in English. "Freunde, das der Mandelzweig" by Schalom Ben-Chorin
Friends, oh see the almond tree,
it blossoms oh so fine.
Isn’t that a wondrous sign,
that love will still prevail?
That life has not gone away,
no matter how much blood cries.
Do not underestimate this,
in these darkest times.
Thousands are destroyed by war,
a world, it ends today.
But the almonds victory
silently flutters in the wind.
Friends oh see the almond tree
it blossoms oh so fine.
this shall be a hint for me,
that life will still prevail.