Sowing, Planting
The one who sows or plants now is making an investment by placing something valuable in the ground and allowing time to do its work; it is not something that can be hastened, one can only wait, water, and watch.
However, the one who sows also sacrifices her seeds. She could hold them in her hand, but choose instead to place them in the earth, where they disappear. It is then up to God whether she will ever be able to harvest them. Similarly, we can choose to give up some of our rationality, our comfort, and our self-centeredness, and sacrifice a little of what characterizes the ego, in order to allow the unconscious to bear fruit that the ego can later harvest. We become less "almost perfect" and more "almost whole," as Edinger expresses it (The Eternal Drama, p. 161).
Sowing or planting and the subsequent growth has always been associated with death and burial, as illustrated in ancient Egyptian imagery and in 1 Corinthians 15:42-44, "What is sown perishable will rise imperishable," etc.