Praise be to Allaah.
There is nothing wrong with
 putting flowers, plants and tree seedlings in bathrooms, so long as there is
 no extravagance or waste involved in that, both of which are blameworthy.
 Allaah says (interpretation of the meaning): 
“And let not your hand
 be tied (like a miser) to your neck, nor stretch it forth to its utmost
 reach (like a spendthrift), so that you become blameworthy and in severe
 poverty”
[al-Isra’ 17:29].
This is a prohibition on
 both miserliness and extravagance. 
And Allaah says
 (interpretation of the meaning): 
“and waste not by
 extravagance. Verily, He likes not Al‑Musrifoon (those who waste by
 extravagance)”
[al-An’aam 6:141]
“And give to the kinsman
 his due and to the Miskeen (poor) and to the wayfarer. But spend not
 wastefully (your wealth) in the manner of a spendthrift.
27. Verily, the
 spendthrifts are brothers of the Shayaateen (devils), and the Shaytaan
 (Devil‑Satan) is ever ungrateful to his Lord”
 [al-Isra’ 17:26, 27] 
Extravagance means spending
 too much money on permissible things, and waste means spending money on
 things that are inappropriate. 
Al-‘Askari said:
It is said that waste means
 spending money on things that are inappropriate and extravagance means
 spending too much on things that are inappropriate. 
In other words,
 extravagance means overstepping the mark in spending money, and waste means
 spending it inappropriately, which is worse than extravagance. Hence Allaah
 says:  “Verily, the spendthrifts are brothers of the Shayaateen (devils).” 
And it was said that
 extravagance (israaf) is not just in terms of money, rather it
 applies to everything that is done inappropriately. Do you not see that
 Allaah described the people of Loot as being extravagant because they put
 their seed in a place that is not for tilling. Allaah says (interpretation
 of the meaning): 
“Verily, you practise
 your lusts on men instead of women. Nay, but you are a people transgressing
 beyond bounds [musrifoon] (by committing great sins)”
[al-A’raaf 7:81]
And He described Pharaoh as
 being extravagant, as He says (interpretation of the meaning):  
“verily, he was arrogant
 and was of the Musrifoon (those who transgress beyond bound in spending and
 other things and commit great sins)”
[al-Dukhaan 44:31]
Then he said:
From these texts we learn
 that extravagance (israaf) is of two types: haraam and makrooh. 
The first kind includes
 wasting money etc on things beyond the norm. 
The second kind includes
 wasting something useful for no purpose, such as pouring away what is left
 of a drink of the water of the Euphrates etc without putting it back into
 the water. End quote from al-Furooq al-Lughawiyyah, p. 114-115. 
See also Fayd al-Qadeer
 (1/50) and al-Mawsoo’ah al-Fiqhiyyah al-Kuwaitiyyah (4/176). 
Examples of extravagance
 include: buying something decorative for hundreds of riyals, because
 adornment is allowed but paying a lot of money for it is blameworthy
 extravagance. 
An example of waste is
 buying something that is of no value or that will not last, for a large
 amount of money. 
This, like the example
 given above, comes under the heading of wasting money that is forbidden in
 Islam: “Allaah hates three things for you: gossip, wasting money and asking
 too much.” Narrated by al-Bukhaari (1477) and Muslim (593). 
Conclusion: we must beware
 of both things and realize that wealth is a blessing that should be guarded;
 we will be asked about this wealth tomorrow: “From where did he earn it and
 on what did he spend it?” as it says in Sunan al-Tirmidhi (2416) from
 the Prophet  (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him). 
We ask Allaah to keep us
 safe by His bounty and grace. 
And Allaah knows best.

 
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