Glad to help.
I do knida understerstand. Transplanting came easy to me, they're so vulnerable when their out of the soil and the roots are exposed.
Some Tips: (if your using soil and pots or gorw bags)
- water the plant slightly so that the soils easier to work with
- watering the new soil is optional. I usually don't so it spreads in the bag easier
- all pre-packaged soil needs perlite added to it, IDK who makes it. The amount of perlite depends on the brand of soil. Like MG, is 2:1 Soil to perlite for best results(IMO)
- use soft hands. touching the roots is inevitable but be gentle
- break off as much of the old soil as you can without tearing off massive chunks off good roots
- put as much soil in the pot as possible before puttting in the plant. Meaning, give the plant a lot of room to expand.
- i dont like to dump the plant on top of the soil and bury it just like that. I fill my pots (bags) with as much soil as possible then hold the plant to where the bottom roots are barely touching the new soil, the I surround the roots while simultaniously lowering the plant. It's more gentle than the former.
- if your still really unsure, there are transplant products out there that contain b vitamins which are supposed to help lessen transplant shock
good luk,
beans