Butterflies in Metamorphosis

Opening Wings

As summer progresses, butterflies begin finding their way into the yard, searching out the butterfly weed and the coneflowers. It’s what I’d always intended when I began the whole gardening thing – a sanctuary for birds and butterflies.

It’s not easy being a butterfly. About the only thing going for you is a bad taste in your wings. That’s some help from predators but not a lot in buffeting winds or hail. It’s not even easy to become a butterfly. Forget about the ugly duckling becoming a swan – to be a butterfly, you have to begin as a worm. Then you wrap yourself into an impermeable cocoon, and you wait. Well, no, you don’t wait. Inside the cocoon, you’re busy transforming a squishy worm into glorious wings. And THEN you come out. Little by little. Just to see what the weather is like. Hopefully, it’s a nice day, because after getting yourself out, you have to find a twig and hang upside down with your wings open so they’ll dry out and not stick together. If you don’t, you die. Earlier than expected.

And you thought your life was difficult these days?

We, as in the humans on this planet, are in the midst of a huge transformational time – a metamorphosis, if you will. There’s no way to stop it except dying – and then the rest of humanity will still have to toe the mark and lift the chain, etc. etc. – or we can be a part of it. This morning, when the rain began, the sirens began. Car accidents of some sort or another, perhaps, – someone not paying attention to the world around them and the necessity to be our brother’s/sister’s keeper.

The intense changes in the world are mirrored in our personal behavior.

Beginning this week and for the next ten days, the Dali Lama has gathered tens of thousands in Washington D.C. to pray for peace. It’s an ancient ceremony called Kalachakra, the first such ceremony is more than five years.

Research has shown that even five thousand people meditating for peace can change the violence level in a city. Imagine what could happen with tens of thousands meditating in Washington D.C. for peace. Congress might even decide they need to work together! Such miracles can happen.

And then there’s the other side of peace and peaceful gatherings: ‘”It’s no more going to establish world peace than Live Aid or one of those things, or any average rock concert. I’m all for freeing Tibet. But there’s nothing particularly Buddhist about that,” said Brad Warner, an Ohio-based Soto Zen priest and author.” In other words, he’s more willing to find fault than to pray for peace?

Many of us are caught in  our own polarization: torn between responsibility and freedom, between staying and leaving, between family and work, between possibility and disappointment. Congress is only the most visible of the conflicts, but we have the same conflicts every day in our own personal lives and in our communities. What we’re really angry about is the lack of control. Look at how politicians blame the Army Corp of Engineers for the massive flood coming down the Missouri River. Gotta blame somebody. Can’t admit to climate change. Can’t just be the massive snowfall in the Rockies in mid-May. Oh, oops. Can’t just do what you have to do to help people (and besides it’s going to cost massive amounts of money in disaster relief) and work with what is.

I guess we can all get in the habit of blaming the stick that’s not handy to hang upside down on, rather than look in another direction.

The choice is ours, again and again and again: we can either hang upside down and trust we’ll soar or we can stay firmly stuck. Be the butterfly. Go visit a garden.

Pray for peace.

.

6 thoughts on “Butterflies in Metamorphosis

  1. chasing butterflies is fun. i hate it when i catch them in the grill of my car. as for peace….i’m for it. the music goes around and around and it comes out….

    here

  2. Beautiful imagery–profound thought–uniting to focus on peace–choosing to look toward the graceful option, even when we’re buffetted about by the storms of life–“work with what is.” It’s really exhilarating to embrace the grace that pops up along the sometimes rocky garden path–even in the rain.

    1. Thank you, Kathleen. I believe Dylan sang something like (I know my friend Willy is going to correct me…) “get out of the road” because the times they are a changing.

I love conversations! Let's start one.

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.