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Birthing Butterflies

Spring 2023

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Birthing Butterflies

Sometimes nature catches me completely off guard.

By Liz Rasley

Illustrations By Patricia Savage

TThe world is still full of so many wonders. I have to remind myself of this on days when watching the news makes my chest tighten.

Liz, I chide myself, move.

I do. I stand up, step outdoors—and spot courting blackbirds gleefully circling over the tops of my crepe myrtles. See? I tell myself, life is still full of miracles. Oh, how small these wonders often are. And how often they crop up where we least expect it.

A couple of Springs ago, one of my sweet, thoughtful friends here in Texas asked if we’d like to care for swallowtail butterfly eggs that she’d found while prepping her lawn for mowing.

To this day, I haven’t found anything as hopeful as birth.

I’ll admit I was amazed, first, by how she was able to see them (bet she didn’t use her reading glasses to examine the leaves, like I would have) and then, that I would be the first she asked to care for these eggs, a compliment—and one that didn’t feel like it would take a bunch of work or time. I was certain they would be the lowest-maintenance living thing on my list, considering how much effort caring for kids, a dog, a husband, a garden, and the other random stuff that comes along (hamster, laundry, etc.) takes. Well.

After several weeks of being a new mom again, fretting over the light/time/air temperature and other miscellaneous requirements of these new babies called butterfly eggs, I’m here to say that any living thing, really, is an undertaking.

Even now, as I fertilize my flowering pumpkin patch, it’s not lost on me, the effort to care well for all living things, down to their watering patterns and how often you need to buy them shoes. Back to the butterflies: they hatched, eventually. From eggs came yellow- and black-striped pudgy caterpillars, eating everything in sight for what seemed like eons.

During that particular phase of their life, I kept getting up at night and pacing—are they fat enough yet? Do they have enough food? Was that the proper type of green leaves? Do they need more? What about the light? While I had told myself I had gotten these eggs-now-caterpillars for our kids, what ended up happening was that I got to tend to them. Caretaking, it seemed, was going to be a delayed-onset instinct with my own offspring.

OOne day I woke up charged, for no real reason. It felt like a big day. Several weeks before, I had watched the chunky caterpillars form into chrysalises, so from all my projected arrival dates (some calculated logically most felt in my heart), I figured today might be the day for a butterfly to emerge.

And then, as I was ambling out in the garden, one of them hatched. Hatched!

I scurried over to look. With silent tears, I watched as the butterfly, new and fresh, awkwardly stumbled on delicate legs and cracked open its wings. I cried in joy.

Not since my own children were born had I been so moved. But here I was—crying over this totally mundane (yet extraordinary) act of nature, a chrysalis turning into a butterfly. If a reporter had been privy to this, the news headline might have read:

  Middle-aged Woman in Slippers Found Crying
  Over Caterpillars and Butterflies in Backyard

Am I proud of that? No. But sometimes nature is so chock full of unbridled hope that it catches you completely off guard. Even before you’ve changed out of slippers.

That year, as I watched several caterpillars turn into butterflies, I recalled my own children being born, and the fresh bite of new hope—unrestrained, unburdened, non-weary hope. It inspired such a deep, innocent expectation in me. To this day, I haven’t found anything as hopeful as the birth of new things—whether that be new babies, butterflies, or even the hopeful, courageous, strong green sprout that appears when you had long figured it was dead.

This year, I’m again looking for butterfly eggs. It’s about the right season for them. I haven’t found any yet, but I haven’t given up. Truth be told, not seeing eggs may be an indication of my eyeglass prescription needing to be amped up more than anything else. I may feel young with hope, but my eyes are still middle-aged.

Sitting on the porch, I see monarchs, traveling up through Texas by way of our backyard. And more than once, I’ve thought about hope, wonder, and how nature is at once so completely ordinary, mundane, and yet overflowing with wonders—full of miracles we deem ordinary and take for granted.

Seems like there is a big lesson in there. For me, at least. ❖

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

  • At The Gate
  • Contributors
  • Stories

  • Birthing Butterflies
  • Looking for Asparagus
  • Saving the Ducks
  • A Sinkhole in the High Desert
  • Try to Remember
  • Of Bulbs Major, Minor & Light
  • Spring Time
  • Selective Hearing
  • The Enthusiastic Gardener
  • The Mystery of the Misplaced Eggplant
  • The Lady Bird’s Blessings
  • Note-Toting Chickens
  • Gnomes? Why Gnot?
  • Perennials are Forever
  • Sacrifice
  • Dandelions Never Give Up
  • Issue 133 Sponsorship Partners
  • Buds

  • Like the musician
  • Gardening is the slowest
  • If you are married…
  • Poems

  • The Life That I Have
  • Cuttings

  • Making the Bed
  • A Spring Cheer
  • Broken Trowel

  • Invasive Herbs
  • Kits

  • Plan Your Spring Garden Now!
  • Celebrate Spring!

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