The Butterfly, The Moth
I once had a friend who was the most beautiful
butterfly on the planet.
I first saw her when I was walking on the mountain.
As I gazed into the distance across the landscape,
trying to pierce through the grey blanket of clouds obscuring the panorama,
suddenly my eyes were caught by the flapping wings of a butterfly.
She seemed to flutter into my vision out of nowhere,
filling it with the most beautiful colors of the painting on her wings.
The landscape no longer interested me.
Instead, I followed this butterfly down the mountain
slope.
At first we were traveling companions looking at each
other from a mild distance, but as I followed her and sat where she rested, she
sometimes would fly towards me and sit on my hand.
I marveled at the beauty of her wings.
Never before had I seen this wild array of colors
mingled together in such an expression of spontaneous exuberance.
It reminded me of my first day at school when I filled
a blank drawing of a fish with a diverse palette of different colors to create
the most beautiful painting I could imagine.
When I showed the teacher the result of my efforts,
she shamelessly tore it up.
Yet here she was, my living painting, out of reach of
the wicked teacher.
She flew out of my life when I first entered school.
And now, many years later, the painting returned in
full splendor, a breath-taking sight and a miracle to behold.
She escaped from the teacher's brutal assassination.
And now she had come back to me as I was climbing the
mountain.
I thought I had lost her forever, since my eyes
clearly saw how the teacher tore up my drawing.
Yet here she had returned to me in the form of a
butterfly, showing the entire world from the mountain an abundance of exuberant
colors.
The fish became the butterfly.
This butterfly had a special gift.
She could paint word poems having the same wild array
of colors as the painting on her wings.
She could string words together in a way nobody else
was able to, using them like paint on an empty canvas.
Like me she did not care about coloring exactly within
the lines.
She just wanted to create beautiful and colorful word
paintings.
As we left the mountain the butterfly and I traveled
passed a garden full of weeds.
Since I hated the sight of weeds and their ability to hurt with their caresses, I did not enter the garden, and neither did the
butterfly.
In the garden we could see a great company of grey
moths flying around.
As we were watching them, they began to shout at the
butterfly, inviting her to come into the garden of weeds where they had made
their homes.
With some trepidation the butterfly whirled sideways
and back, zigzagging herself closer to the garden where the moths smiled at her
and invited her in.
I spoke to the butterfly and warned her that this
garden was not a good place.
I told her that I knew a place of much greater beauty
where nobody could be hurt, a colorful exotic garden on the mountain where the
other butterflies love to dwell, a place abounding with many different flowers
where no weeds could grow.
It was a garden where the rain would feed the plants
at night and where the sun caressed the flowers during the day.
But the attention of the butterfly was captured by the
mesmerizing sound of the sweet words the moths spoke in the garden of
weeds.
I was forced to witness how they lured her in by the
flattering candy of their words.
And there was nothing I could do or say that would
make her change her mind.
They had placed a hook in her mind by their false
friendship and seductive words.
I could see how the moths held up a mirror to the
butterfly, and how this mirror would show her a reflection of a an insect with
soot-black wings, like a bat.
I cried out to her that this image in the mirror was
not real, that it was just a projection of the moths.
But the butterfly was so overcome with grief over the
image she beheld in the mirror that she could not hear my words.
She only could stare at the mirror and feel flooded
with sadness over the image the mirror showed her.
Then the moths began to comfort her.
They offered her a solution which would take away all
her pain and grief.
They brought the costume of a grey moth to the
butterfly, telling her that if she would put on the moth costume, she would
look just like the moths.
So, tortured by the image she saw in the mirror the
butterfly put on the costume, unaware of the strings which were attached to it.
When the other moths showed her their mirror, all she
could see was someone who was transformed from an ugly bat into a beautiful
moth like the others.
The mirror did not show her the strings.
No matter how hard I tried to convince her that her
costume was not real, that her idea of being a bat was a lie fabricated by the
moths to lure her into their prison, I was unable to reach her heart any longer.
Her moth costume had built a wall around her heart,
and I found myself standing on the outside with no gate in sight that I might
be able to enter her heart and persuade her to turn back to the mountain, away
from the moths.
The moths had captured her in the garden of weeds and desired
to change her into a surrogate moth.
As time passed I noticed how the butterfly began to
talk, think and act like the other moths.
Slowly her butterfly identity was replaced by a false
moth identity.
She became the moth, even though I could see how her
heart was still the heart of a butterfly.
In the midst of the garden a huge flame flared up into
the sky, and it seemed to grow bigger with each new day.
Like the other moths, she was mesmerized by the light
of the flame in the garden.
When the light of the sun would leave the premises and
surrender its place to the darkness of the night, the flame in the garden lit
up against the dark scenery.
The flame was beautiful and a powerful sight to behold as it stood in
contrast with the surrounding darkness.
The beauty of its light beguiled the moths and drew
them closer and closer.
The light of the flame became their beauty if they
would gaze into the flame long enough.
They wanted to carry that light within them so that
the darkness of the moth's heart would be overtaken by the light of the flame
and illuminate their entire being.
Their desire was for the fire, and its light blinded
them to its destructive power.
And so they were drawn closer and closer to the light,
to drink of its beauty, and become the beauty.
But as they sought to immerse themselves in the light
of the flame, the heat of the light would cause them pain.
Especially for a butterfly in a moth costume the pain
would be unbearable in the close vicinity of the flame.
Yet the magnetic pull of the flame was too strong for
them to resist.
The flame held out a promise for beauty, happiness and
light, and all of them desired to fill their hearts with this false promise.
So the moths learned to see the pain as part of their
transformation in the image of the flame.
Since they were becoming the light, they became the
pain, and they surrendered their soul to the pain.
The flame became their identity.
The strings on their identities were tied to the
flame, and they would draw them closer and closer to the flame until they were
one with the flame's destruction, trapped in the flame forever.
The butterfly still strung her words together as paint
on an empty canvas, but now that the moth had taken over, her poems spoke of the pain of the moth existence only.
She glorified the pain, wallowed in the pain, and
painted her world in the gloomy monochrome shades of the pain.
Pain was all she knew now that she was mesmerized by
the light of the flame, and so she had to keep running from the pain towards
the promise of happiness held up by the image of the burning flame.
Once she would be one with the flame, its light of beauty and happiness would drive away the dark clouds of pain and suffering.
Once she would be one with the flame, its light of beauty and happiness would drive away the dark clouds of pain and suffering.
Where her poems used to be necklaces stringing strands
of different colors together, they now had transmogrified into strings of
shades of dark grey like the noose awaiting the condemned.
Never once did she bother to turn her eyes upward.
No matter how much I cried out to her to look up,
pointing at the strings over her head, it was of no avail.
Her attention was captured by the other moths, and her vision was trapped in the horizontal pane, a pane which brought
her pain and which led her to the trap of the flame.
I saw how she began to fly like a moth, act like a
moth, talk like a moth, and imitate the moth in their insincere ways.
Yet she was not born as a moth.
She was a butterfly captured in the mold of the moth.
This is how the Shadow demons trap butterflies in
their garden of secret despair.
I kept shouting warnings at her right up to the moment
she disappeared out of my sight.
Suddenly everything was quiet, no moth in sight.
Just the sound of the wind rushing through the trees.
The silence was like the icy breath of the grave into
which my words of warning had fallen.
Even though I never stopped warning her, one thing I
was not able to do: I could not turn back her heart.
The butterfly chose to look away from the mountain and fix her gaze on the fake reality of the garden of weeds, she chose to believe the lying moths.
Her choice turned her in a prisoner of the garden
where the flame of destruction beckons the moths to partake of its grandeur,
and there was nothing I could do.
And so, I waited, hoping.
Hoping that maybe one day the pain would drive her to
look up, and she would begin to see the truth before the strings could lead her
into the destruction of the flame, before the growing flame would consume the
entire garden.
Once the moth enters the flame, it is over.
She never was a moth to begin with, that was a lie
held up by the moths to lure her into the garden of weeds.
I was forced to watch how my painting now was
fluttering towards the hands of the teacher again, waiting with eager longing to tear her up a second time.
The butterfly had turned deaf to my voice and lost sight
of the mountain.
Instead, she filled her head with the chitter-chatter
of the moths and filled her vision with the lure of the flame in the midst of the garden where
the weeds grow.
The teacher became the flame, and ordered the moths to
change her form that the rule of this world might be enforced:
'Learn to color within the lines'!
The problem is that the color of the butterfly did not
fit within the lines of the moth drawing.
How could I destroy my butterfly by painting within
the lines of what the butterfly is not?
I could never do that, not yesterday, not today, not
tomorrow.
And so, as I now walk on the mountain again, gazing
across the distance, I hope that some way some day the butterfly with the
color-poem on her wings will suddenly flutter into my vision again, drawing my
eyes away from the blanket of clouds covering the land.
The butterfly may have left my vision, yet the color of hope has remained.
The butterfly may have left my vision, yet the color of hope has remained.
Butterflies thrive in the garden on the mountain.
They fade away in the garden of weeds where the moths
have made their home, where the flame draws them into its destructive appetite
by its false promises of beauty and happiness.
The moths never know they fly into their own graves
until it is too late.
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