(Every few months I remember
that I haven’t updated this blog in a while and though my brain was filled to
the brim with things to say, I couldn’t bring myself to. But I think it is time
to come back again, to this first love of mine.)
When I was younger, I had a shoebox of silkworms. The box
smelled like mulberry leaves and of the petrichor that rises when rain falls on
summer evenings. I have a habit of projecting fantastical stories onto
inanimate or non-human things and in that way, created stories for the clouds
that hid dragons, for the tiny family that lived behind my books and that
little box of silkworms. I had just started school in the year I got a box of
silkworms. I imagined that they knew I loved them fiercely, that they felt sad on the evening I forgot them at school when my godmother picked me up, I hoped that they knew they would be safe.
There were about six worms and at the time I was about six,
they were pale grey tubes of softness that ate at the emerald leaves
incessantly. Then one day they started to spin golden cocoons and this process
filled me with curiosity and dread. I knew that they would not come out as
beautiful butterflies with shimmering colours, that the time spent in this
blanket of spun gold would not be too much of a showy transformation. And it’s
only now, in my final year of university that I’m starting to understand the
point of it all. Transformation does not have to be this shift to astounding
beauty. It is enough to change and be better off for it.
A small change can feel like a miracle.
Surely, I have grown wings by now.
[Images from: Gardening Know How; Pinterest]
No comments:
Post a Comment