As
Spring unfolds in all it's glory may this reflection on metamorphosis feed your soul and your imagination.
Blessings
and affection,
Jeanne
Marie
“There are three phases to the butterfly’s life cycle: the larva (caterpillar), the pupa
or chrysalis (in the cocoon), and the imago (a mature adult, a butterfly).
The transformational
chrysalis phase is one of the great mysteries of biology. No one knows exactly how the butterfly changes form in such a dramatic
way. But this much is known: inside the caterpillar’s body are clusters of cells called, of all things, imaginal buds.
Imaginal refers to the imago, the adult phase, but it also means “to imagine”, and psychologists use the word
imago to mean an idealized image of a loved one, including the self. The imaginal buds contain the idealized image, the blueprint
for growing a butterfly. While the caterpillar goes about its earth-crawling business, these cells, deep inside, are imagining
flight.“2
“The caterpillar's immune system recognizes these imaginal buds as
foreign and tries to destroy them. As the buds arrive faster and begin to link up, the caterpillar's immune system breaks
down and its body begins to disintegrate... into a mass of creamy material, which is utilized for the production of new organs...
Through a powerful, devastating process, the caterpillar is no longer a caterpillar. It is transformed and reborn as a butterfly.
People who experience being engaged with a powerful force that seems to
lift them beyond themselves seldom fully understand what happens in such moments. Nor do they find it easy to talk about the
experience. Something has been annihilated. Something extraordinary has been born.” 2
Sources:
1. http://imago-transitions.com/philosophy.htm
2. http://www.butterflyspirit.org/stories/noetic_science.html
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