When he was a small boy, he had loved butterflies. Oh, not to net and mount them, but to wonder at their designs and habits.
Now a grown man with his first son to be born in a few weeks, he
found himself once again fascinated with a cocoon. He had found it at
the side of the park path. Somehow the twig had been knocked from the
tree and the cocoon had survived undamaged and still woven to the
branch.
As he had seen his mother do, he gently protected it by wrapping it
in his handkerchief and carried it home. The cocoon found a temporary
home in a wide-top mason jar with holes in the lid. The jar was placed
on the mantle for easy viewing and protection from their curious cat who
would delight in volleying the sticky silk between her paws.
The man watched. His wife's interest lasted only a moment, but he
studied the silky envelope. Almost imperceptibly at first, the cocoon
moved. He watched more closely and soon the cocoon was trembling with
activity. Nothing else happened. The cocoon remained tightly glued to
the twig and there was no sign of wings.
Finally the shaking became so intense, the man thought the butterfly
would die from the struggle. He removed the lid on the jar, took a sharp
pen knife from his desk drawer, and carefully made a tiny slit in the
side of the cocoon. Almost immediately, one wing appeared and then
outstretched the other. The butterfly was free!
It seemed to enjoy its freedom and walked along the edge of the mason
jar and along the edge of the mantle. But it didn't fly. At first the
man thought the wings needed time to dry, but time passed and still the
butterfly did not take off.
The man was worried and called up his neighbor who taught high school
science. He told the neighbor how he had found the cocoon, placed it in
the mason jar, and the terrible trembling as the butterfly struggled to
get out. When he described how he had carefully made a small slit in
the cocoon, the teacher stopped him. "Oh, that is the reason. You see,
the struggle is what gives the butterfly the strength to fly."
And so it is with us. Sometimes it's the struggles in life that strengthen us the most.
Author Unknown
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