
A green cocoon
hung from my grandfather’s bicycle.
I watched, wide-eyed,
as he whispered to me about
what was happening in there.
His voice—
gentle, deep.
His brown eyes misted over,
mustache moving up and down with his words.
That—
was the last memory I had of him
before I left my country,
before I left Costa Rica.
I would not see him again
for twenty years.
I still hear the hammer—
tap, tap, tap—
against shoes in his shed.
My grandfather,
the cobbler.
Black lined his fingernails.
Calluses gripped his palms.
His small eyes squinted in concentration—
except on that day.
That day,
his focus was not on work.
It rested on his oldest granddaughter,
no older than eight.
Rain pelted the tin roof—
a symphony above us.
It relaxed him.
But not that day.
That day, he looked at me.
“One day, the little creature inside
will become a beautiful butterfly…”
But he wasn’t looking at the cocoon anymore.
I didn’t understand it then—
the frailty of her wings,
the struggle to stretch them out.
I didn’t understand the darkness—
that place where no one sees,
where only God knows the inner workings.
That secret place
where crawling things are broken down
and remade into flying things.
No one told me
that to earn her wings,
the butterfly had to die
to everything she knew.
Her body had to break down,
rearrange itself,
surrender her crawling,
surrender her eating,
surrender her familiar ground.
She would never crawl again.
Only fly.
My grandfather knew this.
And though I did not see him
for twenty years,
one day
we sat together again.
I didn’t have the heart to tell him
his mariposa
still thought about her days
as a caterpillar.
Why should a butterfly cry?
Why should she try again to crawl?
Absurd.
So—why do I?
My grandfather
lived in a cocoon—
a warm and storied place.
Not long ago,
it went down to the ground.
Eyes closed.
Face ashen.
Never to tell stories again.
But I hear them still.
An urge rises in me
to shake off
crumbled wings.
My heart yearns
for the safety of cocoons,
even if the familiar
once brought darkness.
But now—
a new breeze warms my wings.
It beckons me.
I shift.
Fly.
Is a butterfly afraid?
No.
Fly.
Does she wonder if she’ll fall?
No.
Fly.
Does she think at all she’ll fail?
No.
Fly.
She was born for this.
So was I.
Fly.
About the Creator
Mezmur
Rooted in Christian faith yet unafraid of human fragility, Mezmur writes as both survivor and worshipper. Her work invites readers to breathe again, to see that even in the deepest silence, Love remains.


Comments (6)
This is a beautiful poem and a heck of a tribute to your abuelo 🫶
Wonderful, lovely, powerful. This was a real pleasure to read...and read again. The emotion is so strong and the language flows beautifully. Congratulations on Top Story and anything else this fantastic work wins.
The butterfly metaphor is always special.
Lovely poem! Congrats on the Top Story.
POWERFUL TOP STORY LOVE IT HUGS
The butterfly metaphor feels so powerful here. Beautifully done.