you will thrive in your own cocoon— legless arthropod wriggling out of its leaved shell, crunching on the stem of a marigold’s shrivel. you crawl up the leaves like they’re the steps of a winding staircase, circling and circling to one day step out of your cocoon.
you are your own skin— a wing ripped in figure eights of formative tearing. at the bottom of a wind-leaned green tower, you are torn down as if starting all over again, away from the pace of a hundred other caterpillar’d creatures.
you are not quite a monarch butterfly, not yet the zebra-patterned black and white, but you bloom in the form of a familiar marigold, a daisy’d curve— thriving as a flower, swaying and alive. you must visit the filial leaves and trace their veins gently.
soon you will thrive in your own cocoon; as those plant’d seeds will soon leave legless arthropods wriggling— for how would a caterpillar’s cocoon wither without your leaves crinkling beneath it?