Springing Up Along the Ditch, 9″x11,” watercolor and gouache, By Donna Lyons © 2025
Taking flight
By Marty Coffin Evans© 2019
I didn’t know what to expect when, several years ago, the principal and several teachers from California Elementary in my last school district invited me to a special celebration, the culmination of a science project. While I don’t remember what grade these students were in, I recall their excitement when they released their butterflies. What began in the classroom as a study of caterpillars soon saw them transformed into beautiful butterflies.
Recently, I attended another butterfly release. This time, it came as the focal point of a memorial celebration organized by TRU Community Care Hospice.
When we entered the TRU PACE Center that morning, we were given a tiny, thin, triangular shaped box. Inside, a butterfly waited to be released. “It’s okay to keep it warm in your hands,” we were told. “You may feel a little movement and that’s okay.”
In the activity room, a volunteer played softly on a flute as we gathered for the program. Later she would lead us outside for the release of our butterflies. During that time together inside, several speakers spoke about grief, joy, loss and the temporal nature of it all.
At the conclusion of the brief program, we moved outside to a Labyrinth where we stood wherever we wished. Carefully, we all began to open our triangular boxes by pulling on the side tabs. Inside, our Painted Lady butterfly lifted its wings. With what appeared to be one tiny foot still attached to the paper, ours fluttered its wings long enough for us to take a picture. All too soon, our butterfly took flight along with our thoughts of loved ones.
One little girl dressed in a pink jacket lay on the ground cupping her hands around her butterfly. Some adults stood in clusters waiting for their butterflies to take flight. Occasionally, a released butterfly would land on some one’s clothing long enough to be admired before heading away.
Fran LeMasters’ poem “Free the butterflies,” included inside that day’s program, captures a sense of this experience and its memorial significance. “I’ll be there to see them soar upon the air. Know my spirit is on the wing, feel my laughter-hear me sing. Forever in your dreams, always in your heart.”
This time, the symbolism of the butterfly became that of transcendence. Here their message, implied and possibly stated – our loved ones live on in spirit although no longer seen. They too had been transformed into the beauty of the butterfly – here for a short time, cherished, and then gone. We were left to marvel at this change with a mixture of sadness and joy.
April 2026




