Sunday, December 11, 2022

Senior Reflections: The Bagworm

Not to be confused with the relatively attractive, furry, social tent caterpillar, the bagworm is a nuisance on ornamental evergreens. Nevertheless, if you think about it, this unattractive little animal is one to which a lot of us older Americans ought to be able to relate. 


(Fair use of a photo from the Missouri Department of Conservation. Inside the little bags of dead plant material are caterpillars--or are they turning into moths already? That's their business. The bags are longer than the caterpillars, with room for waste material walled off in the tapered ends, room for the growing bodies inside at the tops.)

Inch-long survivalist,
always drab, camouflaged
(she never eats the toxins
that turn skins red, black, blue, gold,
nor the succulent leaves
that give a bright green)
and brittle of skin, she builds
her camouflaged armorplate of twigs
and bits of needles, berries, moss,
glued together with her own spit.
It becomes her home, her comfort
zone, her cozy place,
and in due time the cocoon
in which she becomes an adult moth.
The female plume moth has no plumes
of wings, but is shorter and fatter
than she was as a caterpillar,
her surplus legs dissolving in pupation,
their fats and proteins forming eggs instead.
After pupation, males emerge and fly.
The female? That's not for her.
Why would she want to fly when
she has the only place she wants to be?
She stays at home.
Nobody makes her do this.
She is a solitary wild animal.
She does what feels right to her at the time.
It feels right to her to turn around,
head into her cozy place,
claws clinging to its walls,
tail end out for the necessary minimum
of social connection,
which, for a moth, means sex,
which plume moths do back-to-back.
She tolerates that much contact
while basking in the comfort of her home,
thinking whatever moths think, breathing in
the fragrance of her active youth, the memories.
A moth's life can be measured by a heartbeat
but humans do not see the tiny heart,
so the only way humans can tell
whether this moth is dead or alive
is whether she drops eggs on schedule.
After that it's anybody's guess.
Only the moth knows, and she is not telling,
when her life returns to the One Who gave it:
her life, her private life, lived her own way.
 

12 comments:

  1. What an absolutely fascinating picture you paint / story you tell, thinking your way so well into the life of this stay-at-home female!

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    1. Yes. Kind of a warning to myself and others :-) I'm only 90% bagworm moth. I do want to go out *some*times.

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  2. I do like learning more about moths

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    1. I do too! There's a devious reason why this web site is fixating on butterflies. It may become obvious to those who read the weekly butterfly posts.

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  3. I just love when science gets into poetry and makes it more wondrous... I totally get that female moth.. her life, her terms.

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  4. The life of a lady moth. Sigh!!
    ..

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    1. It grossed me out when I first read about it. Now it increasingly makes sense...

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  5. What a wonderful poem...you also taught me something I didn't know! We used to have these hanging on our trees when I was a child, I had no idea what they were! I understand that moth though, home is always more comfortable to me than the world out there!

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    1. I think a lot of people are feeling that way since the lockdowns. Hey, why put on day clothes if we can wear pajamas all day?

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  6. Takes a female to know what coziness is! Love the background information you provided. (Sara)

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