My Personal Journey: Watching the Green Machine
I get asked all the time why I suddenly shifted gears a few years back. People saw me running a successful, high-stress consulting business, making good money, and then boom—I just walked away from the big contracts. They think it was some big financial plan or a pre-meditated retirement. Nope. It was a caterpillar. Seriously.
The truth is, I was completely fried. I was hitting forty and realized I was just going through the motions. I was clocking hours, barking orders, and making clients richer, but I wasn’t growing. I felt like a massive, slow-moving slug trapped in a suit. My stress levels were destroying my sleep, and frankly, my marriage was hanging by a thread because I was impossible to live with. I needed a transformation, but I didn’t know how to start digging myself out.
I remember this one Sunday afternoon. I had just walked out of a particularly nasty phone argument with a client—the kind that makes your hands shake—and I just needed air. I threw on some old clothes and started trying to fix a broken bird feeder in my backyard. That’s when I spotted it.
It was a huge, lime-green creature, maybe three inches long, just relentlessly chewing on my parsley. Normally, I would have squashed it or used some kind of organic killer, because, well, it was destroying my herbs. But that day, I just stared. I saw myself in that creature. A thing that only knew one instruction: consume, consume, consume.
That day, I made a decision. This wasn’t going to be a casual observation; this was my spiritual practice. I committed to tracking this one caterpillar. I marked the date. I opened up a fresh journal—the first time I’d written anything personal in years—and started logging its progress. I named it Chester.
The first stage of the practice was just watching Chester eat. For days, maybe a week, that’s all it did. It didn’t pause. It didn’t worry about what the neighbors thought of its chewing sounds. It just fueled itself. I internalized that behavior. I realized I was so busy worrying about the end result (being happy, being free) that I wasn’t doing the necessary, sometimes ugly, work of taking in new input. I started devouring books on stoicism, ancient philosophy, and astrophysics—stuff completely outside my consulting bubble. I was fueling my change.
Then came the chrysalis. I found it tucked beneath a railing. It was perfect, hard, and utterly still. This was the second, and hardest, phase of my practice: the waiting. My entire life had been about immediate action and instant results. But Chester was showing me that true change requires silence and integration. You can’t rush the melting process inside the shell.
I forced myself to sit beside that chrysalis for 30 minutes every morning. I didn’t meditate—I just sat and felt the discomfort of not doing, not solving, not rushing. I wrote down every single impulse I had to go back to my old panic patterns. I realized that the spiritual meaning of the caterpillar wasn’t just about becoming beautiful; it was about the necessity of that awkward, dark, hidden time where the old self dissolves completely.
I remember one day, about three weeks into the chrysalis stage, my old business partner called, demanding I fly out for an emergency meeting. Old me would have jumped. New me—the one watching the silence—just calmly said no. I pulled the trigger on setting real boundaries that day. That felt like the first crack in my own hardened shell.
Finally, the breakthrough came. I was having coffee when I looked out and saw the chrysalis was translucent. I rushed out and watched the final act. It wasn’t gentle. It wasn’t effortless. The butterfly—a beautiful Eastern Black Swallowtail—had to struggle violently to get out. It pushed, it fought, and its wings looked wet and crumpled. It hung there for hours, slowly, painstakingly pumping fluids into those messy wings until they hardened. It needed that struggle to gain strength.
That moment changed everything for me. The spiritual meaning of the caterpillar isn’t about being reborn pretty; it’s about the sheer, uncompromising effort of the emergence. I realized I had been waiting for transformation to happen to me, instead of pushing my way out.
Within two months, I liquidated my share of the consulting business. I took a massive pay cut and started volunteering with a local wildlife group, focusing on observation and recording. I launched this blog to document these raw, physical processes that lead to mental and spiritual shifts. That butterfly didn’t fly out instantly ready; it struggled, dried, and then, finally, took off. My life felt just as messy, but it was finally taking flight.
- I learned that constant consumption (of work, of money) is only the first stage.
- I embraced the necessary darkness and stillness of the waiting period.
- I understood that the hardest part—the struggle to emerge—is exactly what provides the strength for flight.
If you’re stuck, stop trying to change who you are. Just commit to watching the process of transformation around you, and force yourself to apply those brutal, fundamental steps to your own life. That’s the real seeing.
