Friday, August 24, 2012

Mental health patients find a spiritual release

"And the highest enjoyment of timelessness - in a landscape selected at random - is when I stand among rare butterflies and their food plants. This is ecstasy, and behind the ecstasy is something else, which is hard to explain. It is like a momentary vacuum into which rushes all that I love. A sense of oneness with sun and stone. A thrill of gratitude" - Vladimir Nabokov
John Eagan holds the dusty wings of a monarch butterfly between his fingers, just before he releases it into what the Rev. Ray Gurney has named a "transformation garden."
"Did I do that well enough?" Eagan asks Gurney.
"That was beautiful, beautiful, John."
Eagan, who is 33, identifies with the weeks-old monarch: after time as an egg, a caterpillar and a chrysalis, the butterfly has assumed its final identity; after a breakdown and 15-month recovery at the Milwaukee County Behavioral Health Complex, Eagan has begun to counterpoise his life.
This is the second year that the facility's staff is helping patients - adults and children - raise and release monarchs. It was Gurney, the complex's spiritual integration coordinator, who approached its spiritual committee with the idea. For patients who have had difficulty with organized religion, the program may offer an alternative.
To Gurney, the miraculous transformation of the compact chrysalis to winged monarch "represents nature, which has nothing to do with an organized religion, but it's very spiritual and it means a lot to people," he says.
He collects monarch eggs from under the leaves of milkweed plants. They grow in the complex's triangular courtyard, which he hopes will soon be registered as an official monarch way station with the University of Kansas' Monarch Watch project.
Gurney then places the pinhead-sized eggs he's assembled in a display case in the facility's main hallway. From inside the shells, hungry caterpillars emerge. When they've eaten enough milkweed to outgrow five sets of skin, the larvae hang upside down from their back ends and curl up into letter "Js." They unzip their last black, white and yellow outfits, revealing jade-green chrysalides. Beneath those ornamental coverings, the monarchs dissolve and reform themselves into maturity.
Gurney carefully ties the chrysalides onto a branch in the display case and he waits for them to darken with the butterflies inside. When the monarchs issue from their casings, they're fragile. Their wings are shriveled. As fluid drains into their wings, they expand, and soon the butterflies need no anchoring.
On Monday, before liberating two monarchs, adult patients at the behavioral health complex gather to watch a video called "Butterfly Sunshine: A Monarch Meditation" and discuss what the butterflies symbolize to them.
"The symbol is like he's free!" says Zenova Walker, who was released from the facility only a week earlier. After Eagan lets the first butterfly go, she releases the second. Patients gathered behind her clap.
"I feel like I'm free of all the suicide attempts that God had arranged for me to live," Walker says.
Now 26, she's tried to commit suicide 11 times since she turned 16. In June, she swallowed 30 Tylenol pills after her cousin died of smoke inhalation in his basement.
If God hadn't wanted her to survive, Walker reasons, "He'd let me die the other times I tried to kill myself, so there's a purpose for everyone to live."
With therapy and medication for her schizophrenia and her bipolar disorder, Walker is feeling her wings for the first time. She feels she's at a turning point in life.
At the very least, Gurney hopes the butterflies have taught Eagan and Walker that transformation is part of life's cycle. It's tumultuous - and normal.