Butterfl
...able to let go of things he loved. In the beginning, he is attached to the butterflies in the orphanage’s garden. He would let these “beautiful creatures” “land on [his] head…so [he] could look at them up close.” When he saw how his houseparent “stuck straight pins through their head and wings…onto a heavy cardboard,” he wanted to save them. However, because of his helplessness, he ended up loving these butterflies in a different way. He “would try to shoo them away” to save them from being destroyed. Not many children can throw away what he/she is attached to in order to help it, but he grew up to let go of what he loved for the best solution for them. The author is able to let go of what he loved, showing his maturity. Releasi...