Amanda Boyanowski-Morin
CICADA’S SIREN SONG
I circle trees clockwise late June till early September
searching for cicadas. Running my fingers on bark and plucking
exuviae off branches, placing them in my palm until it is full
and I transfer empty husks to a mason jar in my backpack.
I walk miles around neighborhood trees, waiting
to glimpse a nymph crawling up,
up to where it will cling
and split, a pastel adult hanging until it pumps its wings alive
with hemolymph to harden
body and wings, readying itself for flight.
While considering the incalculable odds to see one molt in a normal year
I have taken at least 73 home with me.
I have one that has died early in the process. It is unbalanced, stony.
Another that died right before emerging.
Out of respect for the dead
these are held separately from the others.
Sometimes I see the lichen green of a fresh wing, still curled at the tip
and I know I was close. I keep circling.
On the day I saw a nymph climbing an Ash tree in a park I shook
as I called my husband
Bring my camera, camp stool, a flashlight and some water.
I’m not leaving until this is finished.
I stood on that canvas stool photographing through dusk.
My pelvis trembled and I fell, I caught myself with my right arm
in a knot and my shoulder gave a familiar dislocating pop.
I climbed back up.
This was the end of cicada season.
/
The thing is – if a cicada doesn’t make it through this complex transformation
it dies. Ideally, it goes from larvae to nymph to mind-blowing siren song of summer
whose tymbal can be heard to call its brood from a mile away.
In just over an hour and a half I saw one living being recreate
itself into a completely unfamiliar and exquisite version of itself.
Am I feeling out the right soil temperature to transform?
It is fully dark now.
I pack up my things and leave.
This molt I do not collect.
Amanda Boyanowski-Morin is a poet, parent, and partner living in Rhode Island. She can be found in the woods with her service dog, Rowan, or among the intertidal zone with a field guide. Amanda's work primarily focuses on the body and its connection with an ever-changing Anthropocene.
Words shown courtesy the author ©️ Amanda Boyanowski-Morin. All rights reserved.