Happily Flarey…Ever?

The third and final Marion Flarey book is now out!

Here’s the teaser:

Happily Flarey...Ever? by Kirsten Mortensen
She’s lost two princes. Is number three the charm?

She’s lost two princes. Is number three the charm?

In life, as in fairy tales, things happen in threes.

So when Marion Flarey’s third prince comes back into her life, it seems like a dream come true. He’s a fairy tale expert! He’s discovered a previously-unknown treasure trove of stories! He wants Marion’s help writing his next book!

Has Marion finally found her happily ever after?

Or maybe she still needs to learn an important lesson about the tales she loves so much…

It’s available on Amazon for Kindle or print.

Or click here to get a copy for different brands of e-reader (Kobo, Nook, Apple, etc.) here.

So what do I have to say about the novel, now that it’s out?

A few things.

One of the 2022 projects that lured me away from writing. Silly hens!
  1. It seemed like it took forever to get the series to this point. But in retrospect, I started working on the book in the summer of 2019, so it was “only” a little over three years. So: one book a year.
  2. My pace would have been faster if we hadn’t moved in 2021. Lived out of a tent for 9 months while we built a new house. Then all the new-house projects.
  3. In theory I could have been writing solidly that whole time, but in practice, novels take up a LOT of my headspace when I’m working on them. And it’s really hard to pick them up and put them back down again. When I’m writing, I’ve got one foot in another world, and it slows me down considerably when I have to play the hokey pokey. Left foot in, left foot out, argh!
  4. My pace wasn’t fast, but it also wasn’t awful. And I’ve accepted that this is how I write. I take a long time, because…
  5. I write from the inside out. I start with a gist of an idea: main characters, setting, a few major plot points. The characters then become the foundation, and I start working the novel out by working out what they do and how they react to one another.
  6. I don’t think I’ll ever do a series again. I disliked having such a big project hanging over me. I felt like I had to get it to completion even though I really wanted to work on other things.
  7. I’m super excited about moving to another project. The working title is Scratch, and it’s going to be very different from the Marion Flarey books. Darker. And definitely more literary.

And that’s it, for now. Please let me know if you enjoy the book.

It started with her name & nickname. (I love using notebooks this way. “Journaling” about my novel ideas really works for me.)

Geodesic domes and how I learned a bit about setting and place in novels

Photo by Kyle Glenn on Unsplash. This is nothing like the Weekes-Flarey dome. Or the San Antonio family’s dome. But I would definitely camp in it :)

One of the things that is the most fun about writing is when an idea just pops into your head, and the further into the novel you get, the more you realize how well it works.

With my Marion Flarey books, an impulsive idea I came to love was to make her parents’ home a geodesic dome.

I started reflecting on that again when I came across this article: Meet the San Antonio family living inside a rare geodesic dome.

Click the link to see the photos. It’s a gorgeous home. (A far cry from Marion’s parents’ rather messy dome with the leaky roof!)

The article also mentions some of the things I’d picked up over the years about the advantages of geodesic domes. They are energy efficient and relatively inexpensive to build.

So, to my point about choosing a dome for my Marion Flarey books:

Marion’s stepfather, Winchell Weekes, is tight with money (a character trait that becomes particular important in the second book, Fo Fum Flarey), so of course he would pick something cheap to build and cheap to heat.

Geodesic domes peaked in popularity in the late 70s or so. Winchell started building his dome around 1987, after the peak, but he’s eccentric enough that the timing makes sense. He’s the kind of guy who would still think domes were cool ten years after the trend had petered out :)

But from my perspective as a writer, the best thing is how I was able to incorporate the dome as an aspect of the novels’ setting. I can “shorthand” the Weekes-Flarey home by calling it “the dome,” and readers know exactly what I’m talking about. Because the interior has an open floor plan, it’s easy to “force” characters into conflict. They can’t easily escape from each other.

And because the dome is fairly unique as a dwelling place, I can create quick visuals to help draw readers into the story. I can talk about the challenges of placing furniture on a wall that isn’t flat — something Marion notes when she tours her tower apartment in Once Upon a Flarey Tale — or the way the shingles have darkened with age, and (hopefully!) readers start to form a picture in their minds of what the Weekes-Flarey home is like. Even the word “dome” is visual. You can’t read the word without picturing the general shape of the Weekes-Flarey house.

This experience has taught me something as a writer that I’ll carry into my future novels: make the buildings unique, in some way that is easy to visualize and easy to shorthand.

How about you? Have you ever set a story in a building that you could use in this way?

And have you ever seen a geodesic dome house — or been inside one? I was, many years ago when I was in my early twenties back in Chenango County… someday I’ll have to see if I can figure out where it is :)

Romance

I love Romance.

I write Romance.

Not in the sense of genre romance, but Romance in the sense of an affirmation of the centrality of the heart in human experience. Of the perils of our alienation from nature, and because Romance gives us a break from the sheer awfulness of life (Byron: “And if I laugh at any mortal thing, Tis that I may not weep.”)

My question is: can novels help people learn better (learn again?) how to think?

Yes, reading novels is a form of escapism.

But can they draw people into stories and then use those stories to train people, not what to think (blech) but how?

I hope so.

I’m so horrified by how poorly people think …

Fo Fum Flarey by Kirsten Mortensen

Out now! Book 2 of my Marion Flarey series :)

Available on Amazon for Kindle or Print, or click here to browse other e-formats.

New novel, Fo Fum Flarey, available for preorder

Those of you who know me personally know that this past year has been incredibly difficult. Yeah, I know I’m not alone. COVID etc. But in addition to the social upheaval, my personal life was turned upside down as well. First, my dad passed in April. And now my mom is gone, too. January 9.

Fo Fum Flarey by Kirsten Mortensen
She’s got her prince. If she can figure out how to keep him…

I am not even sure how to process it, to be honest. Looking forward to when this is all something that happened instead of something that is still happening.

In the meantime, I have been getting some writing done, although work has been a bit slower than I would have liked.

Once Upon a Flarey Tale came out last August.

Now the second book in the series, Fo Fum Flarey, is available.

Here’s the description of Fo Fum Flarey:

A tale about love, life choices — and how trusting the wisdom of old stories is sometimes the best choice of all.

Marion Flarey has finally found him. Fletcher Beal.
Her Prince.
And when you find your rich, handsome Prince, everything is settled, right? The fairy tales say so! You live happily ever after. No more questions, no more stress.
But as much as Marion loves those wise old tales, there’s a limit to their magic. How is she supposed to make her place in her new prince’s world — especially when Fletcher is always busy, flying around the country, exploring new domains and adding conquests to his kingdom?
The stories don’t say.
To make matters worse, her family is gripped by stories of their own — and Marion can’t figure out what’s going on. Her mother is distracted and unhappy. What secrets is she hiding? And then Marion’s brother, Ace, shows up in town — and Marion learns why he left.
He’s a thief.
He stole from their family.
Worse yet? He stole from Marion’s prince.
Can Marion unravel her family’s secrets?
Can she rescue her brother?
Can she put her broken family back together again?
And should she even try?
Or will her family’s crazy problems sabotage Marion’s life, robbing her of the one thing she wants most: a happy future with her sweet, rich, sexy prince?

Missing time, folklore templates, and my Marion Flarey WIP

On Twitter, Midnight Myth Podcast (podcast can be found here) shared a Japanese story for yesterday’s #Fairytaletuesday.

Urashima Taro returned from the underwater Dragon Palace to find centuries had passed.

I was struck by the beauty of the illustration, of course, but also by the fact that missing time crops up in so many folklore traditions, across so many cultures.

But wait! There’s more.

What if fairy tales like this one actually encode powerful secrets?

What if stories like this one are more than “just stories”?

You may be aware, for instance, that missing time crops up outside of folklore. People literally experience missing time when they stumble into certain kinds of paranormal phenomena — they have subjective experiences of time that don’t match up to the linear passage of time in “the real world.” Missing time is an almost universal aspect of UFO abductions, for example.

After a ferocious mental struggle, during which she literally tried to crawl out of the house as she could no longer walk, all went dark. When she woke up, it was hours later. She never found out what happened to her during that missing time.

— The Super Natural: Why the Unexplained is Real, Whitley Strieber and Jeffrey J. Kripal

Which brings me to a question I’ve been tussling with for over a year now, as I build out my Marion Flarey books — a three-novel collection that will debut when I publish Once Upon a Flarey Tale in a month or so. [UPDATE: it’s out and you can get your copy here!]

What if fairy tales hold clues to the nature of reality — and how to manipulate it?

What if they are actually templates that — in the right hands — can be used to harness and direct emotional and spiritual energy in ways that shape reality itself?

Marion Flarey seems to think so. She detects a power in fairy tales that nobody else seems to “get” (well — almost nobody!) — but that also tends to blow up in her face when she tries to wield it. :)

And here’s where — to me at least — it gets interesting.

I think she’s right.

Or put another ways: these books are fiction, but they are also true. I am not writing “paranormal.” I’m writing reality — or let’s call it quantum reality :D

Here’s what I mean, using the missing time template as an example.

If you study the template, you can feel the energy behind it. Quite a lot of energy, some negative (anxiety) and some positive (time pressure can be a powerful motivator).

In some stories, like the one Midnight Podcast shared, the energy is partly sexual. It’s about the power of sexual love-matches to make us completely forget — completely abandon — other loyalties and ties.

The handsome they like, and the good dancers. And if they get a boy amongst them, the first to touch him, he belongs to her.

— Mr. Saggarton, as told to Lady Gregory, Visions and Beliefs v. 1

The missing time template also warns us to be conscious about the trade-offs we make when we decide to take a particular life-path.

You can’t take two paths at the same time. Once you have invested time exploring one path, you can never get that time back. It’s gone forever.

She hastened homewards, wondering however, as she went, to see that the leaves, which were yesterday so fresh and green, were now falling dry and yellow around her. The cottage too seemed changed, and, when she went in, there sat her father looking some years older than when she saw him last; and her mother, whom she hardly knew, was by his side …

— The Elfin Grove, from The Big Book of Stories from Grimm, ed. by Herbert Strang

There’s a profound emotional poignancy, here. When we leave our birth homes, those we loved when we were children will, in our absence, grow and age and eventually die. And we’ll miss that, because we were elsewhere — we were Away.

Because of the poignancy of this trade-off, missing time is also related to death, naturally (what isn’t?): whether we permit ourselves to be aware of it consciously or not, we are all on some level keenly aware that our time on this planet is finite. Sooner or later, Mr. Death is going to knock on the door and whatever we are working on at that moment will remain forever unfinished.

The Good Man at the Hour of Death, from the British Museum Image Library. After Francis Hayman, print made by Thomas A E Chambars, 1783
The good man at the hour of death, print, London, British Museum image library

It’s scary, right? Because life isn’t fair and and the trade-offs we make, when we decide how to spend our time, are often downright cruel.

But there is one small comfort in this rather ugly mess: we have the ability to consciously shape our personal stories — the stories that, in turn, become the channels through which our lives flow.

In other words, we don’t have to be carried passively toward the inevitable penalties of Lost Time. We can recognize those penalties in advance; we can accept them with open eyes as the price we pay for a choice we consciously make.

Will this make those penalties less painful?

Rip’s heart died away, at hearing of these sad changes in his home and friends, and finding himself thus alone in the world. Every answer puzzled him too, by treating of such enormous lapses of time, and of matters which he could not understand: war—Congress–Stony–Point;—he had no courage to ask after any more friends, but cried out in despair, “Does nobody here know Rip Van Winkle?”

— Rip Van Winkle, Washington Irving

Nope. Still gonna hurt.

But it will make the experience of suffering those penalties one of conscious choice. We can therefore consciously acknowledge the richness of life’s tapestry, which is woven not only of beauty and joy and pleasure, but also of ugliness and loss and pain. And that’s something. It’s quite a lot, in fact …

This is what Marion is trying to do.

It’s hard for her, just like it’s hard for us.

It’s also absurd, and confusing, and funny, and has a tendency to backfire :)

But ultimately it’s as rewarding for Marion as it can be for you and I.

Because the better we get at shaping our stories consciously, the more aligned we become with our own sense of place, and our own sense of destiny.

And what could be a better HEA than that?

UPDATE: My first Marion Flarey novel is now out!

Once Upon a Flarey Tale by Kirsten Mortensen

“Once Upon a Flarey Tale” is available on Amazon for print or Kindle, or click here to browse other e-formats.

The Othering of Nature

As some of my friends and family members know, I am writing a novel again — actually a set of three novels.

They’re first-person books narrated by my new imaginary friend, Marion Flarey. Marion is a lover of fairy tales — more — she’s a student of fairy tales (or as she comes to think of them, “flarey tales”) (get it? hahahahaha) because she begins to realize that fairy tales are not old, dead children’s stories from the past but that they continue to intrude on her life today, giving her the tools she needs to navigate her often-confusing and very 21st Century life.

Marion Flarey
Marion Flarey–my new imaginary friend. As drawn by my sweet & talented daughter :)

I’ll be blogging more about Marion and these books. I’ll be introducing Marion to you online, as she is about to start writing herself and has begun preparing a place to publish what she writes :)

But I still have a lot to do, and even though these books are in many respects already mapped out, with many words already in place, in other respects I’m still at the stage where I am understanding what they are, what they are going to be.

And once again, I’m breaking rules.

On the surface, this project is chick-litty. Marion’s voice is light and winsome, and many of her adventures take place on the chick-litty surface of her life.

But I’m aware of a sleight of hand going on as I write; no matter how I approach my books, in the end I can’t but do what “they” say that is always the right thing for writers to do.

Write what you know.

And even if “they” didn’t say it, I doubt I could help myself. More times than I can count, I’ve tried to write books that stay on the surface of things. I’ve always failed. Writing, for me, is and cannot be a purely mechanical act. Writing is an act of opening a door, and through that door something emerges whether I want it to or not. The writing becomes a conversation with something that is picking me, no matter how I tell myself I’m picking it.

For example: Dark Chemistry started out, in my mind, with a premise that I thought was intended to do no more than entertain. It was a simple and familiar recipe: a woman would be deceived into falling in love with the wrong man. The premise had a twist (the deception was achieved using a type of drug) but when I started the book, there was nothing in my plans beyond the surface mechanics: how render this recipe in a way that would hold readers’ interest, deliver a romantic pay-off as the woman discovered the deceit and realized who she really really loved.

But then I started writing, and the more I wrote, the more the book became about something else. It became an exploration that deeply interests me about the interplay of biochemistry and “feelings.” When you fall in love, what is happening, really? You think it is your heart, your being. Your soul, leading you to something good, something fated. But how much of those subjective feelings are, in fact, the result of chemicals gurgling around in your cells, inducing sensations that you interpret subjectively and then act on, blithely, obliviously, even when your actions are very much against your best interests?

mayfly
Marion Flarey’s nickname (no coincidence)? Mayfly …

In the same way, in my current project, my sweet and bewildered Marion Flarey begins by thinking the story she’s telling is about love–romantic love.

But she’s slowly realizing that it is about other things, instead.

One of them being nature.

And so, as her channeler, I’ve been thinking about nature myself.

Specifically, I’ve been thinking about how separated we are from it. How tragic it is, this separation. And how the separation is spiritual, a split that opened in the human psyche and has now, I’m afraid, become a wall.

Without our realizing it.

Several weeks ago, I was in San Diego to have breakfast with a wonderful young lady, also a writer, who I’d worked with but had never met in person. We were sitting outside at a sidewalk cafe, when I noticed an insect.

I can’t be 100% certain what the insect was, but I suspect it was a figeater beetle, Cotinis mutabilis. (Coincidentally I photographed a couple dead ones in my neighborhood and shared the photo in one of my scarab bracelet posts.)

What I can tell you is that the beetle was large and heavy, and flew the way large, heavy beetles fly: ponderously. In the northeast, if you’ve ever seen one of our enormous June bugs, you’ll know what I mean. They’re noisy and slow and heavy-looking in the air.

And sometimes they seem like they are tired. That’s how this particular beetle seemed to me, that sunny morning on the sidewalk. It seemed like he had flown long enough, that he was tiring. His flight pattern had become a circling and a sinking. He was coming in to land.

He circled near another table maybe 20 feet away.

And he landed — big mistake — on a woman’s head.

The woman freaked out.

(Would you?)

Her hair was about the same length as mine, blond and fine, like mine. And beetles have sticky legs. Not sticky like glue, but sticky because of their legs have jaggedy, spiky edges and structures that tend to catch onto things with rough surfaces, like clothing and hair. Useful if you are a clumsy flier, I suppose. When you land you don’t want to bounce. You want to stick it.

I watched all this unfold from where we sat, a little ways away. First the beetle, flying, caught my eye. I watched it circling, heard the screams start, saw it hit the woman’s head. I saw her freak. She bent over, as if cowering, as if ducking her head out of the way although by then it was too late, the beetle was on her — ohdearGod ON her! — and her companions began to grasp what had happened and to shriek “it’s in your hair, it’s in your hair!”

I stood up and walked over toward their table.

My plan was to help. To cup the beetle in my hand, take it off her head, carry it to one of the trees or planters along the sidewalk, and put it down there.

The end of the story is that I never got a chance to do that. Somehow, she shook the beetle loose or maybe one of her companions was able to knock it out of her hair.

The beetle fell down on the sidewalk.

And one of the woman’s table mates stepped on it, smashing it with a grinding motion into the concrete.

Oh, how we hate bugs. How deeply and completely we hate bugs.

And how sorry I am that we do …

This … “sequence of events” … impressed itself on me. Poignantly. And I’ve thought about it many many times in the weeks since, always with a pluck of remorse at the end as I watched the woman’s shoe grind down — me too late. Too late.

It’s only a beetle.

Yet the ending of this story hangs there for me: that pluck of sorrow, and all because I wasn’t able to lift a beetle out of a woman’s hair and move it away.

As I work on my Marion Flarey books, I’ve been reading fairy tales. A lot of fairy tales.

One of the motifs that you encounter in many of these stories is the talking animal. Very often, what happens is that a talking animal begs a human (who is often a simpleton or fool — make of that what you will, hahahaha) for its life.

The human spares the animal. Then later, the human is himself in enormous danger, and the animal reappears and saves the human.

The human’s mercy, in other words, turns out to have been the hidden key that enables a later, magical event, one that helps the human succeed in a mortally dangerous quest.

The heroes or heroines of these stories are not modern city-dwellers. They live in the country — in the forest, often, or in a city bordered by forest. But the essence of the story intrudes into our lives today. For example: how about the news stories that crop up from time to time about how some dog that a person rescued later saved that person’s life? We love those stories, because they suggest that deeper connection with animals — with Nature — that we so crave. They are magical stories.

But we no longer think of them as magical.

We’ve created a new language to describe them — a language of “behavior” and “bonding.” Mixed in with a little chance.

But what if we’ve lost something? What if replacing “magic” for something that is purely materialistic is a huge mistake?

We interact with Nature, today, only in ways that we can tightly constrain: we demand Nature be controlled, antiseptic, abstract.

Take the way that we have turned certain animals — cats and dogs, primarily — into a sort of sub-category of human. We’ve done this partly through breeding, partly through projection. As articulated in this National Geographic article, as well as many other places:

Dogs can read facial expressions, communicate jealousy, display empathy, and even watch TV, studies have shown. They’ve picked up these people-like traits during their evolution from wolves to domesticated pets, which occurred between 11,000 and 16,000 years ago, experts say.

My dog is most definitely “more human” than the coyotes that lope past the fence in our back yard!

(By the way, I’ve read somewhere — if I can remember where I’ll update w/ a citation — that to the Iroquois, dogs occupied a kind of dubious, even conflicted space between humans and wild animals — because by helping humans with tasks like hunting, they betray their animal nature. They’ve sold out. Funny, isn’t it? Dogs’ loyalty, that we so much profess to admire, is the flip side or consequence of a kind of duplicity — a conspiracy they have entered into against their own kind. As dogs have become more human, they’ve taken on something of human sinfulness. Wild, eh? Pun intended.)

And of course we talk about our dogs and cats as if they were people. They are our fur-kids. Many 21st Century humans openly and freely prefer their company to that of other humans.

kirsten mortensen's dog tessa
Nature, so carefully bred to be oh, so cute.

I’m not saying that’s a bad thing. But what I am saying is that it is part of the Othering of Nature.

For how many people, today, allow Nature into our lives in this form, only? Only after we’ve reshaped the Other, like Play-Doh pressed through a form, into something that more closely resembles us. And so it’s only this humanized version of Nature that we allow into our lives, cuddle on our couches, let sleep with us in our beds.

A beetle is another matter altogether. Pun, again, intended.

A beetle is Nature, unadulterated.

Let me pause for a moment, here. I want to be clear: I “get” the way beetles — bugs — insects — trigger horror and disgust. I’ve felt that reaction myself. Another, very vivid memory, this one from very long ago, when I was probably 9 or 10 years old. My best friend at the time happened to be a neighbor boy. And we got along very well, but in this particular instance he caught a daddy long legs and was inspired, devilishly, to chase me with it. He threatened to put it on me — and then, more horrible still — he threatened to drop it down my shirt and squish it. Awful! Awful!

ground beetle
away from me, thou alien thing

The squishability of bugs, I have considered many times in my life, accounts in part for that reaction we so often have to them. Because their squishability evokes at once their otherness (that glossy clickity exoskeleton that envelopes an unknowable goo) and their incredible vulnerability: the horrifying power we have over them, an absolute power of life and death that we can wield so cruelly and without so much as a thought. We step on the bug, grind it into the concrete. Snuff it out. And the act brings to us a sudden relief. In an instant, we have erased the the thing that triggered in us such visceral and instantaneous horror and disgust.

Aaaahhhh….

But such acts raise simultaneously a question. We seldom acknowledge the question, of course — because we prefer to leave it buried in the most hidden parts of our minds and souls — but it’s there, it has to be, it is part of the act. Because we aren’t separate from that bug we just squashed. Not really. It is us. We are it.

So in the hidden part of our mind we know that we, too, are squishable. That right there, under your rib cage, you are also full of an unknowable goo. And the hidden part of our mind knows, as well, that the power of life and death is a terrible power, one that we don’t really understand, one that is horrible to wield.

And we know that like the bug on the sidewalk, our lives can also be smushed away in a second.

And so comes that awful, secret question.

“How like that bug am I?”

How horrible is it that, no matter how much I’d like to hide it from myself, I am part of what is most horrible and disgusting about Nature — the part that is about muck and guts and decay and death?

Some of us try to extract ourselves by abstaining from meat. And just as I “get” how horrible bugs are, I also “get” veganism. I get that the flesh of the cow or the pig or the chicken is, in so many ways, too much like our own flesh. “I don’t eat anything with a face,” the vegan says. It’s a statement that makes sense. Faces remind us of something in animals that is also in us. They remind us that it’s not just humans that can feel. That perhaps an animal may beg us to spare its life, just as we would beg our own life to be spared, if we found ourselves pinned by the paws of a Beast, smelling its awful breath.

This comes, next, to an idea that is not original with me: that we lost something when we began to interact with our meat via plastic-wrapped productized muscle-meats (muscle being the least squishable bit of an animal’s body) instead of living as we did in the olden days, raising our animals on farms or hunting them in the woods, butchering them with out own hands. We don’t need, today, to see look into the face of the animal we eat. We eat a symmetrical substance trimmed of any icky fat, tendons, gristle, rinsed in antimicrobial dip to maximize its purity, placed on a piece of absorbent material to ensure there will be no icky dripping fluids, framed by a cheery rectangular tray. We don’t eat the squishy bits. We don’t eat the bits that remind us too much of our own innards, our brains, our fascia, our marrow.

But most of us stop there. We say: if you can look the animal in the face, and then eat it, that is somehow more honest than opening a package you bought at the supermarket.

I suppose that is true, as far as it goes. But there’s something else that we need to consider.

Today’s 21st Century Westernized consumer is more likely than any other generation before to have been schooled in what we sometimes call the web of life. That you can’t touch one part of Nature without affecting another part. And the implication of this, if you look at it carefully, is that we humans are enmeshed in it this web. That we are part of it.

And there’s no escaping that the web is constructed of prey and predator, of eat and be eaten.

Becoming a vegan seems like a way to extract yourself from this web. “I am not of that.” “I am above that.”

But this is false. It is also an Othering, albeit via a different mechanism — via an illusion. We trick ourselves into believing that we can turn Nature into an abstraction and then, entirely via intellect we can extract ourselves, define ourselves as Something Apart.

But we cannot. We’re still a part of it.

carrot
Time to munch on some nice fresh crunchy carrot legs.

Put another way — and I know this will sound facetious, but bear with me — in the end, how is killing a carrot more ethical than killing a cow?

We argue that there is a difference. Carrots don’t have central nervous systems. Carrots don’t have faces.

Carrots aren’t like us, therefore we don’t have to feel bad when we kill and eat them.

But in some respects, aren’t these arbitrary distinctions?

Life is life.

For me to live, something else must die.

Back in probably the early 1990s I saw an act by the comedian A. Whitney Brown, and his most memorable line from that circuit is now on the interwebs: “I am not a vegetarian because I love animals; I am a vegetarian because I hate plants.”

It was side-splittingly funny because like all honest comedy it hit a truth that we know but try not to see, because secretly it makes us feel dreadfully uncomfortable. And in this case, the truth is that we have no choice but to kill things. And the lines we draw between what we will and will not kill are in many respects extraordinarily arbitrary.

We feel uncomfortable about eating meat, because we are ethical beings that feel empathy for the sad-eyed cow being led to the slaughterhouse.

But we will squash a spider simply because if found itself inside our home.

brown widow spider
squish it – it bites

The people in fairy tales who spare the lives of animals were not adverse to killing animals for food. They couldn’t afford to be. They had set out on long, lonely, physically grueling quests. The bread and jug of water they took when they started has long been depleted. So even in the stories where the heroes spare one animal, they often go on to kill and eat another.

They have to eat.

The difference is that one animal speaks.

Does that mean the one animal was more human than the other?

I think not.

I think that all animals speak. But it’s not human speech.

It’s got nothing to do with an animal becoming more human.

On the contrary. It has something to do with us, the humans, becoming something else — something other than what we usually are, in our ego-focused daily lives. It requires us to shift away from our habitual mode, this awareness that our egos claim is supreme but is more like a chip of wood bobbing along on the surface of a dark frothing current of reaction and counter-reaction and counter-counter-reaction. It requires that we find a mode that approaches a different kind of of awareness or understanding — one where our minds somehow reach out and meet Nature on Nature’s terms.

If you try this, and stay with it, show some patience with it, you can realize first-hand what I’m talking about.

Ask an animal a question and wait for an answer.

Not with your voice. Ask with your mind.

It can be any animal — it can be a pet or a wild animal you see outside your window or in the park or in the forest.

I remember the first time I saw a wood thrush. I heard it, often, in a stand of woods behind a house where I once lived. The song of a wood thrush is unmistakable, an ethereal piping. And so one day I walked into the woods where this wood thrush sang, and in my mind, I asked a question.

“May I see you?”

And a moment later, the bird answered. Not with words, but by materializing out of the thick leafiness of the forest and landing on a branch right above me, where it perched.

It peered down at me.

It was no more than five or six feet away. I could see the bird so clearly: the robin-like shape of its body, its soft breast buff with dark spots, and its eye, large, gentle, brown. Looking at me–looking into my eyes with its own.

Curiously.

And then it flew off.

Of course, you could call the entire thing a coincidence.

But I believe the bird felt my question and responded to it.

And I have replicated this experience multiple times. Not this exact experience — not with the wood thrush, not with the same question.

But with other questions. Or with internal motions, motions of the soul that aren’t even questions exactly, at least not questions that can be put into words, but more like questions about what is.

great horned owl

Who are you?

What are you?

The books I’m writing now, my Marion Flarey books, are once again set in my beloved Upstate New York. The rural bits where I grew up.

And as these books begin to take shape, I’m realizing how much I need to write about nature.

But not the nature you see on television, or learn about in a class on environmentalism, or even see when you go on a hike.

It’s a nature that is part of you–that is part of all of us.

And it’s dying. Quite possibly.

Which means that we are dying.

And many of us are aware of this, and are responding with fear and fury.

But we need a different sort of response, as well. One that is not political, because it’s ultimately not a political crisis, but a crisis of the soul.

There are bugs in your room, right now. They have blundered into your home.

They talk.

Do you hate them?

Why?