Updated 12/15/2014
Would it surprise you to know that I am not human? Most people are not surprised when I tell them that. They just think I am insane.
Would it surprise you to know that I am not human? Most people are not surprised when I tell them that. They just think I am insane.
I wonder what it says about me that
people are never surprised to find that I am insane.
When I found out, surprise is more or
less the furthest thing away from what I felt. Instead, it was
closer to validation. If I were a human memoirist, then the sentence
“I guess I had always known” would no doubt appear in this
paragraph. But I am not human, and I guess whatever I am instead
demands more self-honesty. I have not known for very long. I had,
however, suspected.
My earliest memories, or what I spent
many years believing were my earliest memories, were of being
strange, of not truly fitting. I never had the least bit of interest
in what the boys were doing. It was only very moderately more
interesting than doing nothing at all, and that margin, slim as it
was, is why I went along. That, and I was almost certain that if I
just kept doing it, I could learn to fit.
I even wondered if all of them
experienced the same disinterest. After all, they treated one
another the same way they treated me–almost. The voices, as well
as the gestures and the physical violence that accompanied them, were
a little more emphatic, almost as though they were meant to be final,
rather than to invite a response. The words those voices spoke,
though, were the same.
Of course, the truth is that the words
and the actions that came along with them were meant to be final,
because against me, they were truly meant. I only learned this much,
much later, when I saw a psychiatrist for my not fitting in.
For a while, I decided to experiment by
spending time with the girls instead. This was very, very moderately
less interesting than spending time with the boys, which I eventually
went back to.
After this experiment, the treatment I
received from the boys became quite noticeably different. The
physical violence they directed at me went from leaving visible
results to leaving injurious results. Once, the people I believed at
the time to be my parents were worried that an injury I sustained
might be life-threatening. They became quite agitated.
Though this fact was of no comfort to
those two humans who raised me, I just barely noticed a difference.
I have always been detached from the physical world around me, even
more than from the people. It wasn't that I didn't feel anything.
There are people like that. They have a condition called CIPA, and
they do not feel any pain. I do. It just doesn't feel like my pain.
It's a little like I spend my whole life playing a video game with a
controller that vibrates when I make a mistake or when someone else
attacks me. There's definitely a sensation. It's undeniably
negative, and at times it's even startling. It just feels
secondhand.
Eventually, the boys' behavior more or
less returned to what it had been before my experiment. It felt
familiar. Of course, even in my earliest memories, I recall that the
behavior of other boys seemed familiar in some way. I always assumed
that I had simply spent my days with those boys for some time before
I managed to create a long-term memory of it.
I'm sure I did, but I'm also sure that
it wasn't that simple.
In any case, the old but ill-fitting
state of normalcy returned for a number of years, before it was
forever altered by two incidents that were far more permanent and far
more profound than a couple of months spent among the females of the
human species. The first was that my brain quite suddenly began to
work much faster. It had always worked faster than those of the boys
and girls I had assumed to be my peers. I was far ahead of them in
all of our subjects of mutual study. At night, while they slept, I
studied a number of additional subjects that I'm sure they had never
heard of. (That was another way in which I never fit in. I have
never needed, wanted, or even understood sleep. To this day, I have
no idea how it is accomplished.) Yet, as I did all this, I could not
shake the feeling that the electrical impulses my neurons generated
were moving through some sort of mud or sludge, that I was meant to
think much faster and about so much more. The fact that I knew what
neurons were at all was evidence that my brain was fine, and better
than fine, by the standards of my peers. Still, it took me nearly
thirteen years on earth to shake the feeling that there was something
holding me back.
With a whole world in front of me, and
a suddenly improved capacity to think about it, I quickly stumbled
upon a second realization: that however little I fit in with other
boys, I fit in less with the adults in my own home. Each of them had
interests, and antipathies. Each of them had a passionate reaction
to both. While it was true that there were some subjects of study
which I found moderately more interesting than the others, I never
experienced a visceral reaction to any of them. I can't imagine how
one would accomplish that, nor why they would want to.
Some of the interests or passions my
caretakers shared were the same as those of boys: television, movies
and cars, for instance. However, my parents had a whole additional
set of interests that were collectively referred to as “nice
things.” They encompassed clothing, furniture and money, among
other human inventions which have already become too tiresome to
list.
There was a time when I could learn
from these “nice things.” Money, for instance, has no use of its
own. It is simply a symbolic stand-in that represents “nice
things” in general, which can be carried easily or converted into
something more specific. It also tastes somewhat more pleasant than
the most of human cuisine. Clothing is only considered “nice”
once it includes bland, nonfunctional decorative elements. If it is
purely functional, or if its shape or coloring is unique enough to
attract the eye, it is considered to be “low class.”
Additionally, the more clothing discomforts the wearer and restricts
his or her movements, the “nicer” it is considered. As for
furniture, some of it is considered so “nice” that it is not fit
to perform its standard function at all, for fear of ruining it.
These facts all strike me as being somewhat banal, and in fact I'm
quite sure that you are familiar with all of them. Nevertheless,
these proved somewhat useful in my continuing study of anthropology.
Any details beyond these were somewhat
immoderately less interesting than doing nothing at all. In fact, my
caretakers' discussions of these things brought me the closest I have
ever come to experiencing a visceral reaction. Indeed, I felt quite
strongly that I must leave at once, and so I would always excuse
myself, either to spend time with the boys, who mercifully showed as
little interest in “nice things” as I did, or else to continue my
studies.
As a result of this, I grew to consider
myself somewhat distant from my parents. The psychiatrist I have
mentioned came to the same conclusion, and to one more. He believes
that my parents could not possibly have failed to notice, nor could
they have succeeded in ignoring, this growing distance. In fact,
they probably realized it long before I did.
It is to their credit, according to the
psychiatrist, that they did not react to the change with any sort of
violence or other juvenile behavior. Indeed, they continued to
provide for my extracurricular education as reliably as they ever
had. Eventually, about two or three years before I left their
immediate care, they did cease all attempts to engage me in
conversation. I found this development to be neither a relief nor a
disappointment.
As it turned out, it was that parting
of ways that brought the whole situation to a head. During the same
period over which I became more distant from my caretakers, the boys
I knew were growing very interested in ingesting a number of
psychoactive substances. The psychiatrist has told me that it would
have been quite natural for me to join in, and I did–exactly one
time. I found the effect to be entirely unpleasant. It was uncanny
how it mirrored the prevailing sensation of my youth, of something
gumming up my ability to think. Though asked over and over, I always
refused to repeat this experiment.
For a while, I was able to simply avoid
any exposure to the stimulus, and even to people who would try to
stimulate my interest in it. I took so many classes as an
undergraduate that I literally had no free time to do anything else.
Graduating in record time was an unintended and somewhat undesired
side effect of this approach. After this, I did study for an
advanced degree, but unfortunately, they actually forced me to spread
that work out over a three-year period, setting the stage for the
return of free time. Still, the other boys took my constant answers
of “no, thank you” at face value. At least, they did for a
while.
That answer stopped being good enough
for my social cohort exactly twenty-one years after the official
record of my birth. Apparently this day is considered to be of some
import by humans. In any case, my “friends” insisted that I
accede to the consumption of intoxicants. I insisted otherwise.
Eventually, one of the other boys just grabbed my face, squeezed my
mouth open, and jammed the open end of a bottle of foul-tasting
liquid into it. I felt gravity push the fluid deeper and deeper,
toward my throat. At this point I decide that, objectionable or not,
a choice between temporary stupidity and permanent death wasn't much
of a choice. I felt a burning sensation as I swallowed.
Apparently, this particular liquid was
a far stronger intoxicant than the first one I tried. It took no
more than a few minutes for this intoxicant to render me even duller
than youth had. It also had the strange affect of making some
heretofore-silenced corner of my brain go crazy for more to drink.
Most of my brain, the smarter parts, were against this notion
entirely, but unfortunately, I had become stupid enough that the
smarter parts were no longer active enough to mount an effective
defense.
After that, the night turned into a
slow-moving blur of things I wish quite fervently to forget. But I
remember.
I remember laughing for the first time.
I remember being unable to walk properly, and being unduly amused by
it. I remember speaking in incomprehensible gibberish, and thinking
myself brilliantly clever for it.
I remember regurgitating. While there
are humans who react to this act as though it has humor value, I
can't say I find it to be anything other than repellant and
unpleasant.
I remember engaging in the human
reproductive act, or at least attempting to. I'm not certain I know
the entire procedure. For some reason, the boys had strapped a
cellular communication device to my head. “Pork that pig!” a
voice in my ear said, before making a few animal grunts and then
breaking down into laughter.
Mostly I remember asking for more to
drink, receiving more to drink, and then drinking it.
The last thing I can remember that
happened that night was falling to the ground outside an
acquaintance’s house. A crowd of people gathered around, some of
them familiar, some of them strangers. But all of them, every single
one, pointed and laughed. I remember the feeling of fatigue, and of
darkness approaching.
Eventually, though, I remembered
something else from a very different night, much longer ago than that
one.
“I can't believe you grew a
disguise,” a voice said, the sounds foreign but their meaning
unmistakable. “I can't believe you know how to grow disguises.
That's pure spytech.”
“I can't believe you did such a
good job on it,” shouted another voice, using the same language.
“I do a lot of things you wouldn't
believe,” a third voice responded. “Now you two close it back
up. I have something to do.”
I could not see any of the speakers,
but I could hear them moving around. Somehow, I could sense that
there were more than three of them. I had no sense of where they were,
though. I felt crowded, but only in the same way one feels crowded
on awakening from mostly asleep to half-asleep, when the sizes of
things, and the distances between them, and even one's own body
dimensions all become illusory.
“I think he's waking up,” a
voice said. “Stick him again.”
The conversation faded , but
eventually returned.
“What are you doing messing with
those?” asked one of the voices.
“What do you think I'm doing?”
the cocky voice retorted.
“Come on! That's dangerous. You
have no idea what they'll do.”
“I know exactly what it'll do.
This is for beast control, designed to slow down brain function so
that it can't formulate or carry out any actions. But he's no beast,
so this will make him just dense enough to pass for a child on this
worthless rock.”
“Don't you need one of them for
all of the rest of humans, though, so that they'll actually believe
it?
“No, no, no need at all. I'm
pretty sure they're dumb enough to fall for it as is. The caretakers
and a few others will need some false memories, but that's it. The
human capacity for delusion is quite boggling.”
“Won't the implant wear out?”
“Eventually, yes. But it's good
for two generations of warbeast, which is close to four of our cycles
and a little bit over twelve of theirs.”
“But it'll still wear off?”
“So what? That's after he's more
than halfway out of his youth. Do you honestly imagine him getting
that far without someone deciding to kill him first? I mean, I want
to kill him right now, and he's unconscious.
But I wasn't unconscious, not all the way.
Apparently
this phenomenon is called “state dependent memory.” I don't know
enough about human neuropsychology to say whether it's a real,
scientifically-measurable thing, but I'm certain that I have
experienced it myself.
In fact, I have pursued it many times since my first recollection of a life before my time among humanity. With my most important questions about
myself answered, a new set of questions arose. Foremost among them
was to wonder what to do about it. As much as the sensations I must experience in order to do so disgust me, I repeatedly enter a state of intoxication seeking additional memories, new information, anything more. I repeatedly gain nothing more than my original insight. I have now experienced that same memory countless times. It is always identical, and I learn no more from it. I still have not ascertained how to
remove the disguise.
If you have any idea, feel free to pass
it along.
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