The time of monsters draws nigh and I am reminded of my
appreciation for such things. How can creatures that fill us with terror also fill
us with delight? Perhaps, it is because they are a reflection of us.
Monsters elicit the deepest of emotions, and the feelings
that go deepest touch us the most. We are afraid, and yet mesmerized. Though desiring to run, we pause and reflect.
The best monsters are those that evoke sympathy: the hapless
product of a mad scientist; the man cursed to become a beast under the light of
the full moon; the restless spirit who is unable to leave this world and go on
to the next. We feel for them, even though they frighten us. And maybe what we
really fear is man’s propensity to become a monster.
Still we have a fascination for fantastic creatures. I have
written about orcs, goblins and ogres. Each one strikes me differently: the
ferocity of the orc, the power of the ogre, and the silent threat of the
goblin.
I became obsessed with learning more about these beings:
what would they really be like? If they were wholly evil, the interest would
have abated. But we are drawn to them, and so the knife cuts much deeper…
Human beings are often afraid of what they like. Perhaps, it
is because they are ashamed to like it. But evil is born in the heart and only manifests
itself in the thoughts of the mind carried out by the hands. There is no shame
in loving monsters, so long as you do not become one.
Your insight transcends the simpletons who believe they refrain from evil by watching their words but not their selfish actions. Your sympathetic monsters, though fiction, have more to offer the real world than those who live only to take and suppress.
ReplyDeleteDear God! Your talking about things you love! This is wonderful!
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