《Hive Minds Give Good Hugs》20. Cultural Exchange
Advertisement
"Wait, wait, wait, wait. Are you saying that you don't have any fiction? At all?"
I'm doing the dishes after feeding Tara. Again. She really eats like crazy! After I fried her some crickets she asked if I had any more crickets, and if she could have them raw. I don't have any more, but I will be sure to catch extra later for her. If my alien friend is interested in eating raw bugs, who am I to tell her she should have PB&J instead? Any excuse to hunt more bugs is welcome anyway.
But then she goes and says something super-duper crazy! After asking why I wasn't more frightened or surprised about hearing that she was from another world I started recounting some of my favorite sci-fi stories and she suddenly got really confused. We asked each other a few more questions and it turns out her home world is way bleaker than I ever thought.
“Fiction? That's your word for stories about things that aren't real, yes? It's not like I'm not familiar with the concept, I just find it… somewhat morally indefensible? Why would you create such an elaborate lie?"
"Oh my gosh, Tara, I'm sorry but you're just in a dystopian space future and you don't even know it!" I lament, pacing around the room. "I don't know, maybe your species is really different but to me this sounds super bad! Like this is some Fahrenheit 451 bullshit! You don't burn books where you live, do you? I mean, I guess the warning signs were there from some of the other things you talked about. You had some 1984 vibes, but—"
"Evelyn! Slow down, I have no idea what you're talking about! Why are you the one worked up about this? You're saying these stories are lies, of course I wouldn't want to hear them!"
"No! They're not lies, Tara," I insist.
"But you explicitly said they aren't real."
"It's different!" I say firmly. "Lies are things that you tell with the intent to deceive. With fiction, everyone knows the story is not real. You are never at any point attempting to give the impression that it actually happened."
"People could still be confused," Tara argues. "Sharing untruths is a serious problem, Evelyn. If people go around believing things that aren't true and thinking that's okay, you get all sorts of problems! Weren't you complaining earlier about societal issues you face because of people who don't believe in medicine?"
I'm about to respond immediately, but firm lessons from my father managed to make me stop and consider that instead. She's not wrong. A lot of people say and do terrible things because they believe something stupid. Or… misguided, at least. And other people exploit those who are willing to believe in those particular kinds of nonsense, which is arguably even worse. But still…
"So, for starters, you are absolutely right that the truth is very important. If you think the world works a certain way, but it doesn't actually work that way, you can end up doing super terrible things while thinking that they are good."
Tara relaxes a bit, muscles untensing.
"Exactly, yes," she says.
"But… that's not all there is to it," I continue carefully. "Firstly, I should establish some important cultural background here. On Earth, fiction is well-established, well-respected, and distinctly quarantined from real things. Almost all of the places where you can get fiction, it's clearly marked as fiction, and if you can find both in the same place then the non-fiction is marked too. This isn't always the case, but we are all just so used to it that even the places which don't mark the difference still have a distinction between the two that is inherently obvious to us."
Advertisement
"You say that, but we still have countless examples in your history where atrocities are committed due to lies regarding some group of people or another. What about your 'Holocaust?'"
"Godwin's Law!" I declare, shooting finger guns at her.
Silence stretches between us for a moment.
"What?" Tara asks.
"Nevermind, I'll tell you about it later. Anyway, that example is totally different. The people who did those bad things either thought those lies were true or they were too scared of the ones that did to say otherwise. But nobody thinks that fictional stories are true, unless they are already crazy or the writer goes out of their way to try and deceive people, which is definitely lying and still considered wrong."
"I understand what you're saying," Tara answers hesitantly, "but it just seems like such a hard-to-define distinction, which bothers me. It's a very blurry line, and I don't know why anyone would go to all the trouble to draw it just to create a culturally acceptable form of lying."
"It's not—" I begin, but cut myself off again. I can't allow myself to just give knee-jerk responses. I have to think about it from her perspective. Talking with aliens is stressful!
"Sorry, can I take some time to figure out how to explain this?" I ask.
"Please do," Tara answers amicably, crawling into and starting to nibble on more of my pantry. Geez, she's got to have eaten like three times her weight by now.
"There are two main reasons I think we go to all the trouble of making the distinction," I answer eventually. "The first and more basic reason is that humans just find stories enjoyable. If I'm being honest, this is the biggest reason and because of it hardly anyone ever really questions this. Fiction is fun, and nearly everyone likes it, because I guess over time people that enjoyed paying attention to information about other people got to have more sex or something. I don't know, I'm not really an evolutionary biologist. Culture may have evolved beyond that a lot, but it's part of who we are as people. We need entertainment to alleviate stress, and nearly all of us find fiction entertaining."
"Okay…" Tara murmurs thoughtfully. "It's not as though my people don't have any fun, though. Surely you all have things you find entertaining other than… fiction."
"Of course we do, yeah," I agree. "But that brings us to reason two! This is one that people don't really think about, but in my opinion everyone should. Stories are an incredible tool to teach with and learn from. They can give you outlooks on life you couldn't otherwise come across, and they can deliver those outlooks in a more nuanced and effective way than just flatly telling someone about it. You can teach someone about, say, the moral framework of utilitarianism, but it's going to be bland and boring and miss a lot of nuance that could be better conveyed by immersing someone in a story about someone who believes in utilitarianism. You could show how that affects the way they interact with the world and the consequences in their life that result from that belief. You could even have the story be about the character initially not understanding the framework and learning about it slowly over time and growing as a person as the ideas they encounter change their thinking. The people reading or watching that story will see the process on a more intimate level and understand it more completely."
Advertisement
"Why not just do the same thing with the true story?" Tara asks. "People who have had those experiences could simply write autobiographies."
I shrug.
"Well, firstly, I find autobiographies super boring, and while that sounds like a silly complaint it actually matters a lot. The type of person who goes out and looks for nonfiction about moral philosophy or whatever probably isn't the type of person that needs to know more about moral philosophy. Right? They're going to learn about it anyway, but it's good to also have a way to reach the people who weren't originally thinking about it. The way you do that is to make it fun!"
"And secondly?"
I grin.
"Well, secondly, you can't write an autobiography about the best ways to talk to aliens if no one has talked to an alien before. I have read all sorts of stories in which first contact with someone from another world goes horribly because people just don't think about all the problems that could occur and their carelessness, ignorance, or selfishness causes a lot of pain. None of those people are real, but I can still know about and try to avoid their mistakes."
She's quiet for a while after that, occasionally shifting her many legs as she munches away at more food.
"By that same method," she responds eventually, "could you not influence people with false lessons, negative outlooks that seem good, and portraying cruelty as heroism?"
"Yeah, of course you can. You can also get stories with no real thought or message behind them beyond entertainment, as well. But can't you do the same with stories of things that actually happened?"
She rapidly taps one leg like a woodpecker, in what I think might be an irritated gesture.
"I… yes, I suppose you could. But do you really think this story strategy is working? Your planet still has no end of problems."
I tilt my head to the side.
"Well, yeah. Doesn't yours?"
She stops eating, turning to face me.
"I suppose it does," she admits. "We have many. No wars, which I think is a rather big deal, but we still have terrorists. Murderers that attack Haslken-Rkito administrators in broad daylight. It's rather terrifying."
There is something I immediately want to ask about that, but it might be risky and dangerously personal. It might disgust her. I've seen stories go both ways. But I have to trust her friendship, or what's even the point?
"Are they in the right?"
"What?" she asks, startled.
"The terrorists. Are they doing the right thing when they fight hazel-ken ricky-toe?"
"Wh—no, they're not in the right!" Tara snaps. "They're murderers, Evelyn! They kill people!"
"So do governments, a lot of the time," I say. "And a terrorist group certainly risks being killed themselves if they fight your government. So why do they do that?"
"How should I know? They're insane. Self-defense is one thing, but aggressive, targeted murder is… it's inexcusable! Indefensibly evil!"
I smile, setting the last dish on the drying rack and pulling a chair up next to the counter so I can sit next to my friend. I offer her more crackers. She takes them, grumbling quietly in what I assume is her native language so I don't catch a word. It's so cool that I can do this. Yeah, I'm a little worried about things going wrong. There are all sorts of thought experiments I've read about arguing morality with alien, generally as a representation of something totally inhuman in personality and perspective. But Tara isn't like that, not really. She's just a friend with a few different opinions. Not to mention she's also an actual fucking alien, which continues to be the most incredibly amazing thing I could ever imagine.
"I don't know these people, or really anything about them," I tell her soothingly. "I'm absolutely not saying whether they are or aren't in the right. There are some horrible, awful terrorists on my planet that attack people for crazy reasons, and I certainly don't think anybody should be murdering anybody else. But I can think of a dozen situations in which someone might try to fight the government anyway, and a lot of them are pretty good reasons. They come from both real life and fiction. These people from your home might very well be evil, but like my dad always used to say..."
I clear my throat so I can do a proper impression of my goofy old man.
"It's not enough to think you know something, Glowbug! You have to know why you think you know it, because until you get into the habit of asking that you’ll find you don't have a good answer more often than you'd like to admit!"
Tara chuckles.
"He seems like quite the interesting man, which I suppose is to be expected for the father of such an interesting woman." I turn away as I feel my face going red, but thankfully Tara continues speaking so I don't have to. "Still, while I agree with the advice in general, it's not as though I can walk up to the terrorists and ask them why they do what they do. My whole family could go to jail if it looks like I'm sympathizing with terrorists."
"Wait, so you can be punished for things that you had nothing to do with as long as your family did them?"
She shifts her weight nervously.
"Well, it's not as though anyone in my family would do something like that, but hypothetically yes."
Yep, that's a solid point in favor of a dystopian government if I've ever heard one.
"I have some stories that I think you would find really, really interesting," I tell her. "Think of it like a cultural exchange! To help you get acclimated to life on Earth, for however long you're staying here."
She lets out a hissy sigh.
"I suppose I will consider it," she relents. “But I—”
Her words are interrupted by a sudden knock on the door.
"Yo, dork!" Samantha calls from the other side. "I got the rest of your notes!"
I jumped to my feet, grin on my face.
"Oh, that's Sam!" I tell Tara. "She's super nice, you'll like her!"
I jump up to get the door.
"Wait!" Tara yelps. "Wait, I…"
I stop, looking back at her. She's… shaking.
"Do you not want to meet Sam?" I ask. "We can pretend that you're still Blubie if you want."
She doesn't respond, and Sam knocks again so I go and answer the door. I retrieve her diligently-copied notes, chatting with her in the doorway for a little bit before politely excusing myself and returning inside. I don't invite Samantha to come in. Walking back into my room, I find Tara in exactly the same place, so I sit down next to her again.
"I apologize for my rudeness," she says quietly.
"Hey, it's fine," I assure her, holding out my hands. After a brief hesitation she crawls on and I move her to my lap. "Trust me, I know social anxiety when I see it. If you want to talk about it, I'm happy to listen. If not, that's okay too."
She doesn't respond at first, opening and closing her armor and mouth a few times without letting out any words.
"I don't know if I would call it social anxiety, per se," she says eventually.
"Oh yeah?" I ask, encouraging more elaboration.
Again, she's quiet for a while.
"It is nothing of real importance," she eventually mutters, with a quiet fear tinging her voice. It's as if she's afraid the words themselves might rear up and attack her.
Her species really must value the truth a lot, since she's even worse at lying than I am. But I won't press until she's ready to talk about it.
I may not have many, but I know that's not what friends do.
Advertisement
- In Serial56 Chapters
The Werewolf Cheerleader
Being a cheerleader is easier than being a werewolf. Jessica Tumbleleague is a typical teenage girl who loves being a cheerleader at Moondale High. But after an encounter with a werewolf in the woods, Jessica discovers a frightening world she never thought is real. Dangerous magic, deadly fierce spirits, and other malevolent creatures. Now Jessica must fight the forces of darkness to protect her hometown while balancing her supernatural life with her high school life. But can she control the beast within herself? Note: This is a rewrite of the original with the same name. I decided to change the third-person style to first-person because I liked Jessica's voice better. She is funny and very strong. With the story only focusing on her, I can keep the mystery suspenseful and the reader can experience what Jessica is experiencing. It is a typical YA style, but it is fun to write as your main character. There are changes, but the first and second books will be similar to the third-person chapters. Let me know what you think and I hope you will enjoy this new version of the Werewolf Cheerleader. I will post the chapters every Friday in the afternoon. P.S, there is a Werewolf Cheerleader short story published in the Tales of Dungeons, All Hallows book. Titled The Werewolf Cheerleader: Castle and Ghouls. The short is also in first-person, which made me decide to change the book series into first-person. The link is below if you want to check it out. https://www.royalroad.com/amazon/B08MCS82R5
8 279 - In Serial35 Chapters
First
Meet John Ryder, the human adventure. Not the strongest but in no means is he weak, John is one of the original players of First, a one of a kind VRMMORPG in a world where no others exist. Playing in the shadows, part of a guild that never speaks or is spoken about, John watches the world of First become what it will be. The question is, will he join it or continue his role as a simple observer.Meet William Thacker, John Ryder's other self. Virtual Reality student of a prestigious institution, he studies the world of First from outside a computer. As is the case of many universities, high levels of hormones and a number of females students could spell trouble. Coupled with the fact he is John Ryder and what John Ryder is capable of, he may find himself in hot water soon enough.
8 90 - In Serial47 Chapters
Shadow of Steel
Purple. Persecuted. Poisoned. Saya was a poor teenager raising her family on a farm. She knowingly poisoned herself by choosing the dangerous job of picking Malvaos, mysterious purple fruits. The greater the danger, the better the pay. Picking Malvaos for five years turned her purple. Ever since she got her hands on a broken purple staff, weirder and stranger things have happened. So much happened that she questioned if things would ever go back to normal again. She journeyed back to her hometown, Steel, Michigan, where nothing was the same. Adding to the mess that the new human inhabitants created, the Orcs were trying to take over the town. There was no way to turn it back to how it was but she was determined to fight for Steel, for humankind. Being purple isolated and hardened her but it gave her extra power. With the help of a Tengu, new friends, suspicious elves, and naughty fairies, she would learn how to use her powers to battle the Orcs. Unintentionally, it's like "Percy Jackson" meets "Stranger Things."
8 199 - In Serial20 Chapters
Black Ice
If there is no start, then there is no end. Darkness is all one can see, as the emptiness gradually dominates everything. However a light seems to be shining through this vast darkness, A light that isn't bright but rather dark as if it is the same as the darkness around. After a long time this light seems to separate into small pieces of crystals. As they slowly separated a really bright light engulfs everything as it slowly formed matter, then atoms, then molecules. They slowly combined forming stars, planets, meteors and solar systems. All the pieces of the crystals combined together again creating a single being as it smiled at its creation. The being separated itself into 9, as all 9 populated the most suitable planet for life. The 9 of them split once more creating 81 different species that populated the planet. The 81 species were called Gods, The 9 Creators were called Primordial gods and the Begging of it all was called The Creator or also known as The One. The 81 species had offspring that were mortal in comparison with their bodies that were immortal. The offspring were given the ability to reach a higher plain through cultivation, with strict requirements.The Creator Split the crystals once again as he sent them to the planet. However a really small piece managed to get out of its designated trajectory, its whereabouts unknown even to the Creator himself. A few million years later, a planet with life formed in a far away system. Humans were living there as they slowly discovered more and more about the universe. A Person walked inside a cave as he was looking around and found a black crystal. Amazed by the crystal he tried grabbing it, however this ended in his death. Several months later in the Planet inhabited by the 81 species a human child was born.
8 170 - In Serial6 Chapters
Player Invasion: The Ember of the Forsaken Throne
Many years had passed when foreign people who called themselves "Players" had arrived in our land... They were all unreasonable and mad and we were helpless... They have unimaginable powers that defy our understanding of magic and faith... The Kingdom's strongest Knight Champion was killed in the final defense at the capital. The Great Sword King together with the Grand Wizard has perished together after attacking the Player's known headquarters. The Priestess who tried to seek help from the Elven and Dwarve's Nation was missing. The previous Tyrant King who bent his knees and surrendered his land was still mercilessly killed. Even the legendary hero, the protector of our continent, the pride of the allied nations, and the last Sky Dragon of this generation was now a slave to these so-called Players... Now... They've set their eyes on me. It's my turn to be hunted by the Players as the last descendant of the royal bloodline. Luckily, the gods haven't given up on us and gave us hope to live on. "The Awakening"
8 208 - In Serial20 Chapters
The Slump God (Stokeley Imagines)
Imagine that...
8 233

