Mentality
Part Two: Lyrical Epiphany
(Set mid 54, just before Ax returns to his people)
It began with music.
Humans all listen to music. They have many types of music and countless instruments to create said music. They record and save the sounds so that they can be heard on demand at any time from small portable devices called radios and walkmans. There is even a new device called an iPod, but it is expensive, so I do not have one.
Andalites have music. But we are not addicted to it as humans are. We, even with our advanced technology, do not even have as many instruments as they do. We live very close to nature, and our instruments reflect those of what the humans call primitive societies. I am not sure how I feel about our music being compared to the early humans when humans are already so primitive. Our main instruments of music are drums. We have traditionally fashioned ours out of hollowed pieces of wood. There is even some Andalites that have been experimentally manufacturing them out of various metals to create a different sound. But many the traditional Andalites are against them. I was included in those against the new sound, but now I think I would enjoy the new sounds.
Humans, on the other hand, are willing to use almost anything for a drum. They use wood like us, but as I saw on television on a show called Stomp Out Loud, they are willing to use almost anything, including trash receptacles and plumbing. It was also the most violent and spectacular playing of instruments I've ever seen. But, while it is not inconceivable that such items could be used, it had never occurred to me that one would ever do such a thing. I am told that drums are a type of percussion instrument. Anything that makes sound while being beaten is percussion. It is logical in terms of the definition and method of play.
Andalites would appreciate the string instruments the most. I recall as a child plucking a taught string or wire and finding a pleasing sound, but it is a wonder that we never exploited it. Humans not only pluck the string, but also draw a bow across it. The most complex of these instruments seeming to be the piano. It is played by pressing a key which in turn causes a hammer to hit a sting that is housed inside a large frame. It would seem to be percussion because you are hitting the key with a finger and the string is being hit by a hammer, but it is still a string that is being played. My friends have not indicated to me whether or not I have correctly classified the piano. I believe Andalites would excel with the string instruments because they require dexterous fingers. We have a natural advantage over them as they lack two fingers on each hand.
My favorite type of instruments is the winds. Perhaps it is my favorite because we cannot create such sounds on our own as we lack mouths. The horns, the trumpets, the trombone, the clarinet, the flute, they are amazing. I do not like the bagpipes. I find the sound too harsh and grating on the eardrums. Everyone seemed to agree with me except for the late Rachel. I do not know how she withstood the pounding and grating of such sounds on her eardrums. I much prefer the saxophone. It is sound that I shall never forget. If I could learn to play one and share it with my people, I think they might be able to understand the human's fascination with music. Rachel did not agree me concerning the "sax."
But this brings me to an aspect of music that most assuredly separates Andalites from Humans, singing. Like our situation with the wind instruments, we physically cannot sing. I have discovered that singing in thought-speech is not as pleasant as the concept. Singing was meant to verbal. Marco seems to be the only person I have found that thinks thought-speak singing is acceptable. His singing is not pleasing in either form. Sometimes, I heard Cassie singing pleasantly while working in the barn. Songs with lyrics are most vexing to me. A song's lyrics are often quite poetic. Taken alone, they can be a bit repetitive. But it is the music that couples with them that makes the song whole. I find the sad songs with uplifting music and happy songs with depressing music most vexing. I would often listen to the same song multiple times in order to attempt to discern its meaning, but the subtleties of the English language have made it very difficult. It is an aspect of human music that I'm not sure that we, as Andalites, could ever hope to recreate.
The lyrical component to human music shows the depth of mankind. Andalite music is somewhat akin to what Marco calls elevator music. Human music displays the depth of the emotional side of the human mind. The range of sounds that can be created with their multitude of instruments allows one to experience a thoughtful response coupled with the typical emotional response. But the lyrics touch the soul. They trigger an onslaught of introspective thought which is met with a tsunami of feeling. For the most provoking of songs, I cannot hope to be able to describe my full reaction.
Such power human music has. For Andalites, it would be revolutionary. It has led me to believe that for the good of traditional Andalite culture, human music should not be introduced at home.
Music is the most transcendent form of humanity and introspection that I have seen in my lifetime.
Andalites, as a whole, are not an emotional race. We take part little in introspection. We rarely express our feelings openly. We are constantly being told to suppress them and to live with a level mindset. In order to maintain this mindset, our lives revolve around rituals. When I tried to describe it to Tobias, he deemed it akin to religion. After reading about religions, I do not think it is a religion. The human religions seem to be belief systems that attempt to explain that which the humans do not understand. In contrast, we are simply giving meaning to the daily tasks. Rather than trying to understand and question, we simply find spiritual meaning in how our actions relate to the Andalite community, then we accept and move on.
Ever since arriving on Earth, I have been forced to go beyond anything that I had been taught. I was forced to accept things that I found extraordinary as something so profound that they are rarely considered noteworthy by humans, but that is not important here. I was only an aristh. I knew only the equivalent of my culture that my friends knew of theirs. I knew my principles quite well. I always practiced my morning and evening rituals perfectly, but I was lacking was the years of reinforcement that warriors and princes have. The straightforward thinking I'd been taught all my life was being questioned.
I wonder how I would have reacted in various scenarios if I had already had the discipline of a full warrior. As an aristh, I knew the rules. But as a warrior, I would have had the experience to deal with my situation as my Andalite superiors and untainted culture would have expected of me. As my time on Earth turned from days to months to years, I lost my insight into what the will of what my commanders would have been. I could no longer predict what orders I would have been given. I no longer knew what I should be doing. I followed the only task I knew was always constant, to follow my prince, which I performed on a daily basis as I had been taught, except my prince happened to be human.
I started to become lost. As we get older, we become more involved in our society. We learn more and more about our selected sciences, my chosen science being that of combat as I elected to join the military. But we also learn more about our culture and customs. As an aristh, I was taught the basic morning and evening rituals and the pre- and post-battle and death rituals. Nearing my completion of my training, I would have been taught other rituals. I never learned them.
Everyone must perform their rituals. As a young foal in school, I had a morning ritual that I performed in unison with the other students in my class. If I had taken the path of a scientist, I would have different practices as well. What they would have consisted of, I know not. Every Andalite performs daily rituals. To not practice them is looked down upon, giving them the stigma of an outsider rejecting society.
I was losing my connection to my people. I had to perform my rituals lest I lose my last tie to my people. But it was becoming harder and harder to think like them, to feel like them. I felt as though the distance between us was growing. I didn't know how to handle my flooding emotions. To my knowledge, I was not supposed to even be having them. Suppressing them as I had been taught was insufficient.
And so, it began with music.
The lyrics, it was like they opened a new part of my consciousness. I began to think things that I had never conceived of before. The words voiced my inner self.
When I was younger, so much younger than today
I never needed anybody's help in any way
But now these days are gone, I'm not so self-assured
How was it they can perfectly describe how I am feeling without ever knowing who I am? There must be something more to these humans than meets the eye. Could this be how they manage their struggle with conflicting thoughts? What can music teach me about myself?
How does it feel?
To be without a home
With no direction home, like a complete unknown
Just like a rolling stone?
Yes, that's exactly how it felt. It felt like I had no control. I was moving in whichever direction the hill I was tumbling down wanted me to go. There was no way to get home. There were no Andalites willing to come to our aid and take me where I belonged. I didn't believe my friends could ever understand. My leaders had abandoned me, and I was tumbling down.
Did I ask too much? More than a lot
You gave me nothin' now it's all I got
We're one but we're not the same
Well we hurt each other then we do it again
Did I really expect war to be as simple and as glorious as the stories I'd heard growing up? The War-Princes, full of arrogance, boasted of quick and clean battles where they disposed of Yeerks in the same manner that humans dispose of a banana peel (which is a waste as it is delicious though bitter). How did it they do it? What was I missing? Why wasn't I like them?
Emancipate yourselves from mental slavery
None but ourselves can free our minds
Have no fear for atomic energy
'Cause none of them can stop the time
Perhaps humans do have something they can teach us. They have done so much harm to themselves. They have so much to fear in their little world. They have found an escape, expression. I was a fool for trying to remain impartial to my emotions. It was the way of the aristh, let the Prince handle all affairs. The pain I carried was not just from the weight of trying to avenge my brother, but the fate of the human world, possibly even my world. Who knows what the Yeerks could have done with six billion human hosts at their disposal? But it is not Earth that is a cold world, it is mine.
Living is easy with eyes closed, misunderstanding all you see
It's getting hard to be someone but it all works out
It doesn't matter much to me
Should I give in to my new found humanity? I am an Andalite; I must stay with my people. I am an Animorph; I must discover what that means. Could my upbringing be trapping me from making the greatest move forward into the realm of what it truly means to be Human? Can I remain an Andalite yet somehow hold humanity in my heart?
All I see turns to brown as the sun burns the ground
And my eyes fill with sand as I scan this wasted land
Trying to find, trying to find where I been
My memories of my life before Earth are faded. Not because my memory has deteriorated, but because of the stain of emotional pain. Even now, with the war over and the consequences of my decision close to fruition, I still cannot overcome the hurt. If I have learned anything, it is to appreciate what I have. Would it be a waste to try to return? Is there a going back? I do not think like an Andalite anymore.
Is this the real life?
Is this just fantasy?
Caught in a landslide
No escape from reality
I cannot stay here. There is too much temptation. I would lose who I once was if I remain under the influence of humanity. But would that be such a bad thing? I know I will never take humans for granted again, but I cannot remain with them. If I do, I fear I shall stray too far from my path as an Andalite. I must return to my people, because I am an Andalite. Even Elfangor returned eventually.
That's me in the corner
That's me in the spotlight
Losing my religion
Trying to keep up with you
And I don't know if I can do it
They say I stand alone now. They say that I am no longer in my brother's shadow. They say that to them, we stand side by side as proud Princes who have slain many Yeerks and saved countless innocent lives. Elfangor, the great tide turner, and Aximili, the finisher of the war. I know the truth. I know what role each of us really had in the war. I will always be the little brother. I think of my accomplishments, but what can I do? Could I have given up my life for the hope of an alien race?
Have you any dreams you'd like to sell?
Dreams of loneliness
Like a heartbeat drives you mad
In the stillness of remembering
What you had
And what you lost
If I return, perhaps I can find myself again. I do not think I see myself here on Earth anymore. There are too many memories, too many mistakes. There are no more excuses for me to stay. How would that look to my people? I must respect tradition, no matter how lonely they make me feel.
I've been crawling on my belly
Clearing out what could've been
I've been wallowing in my own chaotic
And insecure delusions
Why can I not be certain of my decision? I know it is the proper thing to do; it is expected of me. Marco would like me to stay. Prince Jake mutters incomprehensibly. Cassie wants me to do what my heart tells me. My hearts want to ask Tobias, but I cannot find him. I was lost without my people. He is lost without his Rachel. They cannot help me.
I heard your voice through the photograph
I thought it up and brought up the past
Once you know you can never go back
I gotta take it on the otherside
I swallowed my emotions. I have chosen to return, I must act like an Andalite. My friends, they will never know the turmoil I have felt. It is no fault of their own. How could a human possibly understand an Andalite? It is what is expected, even if it is not what I want.
And if I only could
Make a deal with God
And get him to swap our places
Be running up that road
Be running up that hill
With no problems
Humanity has taught me how to reflect. It has taught me what life really means. It has taught me the complexity of emotions and that logic is not absolute. No Andalite could ever believed that logic is subjective. Do I return to my people to show them the way or to escape what I learned?
Rachel once told me that there's no going back. Could she have been right?
It hurts to set you free
But you'll never follow me
The end of laugher and soft lies
The end of nights we tried to die
This is the end
Music lyrics in order of appearance:
Help by The Beatles
Like a Rolling Stone by Bob Dylan
One by U2
Redemption Song by Bob Marley
Strawberry Fields Forever by The Beatles
Kashmir by Led Zeppelin
Bohemian Rhapsody by Queen
Losing My Religion by R.E.M.
Dreams by Fleetwood Mac
Stinkfist by Tool
Otherside by Red Hot Chili Peppers
Running Up That Hill by Placebo
The End by The Doors