One night a few years ago, my
then-roommate’s puppy, Lucy, slunk into the darkness just beyond the security
lights of our back porch. It was cold out that night, the moon hidden
behind the clouds. My roommate and I were smoking on the porch, watching each
puff spread out over the branches of a banana-leafed tree above our heads.
This is how we spent most nights
that fall, and the dog did this often, this disappearing act, so we didn’t call
her back. Even when we heard the rustling of leaves, that stop-go…stop-go… of
her paws, that insistent sniffing—telltale signs of something being hunted—even
then, we didn’t call her back.
Why would we? To us Lucy was just a
slobbering, excitable, clever puppy who was always happy to see a new face. She
spent most of her time curled up on the couch or in our laps. And she had never
actually caught anything before. It was the chase, we imagined, that kept
things interesting.
And then, there it was: the muffled
pursuit; the high-pitched squeal; the bones snapping, a quick poppopoppop; and the dense silence that
followed.
My roommate and I looked wild-eyed
to each other—we thought something must have attacked her, hurt her—and we ran
across the yard in time to meet Lucy emerging back into the security light. Her
jaws bloody. Her feet matted with dirt. Her long, slender body tense as a branch
against the wind. And her tail wagging.
This memory came back to me after recently
re-reading Nicole Walker’s essay, “Where the Wild Things Are”—forthcoming in
her collection, Quench Your Thirst With
Salt, winner of the 2011 Creative Nonfiction Book Award from Zone 3 Press.
I thought of that night not only because parts of the essay focus on wolves and
a wolf-like dog named “Cleo” (Lucy was an Alaskan Malamute, one step away from
full wolf), but also because Walker deals with the primal instincts, the baser
desires, the darker fantasies that reside within all of us. Even sometimes shape
us.
For Lucy, it was the predator’s
desire to hunt, to kill—evident the next morning, when we followed her back to
the spot beside the fence where she had chased the squirrel down, broken its
neck. Until it happened, I would never have believed Lucy could ever kill
another living creature. But there it was, splayed out in the backyard. My irrefutable
evidence.
For Nicole Walker in “Where the Wild
Things Are,” the evidence is not so readily apparent. Spurred by the discovery
that her first child will be a daughter, Walker goes on a quest to peel her
fears—specifically, a) “the threat of nature becoming
completely obliterated and all things wild, especially predators, made
extinct;” and b) “some ‘pervert’ molesting my daughter”—open like an onion, layer by layer.
In the opening section, she says:
Whether or not having kids means you
have to make some hard and fast rules or whether or not dams need to be built,
you must first determine what the baseline for normal is, what kind of soil
you’re working with. When you’re formed of muddled soils yourself, it’s hard to
begin to distinguish. But you’ve got to draw the line somewhere. You must first
have a threshold before you can charge trespass. You have to know what’s real
ground and not just a fantasy of packed sand. It’s up to you to investigate the
strata.
Walker’s “strata” is a collage of
titled, linked sections that form the overall structure of her essay. In doing
so, she is also able to embody a mosaic of different identities– female/male,
child/adult, animal/human, mother/daughter, predator/prey—throughout the sections,
switching deftly between real and imagined perspectives in order to expose the peripheral
boundaries of her individual fears and desires: their roots, their perpetrators,
their limitations. Mixing in factual, anecdotal, and research-based evidence,
often within scenes, Walker manages to adeptly navigate the essay’s winding
tapestry while always returning back to the source—herself and her own
fears—which she uses as a concrete foundation for her broader philosophical
inquiries at the ends of certain sections.
For
example, her first major revelation occurs at the end of section two,
“Formations,” where she explains that our fears in the Western world have
transformed, in this age of comfort, into fears not of nature as a
force—starvation, drowning, exposure, predators, and so on—but of the nature/s
within ourselves and within others. We now fear not what the world does to us,
but what we are capable of doing to it, and to each other.
As we
sit inside the comfort of our homes, in the warmth of our blankets and the
crispness of our sheets, we lie in bed fearing not nature, but nature
perverted. And the more that nature is twisted to suit our desire, the more
perverted our natures become.
Mind
you, Walker is not preaching here, and she is not afraid to acknowledge the
shortcomings in her own nature,
admitting, “In the mix of acting and being acted upon, it’s impossible
to even distinguish what is natural and what is a perversion of that nature,”
and, “Maybe everything is
normal to some degree.”
This
self-awareness and up-front honesty is
particularly valuable to the reader, establishing early-on that there would be
no obvious, easy answers; rather, we are put in the position of a voyeur,
sometimes uncomfortably so, watching Walker as she grapples with the duality of
fear and hope that comes with bringing a daughter into a world
in which “perverted” natures seem to drive endless cycles of abuse, fear, and predation—even,
in some ways, within Walker herself:
I don’t mean to brand my baby a victim.
She’s not. She’s strong. But unlike Erik who can believe he can, I don’t
believe I’ll be able to protect her, to watch out for her every step of the
way. At some point, she’ll be on her own. I will give her the tools I can and
then wish her luck when the man in the van pulls up alongside her as she rides
her bike. Or, more likely, when the boy next-door comes over to help her fix
that bike. Alone. In the garage. Or her cousin wants to play truth or dare. Or
her brother wants to move his room downstairs, next to hers. Or the man across
the street asks her to come help him find his kitten. How do I teach her to
draw the line when talking to strangers when I don’t know where to draw it
myself?
Walker continues her struggle to draw this line for herself
and the reader for a few more pages. And it is only after she discovers her
neighbor across the street is included on a sexual predator website–when her
fears literally return home—when Walker decides that, perhaps, these dark
desires, fantasies, and fears are simply inescapable, part of our human nature.
Perhaps there is no neat solution, no line between good and evil, no separating
dark and light.
“We can’t
protect our children from everything, maybe anything,” Walker admits in the
second half of the essay. “Being particularly vigilant, erecting every
foreseeable barrier against one kind of danger just allows other kinds of
danger to swamp right in.”
But what of
this “other kind” of danger? Walker reveals this final, more immediate danger
is the constant dualities we each establish for ourselves and others—us &
them; good & evil; bad & good; fantasy & reality; wolf & sheep;
predator & prey; wild & tame; etc.—which shape the way we view the meanings
behind our actions, the world around us, and the actions of others. She
explains that when we consider one part of our internal or external nature
“wild” and another “tame,” one necessary and the other unnecessary, we communicate
an imbalance within the self, preventing us from ever feeling complete, safe,
as our natural selves:
But change is natural. Nature, both
human and wild, responds to change with equilibrium. The change that happens to
what you do to nature is what happens to the nature in you. The more we try to
keep the wild outside, the more the wild seems to creep, in fiercer and in
divided form, inside.
As the essay closes, Walker seeks to, instead of clarify, blur
these arbitrary lines that have been set between prey and predator, victim and
villain, good and bad. After entering the minds of two imaginary characters in
a graphic rape scene, and after considering the plight of both the lamb and the
wolf side-by-side, she does what others (myself included) often cannot in
writing: acknowledges her inability to judge or lay blame, saying “There are
natures out of our control. Even inside our own.”
When I
first picked up “Where the Wild Things Are,” I imagined it would be about
controlling fear through breathing exercises. Nice, warm affirmations to live
by. Something like that. But now, of course, I know that Walker has a braver
goal in mind for herself and her readers: accepting the fact that we will
always live with certain fears, certain desires. They are, and have always been,
necessary for our survival. And we
can either ignore these fears and desires completely, allowing them to grow
within us—or we can face the truth of ourselves, put an ultrasound to our inner
lives and see what murky beginnings lie inside of each of us. August Wilson
said it best: “Confront the dark parts of yourself. Your willingness to wrestle
with your demons will cause your angels to sing.”
*
Adam E. Kullberg is
currently a nonfiction candidate in the MFA program at the University of
Arizona, where he serves as a nonfiction editor at Sonora Review.
Loved this post, Adam. And can't wait to read Nicole's new book!
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