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On: Secrecy
I've resisted keeping a journal for a long time because the idea of leaving behind physical evidence of my innermost thoughts, moreso than what I am, is a repugnant notion. Having a catalog of my thoughts and my fears, and my insecurities is tantamount to handing out flyers with the information on it, and tossing them at people as they walk by. Nothing ever really stays secret forever. Not if there's a record of it. That's the plot of how many television programs? Two people do something in secret, but good drama only exists when that secret is in danger of being made public, or when it's found out. And if there's one thing I've learned in life, it's that if God or some other higher power exists, we're just entertainment for them. The whole of existence is one great long show. I think vampires being real just cheapens our genre.
So then the question arises: "What is the motivation?" Well for some, I imagine the appeal is for memory and introspection. A person may feel the need to write down and later read the high and low points in their lives. Maybe someone hurt the writer, and they want to remember the exact thing he or she said, to keep the anger alive. I spend a lot of time in meditation, and don't hold grudges. As a vampire, my neural pathways are unlikely to begin deteriorating, so I tend to keep my memories in a lockbox in my mind. Where they belong. Where they are most sacred. I've also never found writing to be therapeutic. If anything, it seems to me to be either the poor man, or the introvert's replacement for seeing a trained professional. When I take issue with something, I have people I talk to for that. Worst case scenario, it's a little blood on the lapel to make sure private remains private.
I thought to myself, after having exhausted other possibilities, maybe I wanted to write down my thoughts for future 'generations'. I have ample experience in numerous areas. Even when the Dragomir went neutral. Even when I went quiet, I always watched. And then I thought to myself. "You know, you're really not a great sire, Az." Which isn't false humility. Of my still living childer, Shiva and I never got along, Tiaz was my best friend in life, who I haven't seen in years. Asher hated me, and I think I hated him too. Scratch, I haven't heard from in years, and Andrew...Andrew is sweet. I should catch up with him. Of course by 'alive', I mean I'm able to still sense them to an extent. I hope they're there, but my heart wouldn't be particularly burdened if they weren't. I care about them, but I only ever wanted to be their friend. I never needed to be their father. So it seems a little pompous for me to suddenly want to be a teacher; the idea actually fills me with a little dread.
The idea of spending days or hours teaching someone how to feed or things like that is just ludicrous. My own sire never taught me any of that, and I learned on my own. I think that might be part of the issue right there, though. I'm a Dragomir. Regardless of anything else, my soul isn't warm blooded and at my core, I'm a snake. I expect my 'young' to fend for themselves. The bond of friendship is more important to me than how successful they are as vampires.
And then I thought. "You know, Az, even if you were a decent sire, there's no evidence anyone would want to read your babbling." And that's true enough. I'm not as old as the ancients, so whatever experience I have pales in comparison. I'm not particularly left or right of any one issue, so extremism is a turn off to me. Sadly, it's extremism that is interesting to read. I can't promise wisdom or entertainment, or knowledge. The only thing I have is my perspective. So maybe that's my gift. I can't teach the basics like hunting or how to seal a wound, or any of that, but I have my mind and I have my magic. I can share those, and hope for the best.
Maybe I'll take on an apprentice rather than sire again.
Cleaner that way, I think.
But I digress. The first topic of my considerations is vampiric secrecy, dubbed 'the masquerade'. I've never personally liked the term. A little too close to the tabletop I enjoyed when I was in high school and college. Not that I blame Harper Rock's community for that; it's a nifty term that summarizes the meaning effectively. And at least nobody is running around calling each other kindred, or (god forbid), taking on names like 'Lestat'.
Anyway, I decided to write on the topic because of CrowNet. Originally I wanted to compile all my thoughts and post them there, but then I thought to myself "You know. Nothing good ever comes from CrowNet." Which is true enough. I don't think any conversation there has ever not resulted in a fight, or drama, or trolling. Which is to say, I thought about posting and immediately ripped my fingers away from the keyboard as if they'd been cracked by a nun's ruler. But the seeds for thought were there, and not easily displaced, so instead, they are all going here.
I said on CrowNet, that there are two options currently available, given the substantial power 'masquerade' enforcers have wielded over the years, and the lack of over-arching results, either secrecy is inherently unsustainable, or secrecy enforcement through violence is unsustainable.
I'll admit, when I first posted those words, I was just being superior. I get tired of seeing every single thread turn out the same way, and every argument become the 'masquerade' argument, ad nauseum. It's the go to thing for seemingly everyone, and I feel like, at this point, it's just a comfortable fight. Something goes wrong. "Masquerade! **** you guys for not keeping it, you fucktards! Rah rah rah!" "No, **** you guys for killing everyone! Rah rah rah!" I mean it's just endless and almost comical by this point. I am waiting for the day someone will satirize it, because it's just the same redundant arguments being spewed back and forth over and over again. Nobody's opinions change. Nobody really even cares! And that's the craziest part. It's like people are reading a script by now, when frankly, the 'masquerade' was never anything other than an illusion (more on that later).
After some thought, I have to agree with myself (I know, terribly self important aren't I?). I don't think it can be argued in any universe that the masquerade enforcers haven't had almost total control. First there were the hellhounds, then the Council's enforcement team, then Tytonidae. I saw the formation of each and I've seen how their methods play out. I think there's a sort of temporary fix to the whole 'killing vampires to get them off the bounty list' thing. I don't necessarily think it works long term, and here's why: We don't live in the 90's or before. These days, we have technology that immortalizes everything. Something hits the internet, and no matter how good a hacker you are, it just takes one person saving a video clip to repost it everywhere. Killing someone won't get rid of that evidence. Violence itself is the easy way out.
Yes, it temporarily gets rid of the problem, but then that person comes back, and much like with the criminal justice system, their incentive isn't to be good, or to repent their sins. Their incentive is to be better at cheating the system. Or stealing. Or killing. In this case, violating secrecy. That is, of course, assuming they were intentionally exposing their nature to begin with. If not? Well now you've given someone who had a chance at being reasonably normal incentive to hold onto a grudge. So what if vampires get wiped out? Their only experience with the vampiric community is that, if they do something they may not understand is wrong, they get attacked. It's all really very toxic, and doesn't contribute to a healthy community in the slightest.
That, and fighting, no matter how secret it is, can always be recorded. How long until someone decides to film everything and send it public? Or how long until a truly dedicated anti-masqerade vampire decides to try and out the whole community on live televison? How could they be stopped? Put a bullet in them and ash them on television and what is that going to do? And once the information's out there. Well. It's out there. You may try to discredit it, but it's easier to hold information back than get rid of it. And that doesn't even take into account vampires with connections to humans. What happens when the chief of police gets turned, and killed? Or when a wealthy businessman is turned? Not everyone has an anonymous past. Eventually, enforcers are going to not only fail to uphold the masquerade, they're going to actively work against secrecy on the whole. It's irresponsible, and I'm shocked it hasn't blown up in their face yet.
Because they can put someone in the Shadow Realm for a little while, but it only takes one instant in an eternity to **** everyone over from a secrecy standpoint.
Not that enforcing secrecy has been entirely bad. I remember when the bounty list was populated with dozens of names. These days, almost nobody is on it. Of course, I'm sure some of the people the enforcers killed are permanently gone, and the ones who returned, are smart enough to fly under the radar. That seems, to me, to be the entire point. And I would actually advocate for it, if it were effective. You see, the fundamental problem with secrecy is that it's an illusion. The government has known about the paranormal almost since day one. Maybe not vampires, but I wouldn't be shocked if they do. So this entire time, people have been screeching 'MASQUERADE!' back and forth at each other, and on the outset, it hasn't really existed. I can't be the only person to realize that, so to me, people who enforce secrecy are just trying to hold onto the semblance of power and order in a world that is ultimately chaotic.
It's like when you grow up, and leave home, and realize that life isn't comprised of neat or tidy lines. Some people develop coping mechanisms to deal with it, and I think secrecy is the collective mechanism we've used to try and say that we have power over the world of the living. We have no power. Not really. Not in a macro sense. Not over humans. Not over eachother. Not over anything but our own actions and our own thoughts. Not that I blame our community. Going from living, breathing humans to blood sucking vampires is a hard transition. A lot of people don't make it. And the ancient vampires were able to rely on secrecy to survive, so it seems logical to assume we should be able to do the same. Except, I return to my earlier argument. We don't live in a pre-2000's world. Word of mouth isn't the only way of producing evidence these days.
So secrecy is an illusion, and that isn't really an opinion so much as an observable, testable fact. Even if the concept were not initially flawed, based on what we know about the government, the way the modern era works does not lend itself to keeping an entire species in the dark. Even then, there's no evidence that fighting and killing is a good way to go about fixing problems in the community. To me it seems like fighting fire with fire - a cliché yes, but a a fitting one.
Of course, all of that is entirely beside the point, even if it's topical. The axiom of my initial argument is that enforcers have been allowed to rule for years. I won't say it's gone unquestioned, but those questions were largely met with ridicule, silence, or bullets. I won't say it went uncontested, but fights quickly lost their appeal, and I think it goes without question that the enforcers go where they want, do what they want and say what they want. The bounty list has grown less populace. On the surface, based on the premise of having enforcers to begin with, we should have no issue with secrecy! And yet, it's equally inarguable that secrecy is slowly slipping out of our hands. I honestly see it only getting worse, especially with other issues on the horizon. The Lionelli, the Administrator, the Fae, the Rift, everything. There is so much going on, and secrecy is just a small part of it.
I'll admit that sometimes I wonder what it would be like if we didn't have to worry about it.
But getting back to the main point, if the enforcers have had the power to make the 'masquerade' work, why hasn't it? Which leads to my two potential conclusions. I've already related my thoughts on both of them, and after some contemplation, I think it's a little bit of both of them. The violence is a stopgap that should never have been treated as a real solution. The violence just breeds contempt and gives people a reason to hate the ones attacking them. And ultimately, they're just fighting for an illusion.
Which leads me to the final problem - the question posed to me. What should the discourse be? Secrecy has been the topic for so long, I'm not sure if the vampire community is ready to talk about something else. I'm not sure it's ready to have 'the talk' about vampires coming out on their own terms, and taking responsibilities for its own in a way it never has before. More likely than not, the suggestion would be turned down. Understandable. And then the topic would turn to 'other ways to uphold the masquerade'. I've seen all of that before. The enforcers will listen, but won't take any advice, and ultimately the 'other side' (read as; everyone else), will just try to push for more peaceful means of keeping the 'law'. And then even that will turn into a big argument, and bear no fruits.
So what then is the solution? I'm not, and nor do I feign to be a leader in the community. I'm a single voice, and I don't have the connections to have sway one way or the other. I can't lead a discussion because I don't have the clout, and I respect that.
But to me it's a pretty simple matter. The community needs to be empowered, not live in fear. I think the idea of minimizing our impact and minimizing our presence is an ideal one, but I think that should be taught, rather than pounded into the flesh. Even then, I don't think it's a fruitful endeavour in the long run. We're going to be so busy policing each other, we're going to miss the outbreak of dozens of fadebeasts attacking humans and totally ruining secrecy for us! I think the community should stop worrying so much about whether or not a fledgeling accidentally feeds and gets seen doing it. Yes, it's a problem, but there are so many OTHER problems that need exploring. So why can't, instead of the community going round and round in circles, we take a look at one of those issues? Why can't we find a common enemy or a common cause and try to do something about that? Why does the primary focus of our interaction have to be divisive?
So then the question arises: "What is the motivation?" Well for some, I imagine the appeal is for memory and introspection. A person may feel the need to write down and later read the high and low points in their lives. Maybe someone hurt the writer, and they want to remember the exact thing he or she said, to keep the anger alive. I spend a lot of time in meditation, and don't hold grudges. As a vampire, my neural pathways are unlikely to begin deteriorating, so I tend to keep my memories in a lockbox in my mind. Where they belong. Where they are most sacred. I've also never found writing to be therapeutic. If anything, it seems to me to be either the poor man, or the introvert's replacement for seeing a trained professional. When I take issue with something, I have people I talk to for that. Worst case scenario, it's a little blood on the lapel to make sure private remains private.
I thought to myself, after having exhausted other possibilities, maybe I wanted to write down my thoughts for future 'generations'. I have ample experience in numerous areas. Even when the Dragomir went neutral. Even when I went quiet, I always watched. And then I thought to myself. "You know, you're really not a great sire, Az." Which isn't false humility. Of my still living childer, Shiva and I never got along, Tiaz was my best friend in life, who I haven't seen in years. Asher hated me, and I think I hated him too. Scratch, I haven't heard from in years, and Andrew...Andrew is sweet. I should catch up with him. Of course by 'alive', I mean I'm able to still sense them to an extent. I hope they're there, but my heart wouldn't be particularly burdened if they weren't. I care about them, but I only ever wanted to be their friend. I never needed to be their father. So it seems a little pompous for me to suddenly want to be a teacher; the idea actually fills me with a little dread.
The idea of spending days or hours teaching someone how to feed or things like that is just ludicrous. My own sire never taught me any of that, and I learned on my own. I think that might be part of the issue right there, though. I'm a Dragomir. Regardless of anything else, my soul isn't warm blooded and at my core, I'm a snake. I expect my 'young' to fend for themselves. The bond of friendship is more important to me than how successful they are as vampires.
And then I thought. "You know, Az, even if you were a decent sire, there's no evidence anyone would want to read your babbling." And that's true enough. I'm not as old as the ancients, so whatever experience I have pales in comparison. I'm not particularly left or right of any one issue, so extremism is a turn off to me. Sadly, it's extremism that is interesting to read. I can't promise wisdom or entertainment, or knowledge. The only thing I have is my perspective. So maybe that's my gift. I can't teach the basics like hunting or how to seal a wound, or any of that, but I have my mind and I have my magic. I can share those, and hope for the best.
Maybe I'll take on an apprentice rather than sire again.
Cleaner that way, I think.
But I digress. The first topic of my considerations is vampiric secrecy, dubbed 'the masquerade'. I've never personally liked the term. A little too close to the tabletop I enjoyed when I was in high school and college. Not that I blame Harper Rock's community for that; it's a nifty term that summarizes the meaning effectively. And at least nobody is running around calling each other kindred, or (god forbid), taking on names like 'Lestat'.
Anyway, I decided to write on the topic because of CrowNet. Originally I wanted to compile all my thoughts and post them there, but then I thought to myself "You know. Nothing good ever comes from CrowNet." Which is true enough. I don't think any conversation there has ever not resulted in a fight, or drama, or trolling. Which is to say, I thought about posting and immediately ripped my fingers away from the keyboard as if they'd been cracked by a nun's ruler. But the seeds for thought were there, and not easily displaced, so instead, they are all going here.
I said on CrowNet, that there are two options currently available, given the substantial power 'masquerade' enforcers have wielded over the years, and the lack of over-arching results, either secrecy is inherently unsustainable, or secrecy enforcement through violence is unsustainable.
I'll admit, when I first posted those words, I was just being superior. I get tired of seeing every single thread turn out the same way, and every argument become the 'masquerade' argument, ad nauseum. It's the go to thing for seemingly everyone, and I feel like, at this point, it's just a comfortable fight. Something goes wrong. "Masquerade! **** you guys for not keeping it, you fucktards! Rah rah rah!" "No, **** you guys for killing everyone! Rah rah rah!" I mean it's just endless and almost comical by this point. I am waiting for the day someone will satirize it, because it's just the same redundant arguments being spewed back and forth over and over again. Nobody's opinions change. Nobody really even cares! And that's the craziest part. It's like people are reading a script by now, when frankly, the 'masquerade' was never anything other than an illusion (more on that later).
After some thought, I have to agree with myself (I know, terribly self important aren't I?). I don't think it can be argued in any universe that the masquerade enforcers haven't had almost total control. First there were the hellhounds, then the Council's enforcement team, then Tytonidae. I saw the formation of each and I've seen how their methods play out. I think there's a sort of temporary fix to the whole 'killing vampires to get them off the bounty list' thing. I don't necessarily think it works long term, and here's why: We don't live in the 90's or before. These days, we have technology that immortalizes everything. Something hits the internet, and no matter how good a hacker you are, it just takes one person saving a video clip to repost it everywhere. Killing someone won't get rid of that evidence. Violence itself is the easy way out.
Yes, it temporarily gets rid of the problem, but then that person comes back, and much like with the criminal justice system, their incentive isn't to be good, or to repent their sins. Their incentive is to be better at cheating the system. Or stealing. Or killing. In this case, violating secrecy. That is, of course, assuming they were intentionally exposing their nature to begin with. If not? Well now you've given someone who had a chance at being reasonably normal incentive to hold onto a grudge. So what if vampires get wiped out? Their only experience with the vampiric community is that, if they do something they may not understand is wrong, they get attacked. It's all really very toxic, and doesn't contribute to a healthy community in the slightest.
That, and fighting, no matter how secret it is, can always be recorded. How long until someone decides to film everything and send it public? Or how long until a truly dedicated anti-masqerade vampire decides to try and out the whole community on live televison? How could they be stopped? Put a bullet in them and ash them on television and what is that going to do? And once the information's out there. Well. It's out there. You may try to discredit it, but it's easier to hold information back than get rid of it. And that doesn't even take into account vampires with connections to humans. What happens when the chief of police gets turned, and killed? Or when a wealthy businessman is turned? Not everyone has an anonymous past. Eventually, enforcers are going to not only fail to uphold the masquerade, they're going to actively work against secrecy on the whole. It's irresponsible, and I'm shocked it hasn't blown up in their face yet.
Because they can put someone in the Shadow Realm for a little while, but it only takes one instant in an eternity to **** everyone over from a secrecy standpoint.
Not that enforcing secrecy has been entirely bad. I remember when the bounty list was populated with dozens of names. These days, almost nobody is on it. Of course, I'm sure some of the people the enforcers killed are permanently gone, and the ones who returned, are smart enough to fly under the radar. That seems, to me, to be the entire point. And I would actually advocate for it, if it were effective. You see, the fundamental problem with secrecy is that it's an illusion. The government has known about the paranormal almost since day one. Maybe not vampires, but I wouldn't be shocked if they do. So this entire time, people have been screeching 'MASQUERADE!' back and forth at each other, and on the outset, it hasn't really existed. I can't be the only person to realize that, so to me, people who enforce secrecy are just trying to hold onto the semblance of power and order in a world that is ultimately chaotic.
It's like when you grow up, and leave home, and realize that life isn't comprised of neat or tidy lines. Some people develop coping mechanisms to deal with it, and I think secrecy is the collective mechanism we've used to try and say that we have power over the world of the living. We have no power. Not really. Not in a macro sense. Not over humans. Not over eachother. Not over anything but our own actions and our own thoughts. Not that I blame our community. Going from living, breathing humans to blood sucking vampires is a hard transition. A lot of people don't make it. And the ancient vampires were able to rely on secrecy to survive, so it seems logical to assume we should be able to do the same. Except, I return to my earlier argument. We don't live in a pre-2000's world. Word of mouth isn't the only way of producing evidence these days.
So secrecy is an illusion, and that isn't really an opinion so much as an observable, testable fact. Even if the concept were not initially flawed, based on what we know about the government, the way the modern era works does not lend itself to keeping an entire species in the dark. Even then, there's no evidence that fighting and killing is a good way to go about fixing problems in the community. To me it seems like fighting fire with fire - a cliché yes, but a a fitting one.
Of course, all of that is entirely beside the point, even if it's topical. The axiom of my initial argument is that enforcers have been allowed to rule for years. I won't say it's gone unquestioned, but those questions were largely met with ridicule, silence, or bullets. I won't say it went uncontested, but fights quickly lost their appeal, and I think it goes without question that the enforcers go where they want, do what they want and say what they want. The bounty list has grown less populace. On the surface, based on the premise of having enforcers to begin with, we should have no issue with secrecy! And yet, it's equally inarguable that secrecy is slowly slipping out of our hands. I honestly see it only getting worse, especially with other issues on the horizon. The Lionelli, the Administrator, the Fae, the Rift, everything. There is so much going on, and secrecy is just a small part of it.
I'll admit that sometimes I wonder what it would be like if we didn't have to worry about it.
But getting back to the main point, if the enforcers have had the power to make the 'masquerade' work, why hasn't it? Which leads to my two potential conclusions. I've already related my thoughts on both of them, and after some contemplation, I think it's a little bit of both of them. The violence is a stopgap that should never have been treated as a real solution. The violence just breeds contempt and gives people a reason to hate the ones attacking them. And ultimately, they're just fighting for an illusion.
Which leads me to the final problem - the question posed to me. What should the discourse be? Secrecy has been the topic for so long, I'm not sure if the vampire community is ready to talk about something else. I'm not sure it's ready to have 'the talk' about vampires coming out on their own terms, and taking responsibilities for its own in a way it never has before. More likely than not, the suggestion would be turned down. Understandable. And then the topic would turn to 'other ways to uphold the masquerade'. I've seen all of that before. The enforcers will listen, but won't take any advice, and ultimately the 'other side' (read as; everyone else), will just try to push for more peaceful means of keeping the 'law'. And then even that will turn into a big argument, and bear no fruits.
So what then is the solution? I'm not, and nor do I feign to be a leader in the community. I'm a single voice, and I don't have the connections to have sway one way or the other. I can't lead a discussion because I don't have the clout, and I respect that.
But to me it's a pretty simple matter. The community needs to be empowered, not live in fear. I think the idea of minimizing our impact and minimizing our presence is an ideal one, but I think that should be taught, rather than pounded into the flesh. Even then, I don't think it's a fruitful endeavour in the long run. We're going to be so busy policing each other, we're going to miss the outbreak of dozens of fadebeasts attacking humans and totally ruining secrecy for us! I think the community should stop worrying so much about whether or not a fledgeling accidentally feeds and gets seen doing it. Yes, it's a problem, but there are so many OTHER problems that need exploring. So why can't, instead of the community going round and round in circles, we take a look at one of those issues? Why can't we find a common enemy or a common cause and try to do something about that? Why does the primary focus of our interaction have to be divisive?