Source of book: Borrowed from the library
This is, without a doubt, the most unusual - and dark - book
I have read this year. I’m not quite sure how to describe it, but I will give
it a shot.
The central premise is that the protagonist, Ada, is an ogbanje,
a “spirit child.” I discovered this concept earlier this year in Chinua
Achebe’s book, Things Fall Apart.
In the original Igbo mythology, such a child is a spirit, or a god if
you will, and comes to the parents for the purpose (more or less) of breaking
the birth mother’s heart by dying young. And then repeating the process over
and over. It isn’t difficult to figure out the way such a myth would arise: in
an era of high infant mortality, weak genes (or maternal malnutrition or
whatever) could easily cause a string of infant deaths. Just the stories of Suzanna Wesley or John Donne or Gustave Mahler
alone are filled with dead babies.
In Freshwater’s version of the story, though, the ogbanje
is a hybrid: a human child possessed or occupied by spirits/gods. For Ada, the
problem is that she didn’t die - she lived, but tormented by the spirits which
are part of her, but that she cannot come to peace with.
The structure of the book is fascinating as well. There are
multiple narrators, with distinctive voices. Much of the book is narrated by
“we,” the plural voice of the spirits. Occasionally, Ada her self is heard,
usually in the form of a diary entry or a poem, until she finds a voice at the
end, which combines her with her spirits in style. The third voice is that of
one spirit, who Ada names Asughara. This spirit is feral, animalistic, the
personification of desire and darkness. The best I can do to describe the
voices is that Ada is timid but recognizably human. We is more like a Greek
chorus, with figurative, mythical, and serenely confident. Asughara is personal
and lets us see more of Ada than even Ada herself, but is so much concentrated
energy and malice and exuberance in one, that she seems other than human.
(Which is, presumably, the point.)
Asughara is “born,” in the language of the book, as the
result of a trauma. Ada is raped by a boy at college, and Asughara separates
from the We at that time. Asughara becomes the way that Ada can function
sexually: Asughara is full of violent lust and desire, but uses sex to punish
the men who sleep with Ada. (They deserve it, mostly, because Asughara chooses
men who are used to using women.) Freud might describe her as the Id - and not
a stereotypically feminine one at that. Even Asughara admits that her flaw is
that she has no concern for the emotional consequences to others - even to
Ada.
There is one other spirit who separates somehow from the We,
and that is the male spirit Ada names Saint Vincent. He is gentle in all the
ways that Asughara is not, and presents an alternative to her dysfunctional
sexuality. But, as he is male, he drives Ada to hook up with women, which isn’t
at all what Asughara wants (although she tolerates it for Ada’s sake.)
If this sounds a bit complicated and crazy, it is. And even
more so as we see the battles raging in Ada. Asughara feels called back to the
spirit realm, and the only way she can do this is by killing Ada - so she
pushes Ada toward suicide. This part of the book is damn dark, and I wouldn’t
recommend it for someone who is already suicidal. It got to me, and I don’t
tend toward depression. (I have my other demons, believe me, and have been in
some dark places related to circumstances, but suicidal ideation isn’t the
direction my brain is wired to seek first.)
Eventually, Ada has to find equilibrium in her own way,
through the understanding of her ogbanje nature.
In order to gain some understanding of the book, I think it
is helpful to understand the author. Emezi identifies as transgender and
non-binary...and also as an ogbanje. The book isn’t strictly
autobiographical, but it is significantly so. The author has said that they
used their life as the skeleton for the story. But even more than this, it is
an emotional and psychological autobiography, a look inside the author’s
psyche. For Emezi, the ogbanje explanation makes more sense and “works”
better than either the Western psychology framework or the Catholic
Christianity that they were raised with. I have decidedly mixed feelings about
this because of my own background. I was raised in the “nouthetic counseling”
subculture, which is similar (but not exactly) to the Catholic approach that
Emezi describes in interviews about that book. For me, that approach was
borderline abusive, as it ascribes pain and trauma and grief and all
dysfunction to specific sin in the life of the one who suffers. It denies any
biological or circumstantial basis for mental illness, and blames its victims
for their own pain. Particularly as Bill Gothard taught it, it pretty well
fucked me up during my late teens. (And that’s before you get to the lasting
relationship damage in my extended family, but that’s a different post.) It
took a while (and the process is ongoing) to retrain my brain to understand how
and why I react - in a way that doesn’t require “spiritualization” of things -
or heaping guilt on me for negative feelings.
On the other hand, I do believe in my deepest being that
there is more to life and the self and the psyche than chemistry and
electricity. I believe in - and have experienced and continue to experience - a
spiritual dimension that is as much a part of me as the physical being that
science can describe. So, while contemporary Western psychology has been
helpful in understanding myself and my reactions, it isn’t all there is.
Two things tend to make my understanding of Emezi’s
experiences difficult. First, I am a Western person, raised in my particular
culture. As such, I can only view Igbo mythology from the outside. (I use that
word not as a pejorative, but in the same way C. S. Lewis and
Joseph Campbell do.
Myth isn’t necessarily untrue, it is just true in a way that isn’t necessarily
literally, empirically, naturalistically true. Rather, it is true in some
combination of psychological, metaphorical, spiritual, and ontological truth.)
The second barrier is that I do not share Emezi’s psychological reality. True,
I have conversations in my head all the time (my wife teases me because she can
tell), and even arguments. But I never feel like someone or something other
than “me” is in my head. I don’t even experience the “angel and devil on
shoulder” dichotomy. (If I ever do, can I have Crowley and Aziraphale,
please? Please?) So, I have never felt like in a way consistent with the
experience of being an ogbanje.
I couldn't resist.
That said, because of my own experiences, I can see how
Emezi could find an Igbo explanation for their experience to be helpful and
useful.
Similarly, I really don’t have a framework to understand
Emezi’s other identity experiences. I am strongly cishet,
although I don’t fit our culture’s masculine stereotypes particularly well. I
feel male...but like a male who loves violin, poetry, nature, suggleing,
cooking, and cats. I was mistaken for gay a lot as a kid and young adult for
that reason. (I literally laughed out loud when I read Alice Munro’s riff on sexual orientation
in one of her stories.) The best I can recommend is the excellent Vox article
they wrote about their transition surgeries. It gives an insight in their
experience, and the pain and trauma that live in their psyche.
In that sense, this book was disturbing because it gave a
full-on immersion into a psyche which is totally unfamiliar, and occasionally
terrifying, to me. I don’t mean that being trans and/or nonbinary is
terrifying. I mean seeing into the depths of pain and trauma that leads to self
destructive and cruel behavior, and the self-loathing and unwellness that drags
one toward suicide. The problem, if it can be called that, is that Emezi writes
so very compellingly of this. At several points, I was sure I was absolutely
hating the book, and hating what it made me feel, but at the end, after I caught
my breath, I had to admit that I admired and respected it. A book that is so
real and takes you on that kind of journey cannot be characterized as anything
less than outstanding. The writing does what it was intended to do. This is a
book that will stay with me.
In addition to my caution that the book may be a bit much
for someone already experiencing suicidal thoughts (although, again, I’m not
wired in that direction, so I could be reading this completely wrong), I should
also mention that it contains psychologically (not physically) graphic rape and
assault. There is a lot of sex in this book, and it can get graphic, although
it is all completely necessary, and it is brief.
The other thing that might be a trigger for those who are
connected to the Christian religious description, is that Jesus (as “Yshwa”) is
a character. He too occupies Ada’s head, although he is an invited visitor, not
part of her, like the spirits. The problem is that Yshwa is a personification
of the Problem of Evil.
Why wasn’t he there during Ada’s rape - or the sexual assaults we learn she
experienced as a young child? Why didn’t he prevent her mother from abandoning
the family? Emezi grew up Catholic, so they know the theology and scripture
well enough. What is most fascinating is the book’s conclusion about Yshwa: he
too was a spirit violently dragged into a fleshly body. He was an ogbanje
too. As a result, he knows all too well the pain of being human and being trapped
in flesh, and does not want to repeat the experience. I certainly hadn’t
thought of that view of things, I suppose. Yshwa is thus not a villain, or even
close. He tries, along with Saint Vincent, to encourage Ada to travel a less
destructive path. But Ada can never escape the effects of the religion she has
imbibed, which taught her that the loss of her virginity made her unacceptable
to Yshwa. (Not that Yshwa shares this belief - he may not be able to protect
and comfort Ada, but he doesn’t condemn her at all.) I found this perspective
on Yshwa to be fascinating. Some of my tradition may freak out, of course. And
insist that the book is evil because it doesn’t insist on their preferred
theology. I prefer to appreciate the unexpected version of our own mythology,
which seems consistent with the mystery of incarnation.
Because the book is so autobiographical, it is hard to know
whether Emezi will be able to write additional books of this quality. I hope
they are not a one hit wonder, because they write compellingly.
***
Just a note on pronouns: I am using “they,” etcetera,
because Emezi uses them on their website. The various articles on them are
inconsistent, some using female pronouns rather than neutral. Since many of the
sources are ones who do aim to use preferred pronouns, I assume that Emezi made
a change fairly recently, and that female pronouns were previously acceptable
to them.
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