This isn’t my art, (it’s made by @ TheHearthFox over on Twitter) but I wanted to make a long post about why this work in particular speaks to me so goddamn much. I think such a massive part of the queer experience – and also the furry experience – is about the abstract. This can be seen in so many different aspects of furry “culture,” from the concept of fursonas to kink and and other fetish content. You and I will never know what it’s like to be a werewolf and transform under the full moon into the form of a big hulking furry beast. However, us furries create art and other works about the idea of it anyway. We never will be able to be our fursonas – our often idealized and “perfect” versions of ourselves – and part of that really hurts. It hurts so bad honestly, to the point where I can’t quite put it into words. In terms of queer culture, I will never know what it is like to be a cis woman, and that also messes with me a lot. Yet, I’m still trans, my identity can change, I can perceive myself as whatever I damn well please. Identity allows you to shape yourself and the world around you in your own image, even if not everyone can see its beauty.
We have ways to get at least somewhat close to how we feel in our abstraction. VRChat allows you to make an avatar of what ever you want, whether it’s your fursona or just an ideal version of you. Hell, it doesn’t even have to be you, it could be anyone or anything really. We have a whole industry based around creating big ass costumes that allow people to at least look something like their desired character. But it’s not enough. It’s never enough. I ain’t religious, but sometimes I feel like I’ve bitten the apple, been kicked out of the garden, and now I’m left to fend for myself with an identity that my physicality will never match. When I made my fursona using an avatar base in vrchat and configured it to match my real world body scales and looked down, I honestly started crying. I take the headset off, and I’m still me. Everyone takes the headset or fursuit off and they’re still the body they were given, not what they would choose. Our reality is objective, and there’s no way to really change that. We can act like animal people online all day, but the moment that screen shuts off, the moment we walk away, that warm, fuzzy feeling (hehe) fades.
To think abstract is to think beyond what you can normally sense. You will never get to brush the knots out of your fur in the morning, or play with your antennae while anxious (I see you bug people). We can still have those ideas, however. I know I’m on the third goddamn paragraph and I’m just now talking about the artwork I linked but this is an important concept to me. Usually, when I think of the abstract, it feels unreal, “fuzzy” so to speak. However, in HearthFox’s piece, the objective reality appears out of focus and pixelated. It feels like even if we are unable to fully embrace the abstract, we can still embrace what we can of it, and bring some sort of color to a world that doesn’t feel like it is made for us. The colors being outside of the lines could suggest that our abstract perception is maybe just “painted on” to the world around us, but is that a bad thing? Is it bad to take things in from the world around you, but still look at it all in your own unique way? I think not. This also isn’t only about therian identity, or furry identity, or even queer identity – it’s also about neurodivergence. You are never in the wrong for thinking about the world in a way that is viewed as “non-standard” by the rest of the world. If you see yourself as a wolf, bee, fox, bear, raccoon, a fucking plane, it’s not a bad thing. We can still identify however we want, and this modern way of looking at identity is the best way for us to embrace the abstract.
Go wild, go fucking stupid. Love yourself, if you’re a fox, be a fox, there are ways you can feel that way, even if it’s not all of the time. We can fight, we can love, we can still find ways to elation, even if sometimes existence itself feels wrong to you. This work is but one side of abstract thinking. Look at the color the fox has compared to the objective. Look how the fur drapes, how it runs down the body, or how the snout expresses emotion. Sometimes it feels melancholic, but you cannot tell me that trying your absolute damnedest to live your identity doesn’t at least bring some color to your otherwise dreary and unfocused world.
Stay safe, love yourself no matter what.
Yes, this is TF.
…It really hurts, man. That abstract self not fitting into the objective reality, none of it being real or possible in the physical world we live in, nor will it ever be.
But there really is so much joy in exploring it, expressing it, creating it in art, thinking abstract despite the objective. It won’t ever be real in a way I can touch, or feel, or breathe, but I still don’t think I’ll ever be able to give it up. It might not be real in a way that matters to many others, but it’s still me.
