Charles Fort: A Personal Introduction

by Skylaire Alfvegren

To think is to conceive incompletely, because all thought relates only to the local. We metaphysicians, of course, like to have the notion that we think of the unthinkable.
Charles Fort, from The Book of the Damned (1919)

Continued...

I dreamt of the Smithsonian's basement, long said to be a repository for artifacts which would knock the established sciences out of their orbits. Academics appeared so... entrenched in whatever their peer-reviewed publications told them to be entrenched in. Later in life, I learned this was a belief held by more than just the "fringe" element.

I invented a lifeform that would thrive in the atmosphere of Jupiter for my 5th grade science project. I wanted to be a parapsychologist, but only two schools offered such a degree. Instead, I followed in what I'd like to think are Jack London's footsteps: I've roped cattle on the border of Area 51, worked on cars for the Mexican Mafia, built a laboratory to grow amanita muscaria, and been trapped in a jungle halfway around the world on Christmas, without money or a change of underwear. All, in the words of Charles Fort, "to put capital in the bank of experience."

My conception of God, for lack of a better term, has become a loose amalgamation of Loki (the Norse God of chaos), Philip Marlowe and Bill Hicks. "Dogmatists of any stripe," I once wrote, "are fundementally wounded, whether they're Islamic terrorists, Christian abortion clinic bombers or magicians with an ax to grind." Fort's writing showed me how subjective not only belief--but truth, as well--can be, and it was his writings--alongside those of John Keel and a handful of other illuminates--that made me feel like I was part of something, something greater. Fort's philosophy has greatly informed my world-view. I am, in my way, a seeker of Truth. Such individuals, Fort wrote beatifically, "will never find it. But the dimmest possibilities--he may himself become Truth."

In this search--I am no longer an echo of Seth, or feel like a monster hidden from view--but something I once was not. I became part of something else. And I am not alone.

 

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