Why Nothing Qualifies As An Eldritch Abomination
Originally posted to Horror Facts on January 10th, 2023
Existential horror has been with humanity for as long as we've been around. Since we could think, we’ve wondered if we were alone and so we invented gods to watch over us. Whether or not any are out there is another topic. Let's say they are. If so, it would stand to reason that for every benevolent and beautiful deity, there are ones that are twisted and malevolent, but where did they come from?
Nothing is a strong possibility. How does that make nothing count as an eldritch abomination, though? First, we need to go over the qualifications, the most obvious of which is being beyond comprehension. Close your eyes and try to picture true nothingness. What do you see?
An empty black bottomless void? Endless empty white space? Even both these things would qualify as something. Hell, nothing itself is technically something. In any case, the closest we can get to seeing it is the empty space in our universe, and space is what we call it, and yet it's filled with darkness.
No, true nothingness has never been seen. Perhaps, if we can somehow go beyond the edge of the universe we'd finally be able to witness it. This alone would hardly put nothing in the same category as Cthulhu or Pennywise the clown. Undiscovered animals would automatically qualify if never being seen before made something count as an eldritch abomination. This brings us to that existential dread thing.
For the characters I brought up, both Lovecraft and King respectively, what were the results of these people facing these monstrosities? In the Call Of Cthulhu, a sailor was put in an asylum. In it, a character's wife was left in a catatonic state, albeit temporarily. Now, can exposing someone to nothing achieve these same effects? Let's go back to when I told you to imagine nothingness, the dark bottomless void, or the blank white space with no end.
There are two real-life examples that get close to these. Solitary confinement would be the first. Anyone at all familiar with the US prison system should be at least somewhat aware of it. For the uninitiated, it is a form of punishment for unruly prisoners involving extreme isolation, usually in a dark cramped space. The harrowing results of this and the other example I’m about to mention could honestly each fill their own articles.
Speaking of, the next one is known as white torture or white room torture. Essentially, people unfortunate enough to find themselves subject to this are put in a white, as the name implies, room with bright lights that is soundproofed or the area outside of the room. They are only fed bland white food in an attempt to sensory deprive them. Notice any similarities between these things, the dark void, or the empty space? The main obvious difference is that as opposed to they go on forever while the punishments mentioned above do not, but wouldn’t that make nothing all the more terrifying?
Nothing existed before everything else and prior to any laws of the universe coming into play. Would you die in true nothingness? How could you in a place where death hadn’t even been born yet? You’d be there alone with your thoughts forever. Another King example that gets close to this would be his story, The Jaunt.
I won’t spoil it. However, it does show why too much alone time can be a bad thing. Now, some of you may be thinking "But if you isolate anyone anywhere long enough it’s bound to mess them up in the head eventually.". Very true. The difference is true nothingness would offer no stimulation.
Even the people who are subject to those tortures, usually retain some sense of identity afterward. Now picture if instead where you were could not stimulate you in any way. You'd feel no heat or cold so there'd be no feeling at all except the occasional itch. Trust me when I say in that circumstance, you'll be thankful to be experiencing something other than your mind slipping away. Not to mention, it'd be hard to keep yourself occupied if you're all alone.
Eventually, you'd lose all sense of self and what it means to be a person in general. You'd be left an empty shell. Now, let's say someone prefers solitude. Perhaps what I've described thus far sounds like a paradise. After all, there would be absolutely nobody to bother you.
This is where too much of a good thing comes into play. If someone spent eons in nothing and then were suddenly back out in our world, how would they react? They’d be feeling cold or heat after being deprived of it for so long. They’d be bombarded with noises when they’d heard none for so long and every sight might rattle them. What would they do?
Would they try to claw off their own skin? Would they try to burst their own eardrums? Would they try to claw their own eyes out? Anything to try and simulate the comfort of nothing. If they couldn’t, they’d most likely lash out and be completely feral.
Think of The Nothing in The Neverending Story, an ever-consuming void. The only difference is they'd be consumed from the inside out, metaphorically speaking, leaving not a trace of the person that once remained.
Now we get to this last qualification for something to be considered an eldritch abomination is that it has to be an affront to nature in some way. Despite what I’ve written so far it could be argued that nothing is the most natural thing and everything that came after is unnatural. To this I say, from that perspective of the unnatural, would what’s natural not then be viewed as unnatural? When you look into the abyss it stares back at you. What is nothing if not the ultimate abyss?
This is the heart of my case. Nothing is as natural as it gets and that makes it scary because it means
that what was never meant to exist is us.
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Super well written and thoughtful. Me being a massive fan and writer of cosmic horror and me being myself an eldritch abomination. I always put the like to their being to the mind filling in the gaps. what we see is just light (I am explaining this poorly because i just consume science shit and am bad at remembering how its actually stated.) and our mind interprets it because we have reference that had developed over time. There was a story of a guy that had been blind like all his life then got his sight back. for the first like year everything was just kind of blobs since his mind had no reference to any of it.
Also like certain migraine can cause blind spots. and those people have said that if a person is in thst blind spot it looks like a person but off because it's mind going off memory. or if they don't know the person the face may just be missing.
So I love the idea that these things, even if they seem more tangible or grounded, being our minds attempt at deciphering them. and also how people can maybe loose their mind or go catatonic or whatever. I just like the idea of stuff like that. translating a non natural thing with science as closely as you can as to "why". Also why I always imagine most truly eldritch abomination would have this kinda smokey blurryness around them and even make us sick to look at because of our mind and eyes not lining up.
Anyway I'm yappin. but I love this stuff. Great piece homie!.