(2021-08-19 13:43)Atlantis Wrote: I do agree with that, that we're not just serving our own species. Because I'm not even from Earth, Avask suffer no harm if this planet was to implode tomorrow. Yet I am motivated deeply to protect this nature as well. It is inherently valuable to me, regardless of specific location. I think as animals, regardless of species, we are more inclined to see nature as an extension of ourselves, wheras humans mostly view it as a separate thing from themselves, and thus there is no inhibition in destroying it.
My question for you then though would be, what is the coyote perspective? How is it different than the dog perspective or the Avask perspective? I suppose one could say the coyote perspective is anything you say, as a coyote; and the Avask perspective anything I say as an Avask. These things are so entangled with our human upbringing though, it's hard to separate out exactly what's the coyote and what comes from being socialized into this particular way of life as a human. Also how is your individual coyote perspective different from that of another coyotes? I've never met another one of my theriotype, but I imagine you have. Do all coyotes tend to have a similar view/ outlook on life, or is it very different? Does that variation come from the coyote side or the human one? I've always been an outsider to this, but I do notice people with similar theriotypes tend to get along. Is it human tribalism that like seeks like, or is it that coyotes naturally get along? I understand if some of these questions are unanswerable, I just wanted to put them out there.
As @DustWolf says, it's not always wise to try to simplify people down too far. I care about environmentalism, but from what I have seen I don't think that's a universal position among coyote therians, let alone therians in general. And you can look in the box on the side there with my items to see that I haven't exactly put forum points here towards that myself. Interpret that as you will.
To your questions specifically. I'll start with, I don't know a whole lot of therians outside of folks I've met on this forum. By chance, I had already met a handful through other things before joining up here, but none of them coyotes. I've seen a handful of coyotes on here, and I'd say, broad strokes, some of why I felt like I got along with them was that the brief glimpses I'd get into how they thought (see something happen, watch how they respond, and so on), it felt... not especially alien to me. That being said, these were brief glimpses and, even then, it didn't feel like we were responding to things in exactly the same way at all. My suspicion is that, the sorts of similarities there may be between coyotes doesn't just work one way though -- they seem like the sorts of characteristics that folks can bond over for a little bit, but too much and you start to get fed up with one another. That being said, coyotes in the wild don't exclusively spend time with other coyotes: the inter-species relationship I know for sure exists is between coyotes and badgers.
More generally, the point about what is human and what is coyote is something I have felt like was important to consider and reflect on. As you point out, it can be hard to disentangle the things that are human vs. theriotype for any of us. And when we start to get into things like the way I think about the world, and perspective and so on, not only is that filtered through the fact that I've only ever seen the world from this human body, it's also that my perspective of what is "coyote" is also filtered through what human cultures think about coyotes. Coyote is a trickster figure in some cultures -- Wile E. Coyote in some ways pulls from that tradition while also drawing from other places as well. But, when I think about "the coyote perspective", consciously or not I'll be thinking of those stories, and they'll influence the way I think about the coyote perspective just as my own observations about the animal itself will as well.
That doesn't lend itself to many satisfying answers to your questions, though. Truth be told, if we speak strictly about experiences, the sorts of therianthropic experiences I have had mostly just say "canine". I feel phantom shifts from time to time, and if we want to get really technical I've tried to measure how far off my head I seem to feel phantom ears (it's far enough that they do seem bigger than I'd expect for a wolf or most dogs). But otherwise, there's not a lot specific to coyotes vs. other canines. Similar for my mental shifts. A lot of the reason I ended up deciding that a coyote theriotype made the most sense, though, was this sense of "a coyote perspective". It's not anything written down anywhere, so truth be told I could just be wholly inventing it (or, at least, pulling very heavily from human stories), but the sorts of things I've seen other coyote therians do and say don't seem incompatible with it. Like I said though, I don't know that it would be anything anybody else would look at and say "Oh, yeah, that looks right". If I were to try to boil it down into some core points it might be things like...
- A skepticism for power and those who have it (though not a foolish one; when someone else is clearly more powerful, no need to stay in harm's way)
- A skepticism for tradition (particularly tradition that isn't supported by good reasons)
- A desire and will to survive, even when doing so requires a drastic course of action or isn't the most graceful
- A care for the people close to oneself, but which doesn't always extend much further
- An ability to recognize and slink through the cracks of a system, and to keep a low profile while doing so
This list isn't very refined. The best rationale I could give for it is, from observations of coyotes, this is a rough intuition of how those behaviors can be rationalized into thought. But, intuition can't always be fully trusted, and it's definitely influenced just by my own way of looking at the world, which... who could say where exactly that comes from.