925 lines
52 KiB
Plaintext
925 lines
52 KiB
Plaintext
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P R I M E C H A O S
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=====================
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FOREWORD
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This book is a state-of-the-art report on Chaos Magick. It is
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written with an overview of magick which has grown out of many
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years of practical work, in a variety of magickal groups and
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orders, including the Pact of the IOT.
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The author's creative and experimantal involvement with magick
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shows in the originality of the material. Think of an influential
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magickal book: how long ago was that picture of magick conceived?
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Less than 50 years? Phil's book represents the nearest thing to
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live magick I've seen in print. It contains work which is still
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being tested. This is a window an the world of the working
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magickian, a mysterious flask of distillate hauled from the
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laboratories of the mind, still smoking suspiciously.
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One of the great strengths of the book is the section on groups.
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Chaos Magick has drawn most of its current incalculable influ-
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ence from the work of groups. In a world where transaction has
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replaced duty as an imperfect method of achieving social
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coherence, it is astonishing that virtually nothing exists on
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the practical dynamics of the non-religious magickal group.
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What Liber Null did for the solo magician, this essay does for
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the magickal group, in summarizing the results of years of
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experience in such alliances.
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Informed as it is by the spirit of postmodernism, the book
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does not try to achieve closure. It does not present a system,
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but supplies the reader with powerful strategic and magickal
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tools for this stage of the Pandeamonaeon. The mood of the
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book ist of being profoundly at home in the accelerating shift
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and fragmantation of daily life. Connoissuers of late 20th
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century demotic will be delighted by the thefts of phrase. As
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we see fractal T-shirts, popular images from chaos, and chaos
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sigils fired out of our TV screens, the reciprocal process is
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occurring too, and magickal symbolism is growing out of fractal
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shards of culture.
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In opening up the magickal demensions of the work of Burroughs
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and Gysin, Phil introduces to the experimental sorcerer two
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particulary valuable ideas: the use of cut-up, the sliding
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and dislocation of words, as a magickal technique, and the
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concept of wordvirus, aka meme. As in pre-literate societies,
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magick becomes the core of language, as we weave spells from
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spelling. This pulls our magick into the heart of everyday
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life, the Chaos of the Normal, which is where it belongs.
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Dave Lee
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W H Y C H A O S M A G I C K ?
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There's basically two kinds of magick. There's puff's magick, and
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git `ard Magick. Chaos is git `ard Magick.
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Mick McMagus. Leeds, 1987
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As our world changes, so too do our magick. Throughout history,
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the way in which magick is described and understood changes, from
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its beginnings in proto-shamanism, to the great 'Occult Revival'
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at the turn of this century. Chaos Magick sets the pace for our
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entry into the next century.
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There have been revolutions in science, literature and art. Chaos
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Magick is the first revolution in the field of Magick. Previous
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(and many existing) magical philosophies have been rooted in a
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connection to the past - be it the past of the ancestors, or in
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historical (or romantic) tradition. Althrough much of what is
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emerging as Chaos Magick builds on what has magically gone before
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it stresses change, rather than continuity, as the only constant.
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We live in a world that is rapidly changing, a world where the
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application of high technology and media saturation enables us to
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mix styles endlessly, where elements of the past present, and
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possible futures are conjured up in most aspects of everyday life
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from the clothes we wear, to the beliefs we adopt. While other
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magical systems promise stability, an anchor into fixed time and
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ordered universe neatly encapsulated into bite-size take-home
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pieces, Chaos Magick moves with the fusion and fluidity of
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modern life.
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Chaos Magick began to surface in the late 70s as punk rock arose
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to threaten the complancency of the establishment. Now we see
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Chaos Theory move from an obscure branch of mathematics into an
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accepted 'new' science. We have watched computer-generated
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fractals become high fashion, the mandalas for a new generation.
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Chaos has become fashionable. We do not reject modern culture,
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we embrace it. So how is Chaos Magick different from the other
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Magical Systems which are on special offer in the modern world ?
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Firstly, Chaos Magick is a paradigm rather than a system in itself.
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It is an approach or overall view, wherein each individual, ulti-
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mately, creates his own magical psychocosm. Rather than 'following'
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a path, the Chaos Magician weaves his own path out of individual
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experiences, and what works best for him. The Chaos Magician has,
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from the very beginnings, the option to be as eclectic as he
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desires, selecting beliefs and techniques from any magical system,
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indeed anything which ha believes will be useful - from the past,
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present, or possible futures. From literature, art, science,
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pseudoscience, technology or fantasy.
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The revolutionary impact of Chaos Magick was that it emphasized
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practical experience. What matters is hands-on experience - rather
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than accommodating second-hand beliefs or long lists of corres-
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pondences. There are no Chaos teachers, 'holy' books or traditions
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that dictate belief an behaviour. The Chaos Magician is free to
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act first, and choose his questions ans answers later. It is the
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Chaos Magician rather than some guru or teacher, who is respon-
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sible for development, experience, creativity, and the results of
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his actions.
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Magick has always been a way of creating islands of order out of
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what Austin Spare called 'the chaos of the normal'. As society
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became more complex, it seems that 'magical' realities became
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increasingly abstract and relatively simplistic. The otherworld
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of tribal shaman is a fair reflection of his everyday world,
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whereas the 'innerworld' of the twentiethcentury Cabbalist bears
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little resemblance to consensus reality, as he ascends Jacob's
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Ladder away from the Earth into cosmic abstract spaces. the
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general view of Chaos Magick is that any islands of order we
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create are at best temporary enclaves; that belief itself is a
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tool, rather than a set of limitations that can quickly become a
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stagnant dogma. Thus a Chaos Magician may choose to adopt a
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Cabbalistic belief-system as a temporary measure, just as he may
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given enough time, determination and effort redesign his personal
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belief which govern any aspect of his behaviour or attitudes.
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"Nothing is True, Everything is Permitted" is one of the
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few Chaos slogans. No wonder that some occultists react to Chaos
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Magicians as through they are militant anarchists.
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As we move towards the twenty-first century, a number of concepts
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which, until fairly recently (and from certain belief-system
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remain so), appeared stable and understood have been called into
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question. Pete Carroll, in his seminal work Liber Null (the
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premier grimoire of Chaos Magick so far), described the 'death'
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of these concepts as - the Death of Spirituality, the Death of
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Superstition, the Death of Identity, the Death of Belief, and the
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Death of Ideology. These concepts are no longer fixed and rigid,
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and reality becomesa playground for those with the will to enjoy
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and make it so. One of the immediate concerns to be voiced about
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Chaos Magick was an implied lack of an ethical basis. Most other
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occult systems have clearly-stated (sometimes over-stated) ethical
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stances concerning what the practitioner must not do. The Chaos
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paradigm rejects the necessity of this attitude and instead tends
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towards the view that personal morality grows from within - that
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is, it up to each individual to define and uphold his own ethical
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standards, rather than them being imposed by some outward agency.
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Having said this, Chaos Magick is generally pro-life and pro-
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freedom of expression. Magick tends to be portrayed as being
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separate or beyond our everyday existence. Chaos Magick, howerver
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supports the proposition that magick works best when it is
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responsive to our life situations. The Chaos approach is that of
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becoming more flexibel and adaptive to the world through which
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we move, to take a wide-angle, rather than one-directional view
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of the world, and to seek and embrace new possibilities. To find
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the most appropriate position and perspective to act from, and
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than act decisively. Magick becomes not so much what we 'do', but
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the 'way' we live.
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This book is but one viewpoint into the Choas Perspective. Magick
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stagnates when it becomes trapped into set formulations and pro-
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cedures. Look beyond what you 'know'to be magick, and go further.
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Enjoy.
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- Phil Hine, January 1993.
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P A R T O N E
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A C H I E V A B L E R E A L I T Y
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One of the first questions that a non-magician asks the practitioner
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of magick is Why do you do it ? A number of answers may be offered.
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One may speak of a desire to unterstand the universe, of finding a
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way of 'spiritual' living, a means to personal transformation, self-
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evolution - of course, much depends on the belief-system that has
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been adopted. Spiritual Living implies the belief that there is
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something about life which isn't 'spiritual'; Personal Trans-
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foramtion keeps things nicely psychological; and Self-Evolution has
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a Darwinian ring to it. For now through, let's cast the net fairly
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broadly and answer that Magick is a set of techniques and appoaches
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that can be used to extend the limits of Achievable Reality.
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In the Chaos paradigm, the emphasis is placed on realizing magick
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work into Consensus Reality. Success is not measured through context
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dependent 'spititual' grades, nor by a slow, imperceptible plodding
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along a course which was laid down by someone else, but by visible
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results by which the magician demonstates to himself that he can
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do things which, a short time ago, never entered his mind as
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possibilities. Some Chaos Magicians tend to the view that Magick is
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a means of adapting oneself to one's environment. Through Magick,
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one can redesign oneself, enabeling greater freedom of movemnt
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within the environment and, where necessary, seek to adapt and
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redesign the environment to allow a greater degree of posibilities.
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Adopting this stance requires the ability to evaluat one's
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circumstances without recourse to the safety-net of delusions
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which aspiring magi often weave about themselves. Gone too, are the
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cosmic cop-out clauses which, on the one hand, allow a magician to
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believe that if a spell 'worked' it's because he is a good magician
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but if it didin't, it's because the tides/karma/fates weren't
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'right'. The responsibility for the failure or success implies a
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greater responsibility than failure, as successful magicks lead to
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change, and change is not generally easy to cope with.
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GUARDIAN OF THE THRESHOLD
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The very act of doing magick itself threatens the magicans
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established limit of Achievable Reality, even if one is
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practising the entry-level BodyMind Exercises, Mind Control
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and simple Sorceries which are available through the plethora
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of magical workbooks (Chaos or otherwise) now available.
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Probably the most formidable opponent the magician will
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encounter is his own inertia, or resistance to change.
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Embarking on any training or work schedule automatically
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invokes this demon, and magicians may be surprised time and
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time again at the ingenuity 'it' shows in manufacturing
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excuse which justify the delaying of a practice 'until
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tomorrow'. The demon of Inertia is the Guardian of the
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Threshold of Achievable Reality, and the only way to over-
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come it is through determination, effort and sheer bloody-
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mindedness: themselves useful qualities for the would-be
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magician.
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BASIC PROCEDURE
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One may consider magick to be an art, science, or somewhere
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inbetween, but it remains true that before one assumes the
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pose of being a magical Dali or Heisenberg, some basic
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procedures must be established. Just because Chaos Magick
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semms to imply that all the 'rules' of other magical systems
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can be cast aside, doesn't mean that there is a total absence
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of self-discipline. Well begun is half done, and establishing
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basic procedures of practice go a long way in moving back the
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borders of Achievable Reality.
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STAGES OF LEARNING
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When learning any new skill, there are three key stages which
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it is well to be awere of. Firstly, there is the initial
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stage of practice which if fulled be high levels of enthus-
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iasm and motivation, and so the results of learning are
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fairly immediate. So far, so good. However, at some point in
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the practice, one enters a 'dry' stage - the Guardian of the
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Threshold has caught on to what is happening and suddenly,
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the practice becomes BORING. Out come the
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excueses and delaying tactics. This is the 'hump` experienced by
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students and people on long training courses, and is the point
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where many people give up. This is the time when one has to conquer
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the Guardian by being equal to its wiles. Once this stage has
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passed, one frinds that the effort that was being diverted into
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resisting the practice is available for further progression; that
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there is now little effort involved in the practice, and its
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benefits may be reaped. A great deal of early learning follows
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these stages, and learining magical skills is similar, exept that
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one is not only establishing new patterns, but changing
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established patterns.
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TIME SCHEDULING
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Learning new skills requires time - a commodity that one often not
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willing to redistribute and which not everybody has to the same
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degree. Many magical workbooks insist that set exercises be
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diligently performed at the same hour each day. This is fine, if
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one's lifestyle allows such rigorous structuring of personal time,
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but others find it near-impossible. When setting a Time Schedule,
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it is essential to be realistic. Making up unrealistic schedule
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often means the one is unlikely to stick to it, which ultimately
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strengthens the Guardian of one's Achievable Reality. A Time
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Schedule should be difficult, but not impossible, lest one sets
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oneself up for failure at the beginning.
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THE MAGICAL DIARY
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Keeping a Magical Diary of practice, ideas, weird experiences, and
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dreams is essential. It becomes not only a record of work done,
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but also a depository of ideas and insights arising out of one's
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magical work. It is also a valuable tool for self-assessment. Just
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as it is all too easy for aspiring magicians to see themself as
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the best thing since Solomon's wand, so too is it easy to deny
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that one has made any progress at all. When there is no guru,
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teacher or master to give support, then there remains only oneself.
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The Magical Diary is the place where strenghts and weaknesses are
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acknowledged, and changes over time effort can be discerned.
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MAGICK WORKS
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Magick, like sexual intercourse, needs to be experienced to be
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fully understood. Similary, the fist few times that one tries it,
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it might not live up to preconceived expectations. It might even
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be a dismal failure, but that shouldn't put you off forever,
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right? However, the Guardian lurks in a corner of the psyche,
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armed with justifications, rationalizations, excuses - all the
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embedded cultural programming which says that magick is super-
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stition, fantasy, and something that can't 'really' happen. The
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fact that much of what passes for Consensus Reality is based on
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superstition, fantasy and things which defy rational explanation
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is neither here nor there. To overcome the Guardian, the would-
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be magician has to prove to himself that MAGICK WORKS, and the
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only way to do this is by trying it out. Proving that Magick
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Works, even in a small way, begins the process of pushing back
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the boundaries of Achievable Reality. Suddenly, nothing is as
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clear-cut as it formerly seemed. Keep 'doing' Magick for long
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enough and it becomes an embedded part of personal reality - as
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familiar as the sky, earth, and buildings seen every day. At this
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point one ceases to believe in magick as something 'seperate'
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from the rest of one's familiar world. Rather, the world is
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becoming magical.
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T H E D Y N A M I C S O F S O R C E R Y
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Orthodox magical systems make a distinction between 'Low' Magick
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(Sorcery) which is concerned with bringing about change in one's
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immediate circumstances, and 'High' Magick which in concernd with
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'Spititual' Evolution. The Chaos Paradigm generally rejects this
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distinction, as it implies a philosophy which rejects the
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physical world as being somehow inferior to a 'spirituality'
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which is somehow above the world. Also, this distinction is not
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an accurate reflection of magical experience.
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Being able to see the results of Sorcery workings (even in small
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ways) shift the boundray of Achievable Reality and successfully
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embeds the fact that magick works. It also raises one's
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confidence in both personal abilities and the techniques them-
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self, and leads to a more expansive outlook.
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Also, success with Sorcery techniques requires that one develop
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the ability to assess self-performance, and critically examine
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desires, which in self leads to change. Bringing about direct
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changes in the world necessitates that the magician pay close
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attention to what he is about. Sorcery, with its emphasis on
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pragmatic techniques and observable results, directs attention
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to the world as it is experienced, rather than some simplistic
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idea that has hitherto been accepted as 'real'. Reality is more
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complex than many people generally like to think.
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The dynamics of socery are fairly simple, and there is a wide
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variety of techniques available. Also it's not difficult to
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devise personal techniques which are unique to oneself. The
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application of Sorcery, too, is very wide.
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1. INTENTION
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Most acts of Sorcery begin with the Statemant of Intent. This is
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a simple declaration of what one is about to do, and for what
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final purpose. Since vague intentions tend to give rise to, at
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best, vague results, the magician should formulate a Statament
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of Intent which is as precise as possible, without
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becoming overly verbose. Two techniques which may be of assistance
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here are:
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(I) DIVINATION SYSTEMS
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The surface desire for change may well not be the best point from
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which to work. This is where Divnation Systems such as Tarot,
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I Ching, Runes, Astrology, or self-created systems can be brought
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in. For example, a Sorcerer is desirous of obtaining employment
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- 'getting a job' is desire. However, using a divination system to
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examine the components of the situation, he finds that a key
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element which 'blocks' his desire is lack of confidence. so he
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performs a working where improving self-confidence is the main
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focus of the Enchantment.
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Divination system can also be used when examining a situation
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which involves other people. It may occasionally be useful to
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examine one's motives for intervening in a situation involving
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other people, and also looking for 'hidden' factors which may be
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immediately apparent.
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(II) COGNITIVE RESTRUCTURING
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There is often a good deal of difference between what we think we
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'ought' to be doing, and what can realistically be achieved. This
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difference is often a contributing factor to work and life
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stresses. Magicians often have high ideals, but may sometimes find
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that it is difficult to bring those ideals down to earth. It can
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be useful, in this regard, to take an overall intention and break
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it down into smaller stages, each of which is more readily
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realised than the overall objective. Rather than trying for a
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sudden 'push' of Achievable Reality threshold, it may by more
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realistic to attempt this in stages.
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SORCERY EVENT SERIES
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A Sorcery Event Series (S.E.S.) is a series of linked Sorcery
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operations. A long-term goal is broken down into smaller, related
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steps. As one results manifests, the momentum of success carries
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the magician into the next working in the
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series. This sets up a condition where each single event concluded
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in the series, increases the probability of the overall intent
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manifesting. The S.E.S. is a particularly useful tactic for work-
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ing with establishing long-term projects. The effect can be
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likened to setting up a line of dominoes, and then pushing the
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first domino into its neighbour.
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2. PROBABILITY PATHWAYS
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Contrary to popular opinion, magical results do not pop up out of
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thin air, and it does help enormously, with Sorcery workings if
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there is a 'pathway' through which the desired result can manifest.
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This can also be examined in terms of probabilities. A Sorcerer
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who performs a ritual to ensure that he passes an exam, but who
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does not any revison or cramming, is not creating a situation where
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there is a reasonable probability that he will pass with flying
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colours. If he does study, however, the probability of success is
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likely to be higher. Sorcery does seem to achieve the best results
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when the probability factor is at least fractionally higher than
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zero. To take another example, when planning workings for
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financial gain, it is useful to have a number of projects on the
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go, any of which many results in increased funds - and hence the
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sorcery working is more likely to yield some kind of positive
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result.
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3. TIMING
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Timing is an important yet often underrated factor in practical
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magick. A good example of how timing can critically affect the
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outcome of a working is that of Healing. If a client has a long-
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term, progressive may be more successful at an early rather than
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a late stage in the course of the illness. Complex life
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situations can be examined for the purposes of Sorcery as
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unfolding event series. In the early stages of a developing
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situation, there may be more fluidity and flexibility than at a
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later stage, where it is less easy to influence probable out-
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comes. Events which can be perceived are macroscopic changes
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which have been brought about by
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the unseen interaction of microscopic fluctuations. In other words
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an avalanche can be seem, but not the very small factors which
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brought it about. Developing strategies that allow the
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identification of small changes, and then influencing them so
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that they lead to change which fulfils the cordinations of one's
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statement of intent, can therefore be useful for Sorcery working.
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In other words, learn to 'nudge' a situation at the right moment.
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Paying close attention to what is happening in a given situation
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is useful, and using Divination systems can also help here.
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SORCERY OPERATIONS - BASIC PROCEDURE
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Once a Statement of Intent has been formulated, and any other
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relevant factors taken into account, the next general step in
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any Sorcery operation is to move into a Free Area. In orthodox
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magical systems, this tends to involve ritual procedures for
|
||
setting up a magical Circle, making any psychological adjustments
|
||
for magical work, or assuming particular postures. In the Chaos
|
||
Paradigm, a Free Area is any space which has been redefined as a
|
||
zone where normal Consencus Reality is suspended, and Magical
|
||
Reality is operant. Thus a Free Area may refer to a previously-
|
||
prepared Temple, a space in which ritual is to be performed, or
|
||
a state of Consciousness.
|
||
Within the Free Area, the magician uses any offered technique/
|
||
trick deemed appropriate to clear his awareness of anything but
|
||
the impending magical act. This can range from full ritual
|
||
procedure - performing a Banishing ritual, setting up an altar,
|
||
ect.,to merely closing one's eyes and concentrating. The
|
||
techniques used to define a Free Area often depend upon:
|
||
I) Circumstances
|
||
II) Available Time
|
||
III) Necessity
|
||
IV) Individual Perference
|
||
Following the defination of, and entry into the Free Area, the
|
||
next stage is to move towards a stage of consciousness known in
|
||
condition of one-pointed consciousness wherein awareness is emptied
|
||
of all save object of concentration; where will is given both
|
||
intentionality and vector. The main routs to Gnosis are threefold:
|
||
Excitatory - anything which stills the BodyMind, such as passive
|
||
meditation, slow chanting, hypnotic agents, or slow breathing; and
|
||
Indifferent Vacuity - a state of no-mind, or Non-Interest/Disinterest
|
||
where the object of desire flickers briefly in a mind emptied of
|
||
all content - no emotional attachment to the desire.
|
||
Upon entering the 'peak' of Gnosis, the desire in its chosen
|
||
repredentative from - a sigil, for example - is projected forth,
|
||
towards its target or into the void of the multiverse. It is then
|
||
banished from awareness, that is to say forgotten.
|
||
Following projection of the desire, the Free Area is closed using
|
||
any preferred method, such as manic laughter, a Banishing Ritual,
|
||
or a hand gesture. The Magician then moves onward, having set up
|
||
the conditions whereby his desire will manifest accordingly.
|
||
It should be noted that a key to Sorcery is that, on completion
|
||
of a working, it should be considered - at least on a magical
|
||
level - to be finished with, and nothing more in the way of
|
||
magical work needs to be done. The deep certainty that one's
|
||
Sorcery will yield the desired result will only come through
|
||
continued practice, effort, and refinement of technique, but it is
|
||
not unusal for advanced practitioners to claim a 'succes' rate
|
||
with the kind of magick of around 80-90%.
|
||
The above description of General Sorcery working, from a three-
|
||
hour group ritual involving prolonged dancing, druming and
|
||
chanting, to an act of 'Empty-Handed' magick which can be
|
||
performed anywhere, and need only last a few seconds. In general,
|
||
magicians tend to proceed from the former to the latter type of
|
||
working. As one continually shifts the boundary of Achievable
|
||
Reality, the definations of 'what' constitutes a magical action
|
||
tend to become fairly fluid. At
|
||
the beginning of magical practice, it is usual to perceive magical
|
||
operations as being 'seperate' to everyday experience. Later how-
|
||
ever, acts of magick becomes a part of everyday experience, as
|
||
one makes the transition between inhabiting a Consensus Reality
|
||
which is gradulally widening to admit the possibilities of magick
|
||
to creating a personal Magical Reality - a Psychocosm.
|
||
|
||
E V O L V I N G A P S Y C H O C O S M
|
||
|
||
In becoming familiar with magical ideas, reading books, learning
|
||
symbol systems and correspondences, one comes to learn the 'game
|
||
rule' of magick. Like any other game, the rules define the frame-
|
||
work of the activity. For a game to be wortwhile, its rules must
|
||
be flexible, open to different interpretation, and allow for
|
||
different needs and situations. Involvement with magical practice
|
||
shows that the game rule of Consensus Reality are more flexible,
|
||
and have more loopholes than one may originally through.
|
||
Developing a magical Psychocosm is slow process, as one pathers
|
||
momentum in magical practice, shifting from the 'beginner's mind'
|
||
of having read a few books and probably having set up
|
||
preconceptions as to what magick is 'about', to beginning to
|
||
practice magical techniques in earnest. One of the strengths of
|
||
Chaos paradigm is that experience is stresses over pre-
|
||
experiential beliefs. Do it first then consider which beliefs
|
||
and concepts seem to be most appropriate, in the light of
|
||
personal experience.
|
||
In modern culture, there are hundreds of magical paradigms
|
||
available, with more being discovered, recovered and invented
|
||
every year. Beginners in magick often adopt a paradigm which
|
||
reflects their core self-beliefs and ideas, or, as is some-
|
||
times the case, the first system that is encountered or made
|
||
accessible. Since few people get anything from an approach they
|
||
are not even remotely interested in, it is usually best to
|
||
choose a magical system that is attactive, for whatever reasons.
|
||
|
||
|
||
ENGLAMOURMENT
|
||
All magical paradigms have their attendant glamours, and these may
|
||
be changed as a paradigm develops. The earliest editions of Liber
|
||
Null, for example, did not mentation the term Chaos. Early on in
|
||
its development, Chaos Magick required the glamour of being some-
|
||
how 'sinister' or 'Satanic' which, while inaccurate, has doubtless
|
||
drawn quite a few people to become interested in it. Some magical
|
||
systems have strong quasi-religious overtones, and for
|
||
practitioners of these systems, the glamours can become faiths.
|
||
Elements of glamour include not only beliefs and concepts, but
|
||
styles of writing, narrative content, images, overall presentation
|
||
buzz-words, and occasionally the participation of charismatic
|
||
figureheads. Often, the attractiveness of a glamour for an indi-
|
||
vidual reflects personal tastes in literature, music, or other
|
||
fashions. For Chaos Magicians, the power of glamour becomes yet
|
||
another technique to be unterstood and utitized. For example,
|
||
successfully weaving the glamour of being a shaman will signi-
|
||
ficantly alter other people's reaction to the magician, as would
|
||
successfully weaving the glamour of being a Satanist. Indeed, it
|
||
is possible for a magician who is adept in the projection of
|
||
glamours to be perceived as both (by different sets of people),
|
||
when in fact neither glamour is particularly true.
|
||
|
||
|
||
PARADIGM SHIFTS
|
||
A well-documented feature of post-traumatic reaction is the
|
||
tendency amongst some individuals to shift towards major lifestyle
|
||
changes. Witness, for example, the number of people who embrace
|
||
religion following bereavement, accidents, or over-use of
|
||
hallucinogenic agents.
|
||
A core technique in Chaos Magick practice is the conscious attempt
|
||
to make periodic Paradigm Shifts. The aim here is to loosen one's
|
||
personal web of beliefs and attitudes; to gain an Ego-complex that
|
||
is adaptive to new situations and attitudes. Shifting into a new
|
||
paradigm or world-view is instructive, not only in terms of
|
||
empathy - understanding another persons' outlook on life - but also
|
||
by bringing about
|
||
a deliberate change which occurs across different strata of one's
|
||
life, the magician undergoes a process of egofracturing and
|
||
remoulding.
|
||
It should be understood that making a paradigm shift is not easy.
|
||
It is not merely a matter of deciding one day to be a hedonist,
|
||
and the next, a medieval ascetic. Merely playing around with
|
||
beliefs and attitudes in the safety of one's own handspace is
|
||
little more than mental masturbation. Paradigm Shifts are rarely
|
||
effective unless they are enacted fully within Consensus Reality.
|
||
Thus it is one thing to convince oneselfe of being a Born-Again
|
||
Christian, another to convince family and peers that such is the
|
||
case, and another thing still to convince other Born-Again
|
||
Christians. Entering any particular paradigm as an ego-
|
||
deconstructive exercises implies a stance of total involvement
|
||
and embtace of any associated beliefs, attitudes, and behaviours.
|
||
This process takes time. It takes time to establish oneself
|
||
comfortably within a particular paradigm; time to exerience
|
||
Consensus Reality totally within that worldview, and time to
|
||
withdraw from that paradigm and evaluate the experience. Some
|
||
paradigm are easier to enter and leave than other. It is
|
||
relatively easy, for example, to shift from being a fanatical
|
||
follower of a religion to a fanatical exponent of a magical
|
||
system. All that a person has changed, in this example, is the
|
||
surface content of the beliefs. The embedded patterns of
|
||
behaviour and attitude have remained intact, and it is these
|
||
'embedded' befiefs and behaviours which are at the root of the
|
||
more conscious responses to situations and life-changes.
|
||
The sense of being a uniaue individual - the Ego - is maintained
|
||
by a pattern which basically makes a divide between what it 'is'
|
||
and what which it is 'not'. An individuals' attitudes beliefs
|
||
and allegiance to various ideologies and social groups reinforce
|
||
the sense of selfhood, against the projected other. These
|
||
structures are very much responsible for maintaining one's
|
||
preception of the way things 'are' - the embedded perception of
|
||
consensus reality, echoed back through all aspects of one's life,
|
||
so that there is little sense of
|
||
reality being fragile or unstable (exept at times of stress).
|
||
One's worldview literally becomes the World - embedded and
|
||
reinforce, so that its limitations and parameters are experienced
|
||
unreflexively, as self-evident 'truths'. The first stage of
|
||
moving into a Paradigm Shift is made when one begins to question
|
||
the validity of these self-evident truths - to begin to experience
|
||
Consensus Reality as fragile, where one's own individual beliefs
|
||
are seen a prop as those held by others. A great many people do
|
||
this as a matter of course and, as this proccess leads to anxiety
|
||
and alienation, seek to resolve the inner conflict by embracing an
|
||
ideology which gives them the illusion of 'solid ground' - meaning
|
||
participation, and a secure place to be. Many religious and quasi-
|
||
magical cults recruit their members by deliberately targeting
|
||
individuals who have begun to question their participation in
|
||
Consensus Reality.
|
||
Individuals with a rigid ego-complex tend to react to any
|
||
perceived 'threat' to their world-view by suppressing, denying,
|
||
or attaching the source of dissonance. The more 'loose' one's
|
||
ego-complex, the more adaptive and tolerant the individuals is to
|
||
new ideas, change, understanding another person's viewpoint, and -
|
||
perhaps most important - the ability to interact with others
|
||
across a wide social range, without requiring a complex consensus
|
||
of attitude and belief.
|
||
|
||
EGO MAPPING
|
||
In deliberately setting out to enter into Paradigm Shift, the
|
||
magician is preparing to assault the fortress of his own identity.
|
||
A ground plan of the area is therefore useful. Ego Mapping
|
||
requires the articulation and unravelling of one's own beliefe and
|
||
attitudes: ideologies that the magician is attracted to or,
|
||
equally , is repelled by: perceived strengths and weaknesses,
|
||
fears, ego-propping fantasies, desires, dreams, nightmares. The
|
||
magician writes an account of himself, as he is, how he would like
|
||
to be, and how he things other see him; he trawls back through his
|
||
personal history, attempting to identify major turning-points,
|
||
success, incidents of failure, embarrassment, blunders, traumas and
|
||
ecstasis. An account of himself in the third person may be useful,
|
||
as might be an obituary, written in the present, or ten yeas in
|
||
the future.
|
||
As the process gains momentum, there comes the understanding that
|
||
one's worldview, which may well have been tacitly sccepted as
|
||
'true' so far, is merely one of many, in a bewilderingly complex,
|
||
expanding culture. An initial choice of Paradigm Shift may be the
|
||
movement into a paradigm which is diametrically opposend to a
|
||
belief-system which one has invested a good deal of time, energy,
|
||
and self-esteem into. A change of political ideology is a good
|
||
example, as it requires a radical transition towards embracing and
|
||
experiencing a worldview which has been, for years, the
|
||
'opposition'. Here, the magician may have spent years viewing a
|
||
particular ideology through stereotyped 'others'. by deliberatly
|
||
becoming one those 'others', he challenges the 'truth' of his
|
||
pervious worldview. Of course, this is risky, especially as it
|
||
will affect every spect of one's lifestyle, particularly
|
||
interactions with family, friends, peer group, etc.
|
||
|
||
|
||
SUB-PARADIGM SHIFTS
|
||
The kind of Paradigm shift examined so far is very broad in its
|
||
scope. It can also be instructive, from time to time, to make
|
||
occasional sub-paradigm shifts within a specific context. The
|
||
symbolic and ontological sub-paradigm that make up occult belief
|
||
systems come within this category. Compared with manking Paradigm
|
||
Shifts within one's Social World, shifting between magical
|
||
paradigms is relatively easy. Magicians do tend to move between
|
||
magical paradigms in the course of their offer different degrees of
|
||
explanatory strength, freedom of expression, personal meaning and
|
||
working within its parameters until they are experienced as 'true'
|
||
and then moving to another paradigm, is instructive. One example of
|
||
such concept of subtle body energies. By studying, and heance
|
||
embedding the symbolism and layout of standard
|
||
western set of chakra-points, a magician will eventually come to
|
||
have expirience which accord with that particular overly of
|
||
internal subtel energies. Shift into a different system of power-
|
||
points, and one can again experience phenomena which are consonant
|
||
with the new system. Such experience tends to lead to the
|
||
conclusion that magical belief systems are not necessarily 'true'
|
||
descriptions of the territory, but merely structures for organizing
|
||
assimilating, and integrating experience. To do this successful
|
||
requires that the magician works with any chosen system over time.
|
||
Thus magical models becomes themselves tools, rather than rigid
|
||
parameter. Some tools are likely to be better for some types of
|
||
exploration than other, and Chaos Magick tend to the view that it
|
||
is more efficient to have a wide range of conceptual weapons to
|
||
choose from, rather than be limited to one paradigm that cannot
|
||
possibly account for everything. Tools however, can be subtle
|
||
traps. A magical model which at first appears liberating, yielding
|
||
new insights, informating and experiences can become, in time,
|
||
restictive.
|
||
The inability to move beyond the limits of one's chosen dominant
|
||
paradigm seriously hampers one's ability to be adaptive to life-
|
||
changes, and the exploration of new possibilities. A strength of
|
||
the chaos approach to magick is the freedom to draw inspiration,
|
||
creativity, and structure from any area of human endeavour, and not
|
||
be restricted to what is usually perceived as 'magick'. Hence a
|
||
rising interest in cybernetics, science-fiction, biology,
|
||
communications, non-linear dynamics, and other diverse
|
||
contributions to contemporary culture. Rather then attempting to
|
||
accommodate ideas within existing paradigms, Chaos Magick creats
|
||
new paradigms based on current ideas and possible futures, rather
|
||
than continually attempting to rewrite and recycle the past. The
|
||
cumulative effects of Paradigm Shift, practised on all possible
|
||
levels, are: the deep unterstanding that all beliefs are relative,
|
||
that one can consciously adopt a particular stance and successful
|
||
weave a projective glamour (both for self and others) from it; that
|
||
one is able to accept new
|
||
information and ideas without perceiving them as a threat; that
|
||
one can live comfortably within many differnt roles and selves.
|
||
All individulas are free to make contradictory statemants, be wrong
|
||
occasionally, and admit to errors in judgement, without suffering
|
||
a serious blow to the ego. This transition is known as shift from
|
||
Ego-centric behaviour, to Exo-centric behaviour. That is, the
|
||
process of movement from a position where a stable sense of self
|
||
has to be maintained at all costs, to a position where a multitude
|
||
of selves is acknowledged, which a continual sense of engagement
|
||
towards those selves which are, as yet, unknown. Further, it
|
||
requires the identification and acceptance of that which the
|
||
magician has previously found fearful, distasteful and
|
||
unacceptable - the demon-selves which, having been faced and
|
||
bound, become routes into power. This practice is not easy, as it
|
||
requires the ability to move freely eithin one's Social World,
|
||
and the continual reassessment of on's Personal World.
|
||
|
||
USEFUL GAMBITS
|
||
|
||
Going Away
|
||
Travelling not only broadens the mind, it also provides a useful
|
||
opportunity to adopt Paradigm Shifts in a social space where few
|
||
other are likely to be familiar with one's 'normal' identity.
|
||
Self-Observation
|
||
Here, the magician develops the ability to observe himself
|
||
dispassionately, so that he becomes aware of how he creates
|
||
projects, and maintains a distinct identity. Awareness of the
|
||
dynamics of identity Maintenance is essental when attempting to
|
||
alter that than projection at will. It is also important to be
|
||
able to observe how other people react to willed identity
|
||
projetion. Self-Observation becomes a continual meditation. It is
|
||
also instructive to pay attention to how others maintain and
|
||
project different identities.
|
||
Shock Tactics
|
||
It is a natural tendency for individuals to attribute their
|
||
own behaviour to situational factors, yet at the same time,
|
||
attribute the behaviour of other to their personality, the
|
||
process of labelling other on the basis of their dress, peers,
|
||
and given opinions can become a subtle trap. Knowledeg of this
|
||
tendency can be turned to the magician's advantage. If, for
|
||
example, he knows that another person has tagged him as holding
|
||
generally liberal views on various issues, then choosing the
|
||
appropriate moment to make a comment which implies the opposite
|
||
view, is likely to give the other person a considerable shock.
|
||
Such tactics may used to enhance personal power, or to appear to
|
||
collude with another, whilst maintaining a hidden agenda.
|
||
The above might promot the question 'Do Chaos Magicians ever
|
||
remain in one paradigm or sub-paradigem for any length of time?'
|
||
Of course. The practice of making Paradigm Shifts allows the
|
||
magician to move between paradigms, so that he develops, over time,
|
||
a web of personally significant paradigms, based on developing
|
||
personal and ethical stances, embedded beliefs, a mobile sense of
|
||
identity, and whatever magical models are being used at any one
|
||
time. This sounds complex, but is experience as simple, or self-
|
||
evident. The Chaos Magician is more likely to accept that his
|
||
paradigm-web is likely to change, and that he is quite likely to
|
||
find himself doing things which were previously outside his
|
||
know repertoire of experiences.
|
||
THE MAGICAL SELF
|
||
Creating a Magical Self is a process of deciding what qualities,
|
||
abilities and skills the magician wishes to acquire, and creating
|
||
a role which is the encapsulation of these projections. The
|
||
Magical Self is a persona-mask which the magician 'wears' each time
|
||
he performs any act of magick. It may be associated with a
|
||
particular symbol, item of adornment, clothing. Each act of magick
|
||
reinforces the role. A related practice is that of adopting magical
|
||
names. Some magicians choose a name or motto which reflects their
|
||
magical aspirations. Such names are usually chosen due to
|
||
association with particular magical concepts. The magician
|
||
identifies himdelf with the name - thereby invoking his Magical
|
||
Self. As the magician develops, so may his name change. An example
|
||
of a magical name is PACHAD - a Heberw word which can be
|
||
translated as 'Fear'. It is also a title of the Cabbalistic
|
||
Sephiroth GEBURAH, which corresponds to the planet Mars. This
|
||
name might thus be adopted by a magician who wishes to identify
|
||
his magical self with a martial curent.
|
||
There is little point however, in designing a magical persona
|
||
which merely reinforces qualities that the magician already
|
||
possesses in abundance. The Magical Self is an invocation of
|
||
future otherness - a self which one might sense the need of, but
|
||
has not yet developed the requisite abilities and powers of.
|
||
Initially, the Magician Self is a mask which one adopts when
|
||
moving from Consensus Reality to Magical Reality. But, over time
|
||
and experience, the 'everyday' selves assume the function of masks
|
||
and Magical Selves become dominant.
|
||
|
||
CHAOS IDENTITIES
|
||
Entering a magical universe is an attempt to impose order onto
|
||
chaos. Magical universe are based in Mythic or eternal time -
|
||
linking into the past through symbol, image, and a sense of
|
||
continuity. An escape route, whereby one can gain a breathing space
|
||
a sense of order and permanence. There can identity be stabilised
|
||
and rooted into a structure. The magical revival is powered by two
|
||
related undercurrents. Firstly, the search for a personal and
|
||
collective past, and secondly, the need for escape routes from
|
||
the perceived tyranny of Consensus Reality. The desire to uncover
|
||
and preserve the past is part of the impulse to preserve the self.
|
||
Without knowing where one has been, it is difficult to plot a
|
||
clear future. The concern for recovering the past, through
|
||
museums, ruins, etc has been growing since the nineteenth century.
|
||
The past is seen as the foundation of personal and collective
|
||
identity. It offers the sense of continuity, of eternal time. But
|
||
history is no longer true. The past is being re-written, re-forged
|
||
in a new image to feed dreams of
|
||
Golden Ages, or National Boundaries, of Agelss Wisdom. History has
|
||
turned into commodity, a growth industry; the preoccupation with
|
||
roots has grown rapidly since the 1970s, ever more so due to
|
||
widespread insecurity in areas nominally seen as stable - labour,
|
||
credit, technology, skills.
|
||
Magical universe offer the promise of a meta-theory through which
|
||
all things may be represented. This runs contrary (hence its power)
|
||
to the spirit of the age, which turns away from global projections;
|
||
where a meta-narrative is illusory. The sciences are suddenly
|
||
uncertain; no longer able to chart the void through mathematics,
|
||
they find smaller and smaller worlds to discover. The one-world
|
||
dream of the Enlightenment is fragmenting into worlds colliding and
|
||
worlds apart; individuals do masks to enter the different reality-
|
||
games, the social worlds layered through the eyes of strangers;
|
||
existences which may only be guessed at refracted through the media
|
||
never-web of stereotypes and labels. Images flicker across screens
|
||
and into minds.
|
||
Working, living and acting within a magical psychocosm, one
|
||
discovers that the sense of identity becomes inextricably
|
||
interwoven with one's magick. There is a graduated progression from
|
||
magick beeing something that one is interested in, to something
|
||
that one is engrossed by, to being a magician more or less full
|
||
time. In terms of the Chaos approach, this implies continual change
|
||
modification of identity, entering different paradigms of belief
|
||
and behaviour, learning new skills, and shedding life-patterns
|
||
which have outworn their usefulness. There is thus a shift from a
|
||
core Ego which is based on differences, the self-other divide, to
|
||
Exo, the self in a continual progrss of engagement. As one
|
||
continues to expand and develop the personal psychocosm, the size
|
||
of the social group which reinforces that sense of identity grows
|
||
smaller.
|
||
SELF LOVE
|
||
The aim of the progress is to reach the point where identity is
|
||
countinually being deconstructed - when a measure of fluidity
|
||
of expression is attained and one is released from the necessity
|
||
of seeking self-validation from others. This is what Austin Osman
|
||
Spare referred to with his doctrine of Self Love. This is no
|
||
narcissistic basking in the glamours of the ego, rather, it is the
|
||
discovery of the void at the core of an indentity which is freely
|
||
able to move into any desire set of social relations, without
|
||
becoming trapped or attached to them. As the core of the sense of
|
||
self is 'Self-Love', rather than any limitated label, one attains a
|
||
state of great freedom of movement and expression.
|
||
Self Love does not necessarily imply alienation or withdrawal from
|
||
Consensus Reality. Modern culture is saurated with escape routes
|
||
by which one is encouraged to resist the routines of reality.
|
||
Drugs, sex, fantasy scripts, social enclaves, ideologies,
|
||
therapies, mindscapes, the past, utopia - all well-signposted
|
||
escape routes that, ultimately, reveal themselves to be dead-ends.
|
||
This is especially true of so-called revolutionary escape routes -
|
||
political, alternative lifestyles, magical endeavour. They support
|
||
rather than threaten, consensus reality, whilst feeding the
|
||
illusion of escape. Many of these escape routes require a change
|
||
in social scripts and masks and do little more than create fragile
|
||
enclaves within consensus reality, which inevitably are recaptured
|
||
recuperated, and commodified into fashion and trends.
|
||
Magick is the 'great' escape route to the edge. Through its
|
||
practice the magician may project himself into Mythic Time, make
|
||
place and space sacred, project future benign or otherwise. Whilst
|
||
political ideologies focus on changing the structure of social
|
||
relations, magical scripts focus on changing identity, so that the
|
||
structure might one day follow. All transient individuals,
|
||
magicians dream new towers from the buildings of consensus reality.
|
||
The difficult comes in attempting to find others who will share
|
||
and personal identity has been rendered fluid, ephemeral, and
|
||
endlessly open to the exercise of will and imagination. This may
|
||
be liberating. It may also, of course, be deeply
|
||
unsettling and stressful. Nostalgia for common values becomes a
|
||
cultural force, as much from the counter-culture as the
|
||
establishment. As the spatial and temporal worlds become
|
||
increasingly compressed, so the response increasingly becomes
|
||
that of denial, cynicism or a blase attitude - sensory screening,
|
||
the yearning for a past forever lost, and the simplification of
|
||
representation. The search for escape routes vieds yet another
|
||
market of commodities. There is no escape from Society of the
|
||
Spectacle. The Chaos appoach to the deconstruction of identity
|
||
can be understood by examining the tactics of Aleister Crowley,
|
||
who has left a good deal of useful materiel for exploring the
|
||
boundaries of identity. Crowley's life can be understood as a
|
||
continual battle between himself and consensus reality - a battle
|
||
to create a personal enclave for himself beyond the limits of
|
||
conventional morality. Crowley sought to escape the Society of
|
||
the Spectacle by becomming himself Spectacular. He used his
|
||
lovers, pupils and writings to create a free area from which he
|
||
could give free reign to the myriad selves which he had uncovered
|
||
through his magical living. Crowley's approach to the problem of
|
||
identity was an extrem one, and part of his drive towards the
|
||
extrems of experience may have come from his desire to inaugurate
|
||
a new society. The scheme may have begun as a deliberate
|
||
projective glamour, but there are indications that Crowley became
|
||
trapped within his own glamours which, though they provided meaning
|
||
and support, may have also, at times, seemed to be crushing weights.
|
||
Through he deliberatly created tensions and stresses within himself
|
||
he used these to fulfil his task - to perturb - and he countinues
|
||
to do so.
|
||
The Chaos Magician may occasionally resort to extreme stances, but
|
||
is less likely to be concerned with projecting his personal
|
||
visions onto anyone else. Chaos future dreams are not, as yet,
|
||
guided by one overall meta-vision. Instead, there is the
|
||
Pandemonaeon - a future which sewthes with possibilities, any of
|
||
which may become manifest, according to individual will and
|
||
powers, rather than overall schema.
|
||
|
||
Matter is my playground. I make and break without though. Laugh
|
||
and come UNTO me.
|
||
Eris, the Stupid Book
|
||
|
||
Modern society has exalted the notion of individualism almost to
|
||
a pathological degree. Within this urge to be individual are the
|
||
continual exhortations to find 'real','higher' or 'true' selves.
|
||
But if 'Nothing is True' and 'Everything is Permitted', one may
|
||
come to discover that there is nought but a whirling void behind
|
||
the social masks and personas necessary for moving through social
|
||
reality. The Chaos approach offers the choice of becomming many
|
||
individuals, and to finde a sense of freedom not through
|
||
attempting to resist consensus reality,, or to create an enclave
|
||
beyound it, but to embrace it joyfully. While the majority of
|
||
magical paradigms seek to reject consensus reality in favour of
|
||
'higher' states of being, the Chaos approach masks consensus
|
||
reality into a playground for the phenomenizing of will desire.
|
||
By experience consensus reality from the basis of Self Love, the
|
||
magican may begin the long and fascinating process of bringing to
|
||
earth those shards of the Pandaemonaeon - and whatever my lie
|
||
beyound it - which engage attention. This is, by definition, the
|
||
activity of an Elite group, since few have the drive, stamina, and
|
||
determination to continually strip away the skins of identity, in
|
||
favour of freedom of movement.
|
||
For the Chaos perspective, the sence of selfhood is an emergent
|
||
property of continual movement through zones of social dynamics -
|
||
there is no 'core' behind the masks. As one gradually moves away
|
||
from dependence on social groups to reinforce a sense of identity;
|
||
when one ceases to label one-selves on the basis of a few dominant
|
||
behaviours or identifications; the magician becomes able to
|
||
establish experimental 'beachheads' into the nascent possibilities
|
||
of the future round the corner. Freedom lies in remaining mobile,
|
||
elusive, and relaxed. Rather than resisting the chaos of the
|
||
normal, the magician joyfully hurls his-selves into it,
|
||
never quite sure what will emerge. When there is no need to
|
||
be anchored in a stable past or present, the possibilities of any
|
||
future that one might care to dream about are there for the taking.
|
||
Thus, by extending the limits of Achievable Reality, it becomes
|
||
possible to mutate and re-design the human entity for explorations
|
||
into future spaces.
|
||
|
||
|