Been wanting a color laser printer for a long time. Finally broke down and bought one for our Gen Con printing needs. As a bonus, I now have the ability to make new devotional candles.
Tag: magick
Emergent Magick – Emergent Magick
Emergent Magick – Emergent Magick
Emergent Magick now has it’s own website. It’s bare bones right now but we are looking for suggestions on what to add and donations of artwork to use.
IA!
Emergent Magick – Tribe
Performing ritual as a
group adds several dimensions to the magick being performed. Not only does the
original goal of the ritual become clearer for the individual, but the magick
changes the group as a whole. If the purpose of magick is to connect with a
universal consciousness, and alter that consciousness through the creation of
meaning, then practicing magick as an individual will only get you so far.
Other perspectives on the universal consciousness will only enhance that
connection. Concepts that only have meaning for an individual are limited in
their ability to make change. Creating meaning for an entire tribe promulgates
those concepts and makes them something you can interact with. Once the myth
and stories you create are launched into the world through others, they can
continuously expand, as others add to and modify your art. What we make real
for each other has no bounds.
This is how you magick…
To do list:
Grow roses in all available garden space. Check
Harvest roses. Check.
Make rose water. Check.
Make dried rose petals. Check.
Obtain seven-pointed star cookie cutter. Check.
To do list – Week before festival.
Make cannabutter.
Day before festival.
Make rose-scented, chocolate dipped, shortbread cookies with cannabutter.
Goal – Give cookies as offering to priestess at Babalon Rising Festival.
Emergent Magick – The Land
Emergent Magick has its roots in the post-industrial Midwest. A workingman’s magick. If there was any work to be had. Among these ruins, forgotten by out countrymen, we seek to build a new culture, with its roots firmly planted in the land of our ancestors. This is immigrant magick. As so many of our ancestors came here on the promise of prosperity in the early twentieth century. But that promise has been broken, probably always was a lie. The factories emptied, but we survived. Making our own way. Our own economy. Our own tribe. I think of this as I am about to embark. Heading to the blackened, shriveled, but still beating heart of EMK—Rockford, Illinois. It’s Sabbat time.
Emergent Magick – Why Become A Magus?
So why become a magus? A
few are born to it. This can be as simple as having a practitioner in the family
that passes on their knowledge, to those born to an initiated lineage. While
more common in cultures that accept magick, there remains families that
continue their traditions even in modern, Western societies. Most are not so
lucky.
Many a magus comes to the
art through an experience they had in their youth. They may have seen a ghost
or other spirit. They may have experienced or produced some kind of psychic
phenomena. Some have experienced trauma, such as a childhood illness or extreme
injury. Those who suffer near death experiences often report unexplained gifts
or knowledge they did not have prior to the event. An interest in magick can
also stem from location, having spent time in forests or fields, or on an
ocean, where they often spent time alone developing their imagination and a
sense for things unseen. This can happen at mid-life as well, when a magus has
an experience that shatters the sense of self and reveals much that they have
been taught to be illusion.
However, none of these
things are required to become a true magus. No agency, entity, bloodline, or
event bestows the ability to perform magick. All it truly requires is a belief
that something besides the material world exists, and the bravery to look for
it. Magi come from all walks of life, though most have counter-cultural and
rebellious tendencies. Magick itself being the ultimate act of rebellion—to try
and change society, culture, or perhaps the very nature of the universe.
Babalon Rising Thelemic Festival
Babalon Rising Thelemic Festival
The schedule for the Babalon Rising Festival (June 7-10) is up. I will be hosting the Headless Rite and workshops on Emergent Magick.
If you can go to this. Go to this. It will change your life. I mean it.
Emergent Magick – Purpose
To determine our role in society, it helps to examine the
roles magi have taken through history and how they have changed. Keep in mind
these changes have not always been for the “better.” Once again, it would be
impossible to form a complete picture of the magus in every era and culture in
the scope of the book. As with the previous chapter on the history of magick,
we endeavor only to present the EMK perspective, with the focus on Western
magick.
Archaeological evidence and observation of contemporary
hunter-gather societies show that the magus in pre-history had a rich and
varied role that changes from culture to culture in these groups. However,
certain aspects cut across cultures and these elements in differing
combinations can be found in most.
These societies often turned to the magus for their ability
to heal. The ability to treat illness and injury made the magus central to
tribal life. In some cultures, all magick was viewed as a healing act. This
goes beyond the scope of physical illness, and can include healing non-humans—animals,
spirits, and the land itself. It was most often the duty of the magus to keep
the herb lore. The identification, preparation, and uses of plants and
sometimes animal components required years of training, practice, and
experimentation. We tend to downplay the importance of this knowledge in the
light of modern medicine, and we would not argue that traditional practice
should take the place of modern medicine in its entirety, but one only has to
take a cursory look at the multitude of cures that have been found by
scientifically testing ancient medicine to know it should not be dismissed.
Tribal people turned to the magus for healing because many times their cures
worked, or at least alleviated symptoms. We have direct evidence that the
practitioners in these societies knew of plants with analgesic, disinfectant, stimulant,
and psychedelic properties. Not only could they identify the plants, but could
prepare them and combine them in ways that released and enhanced these
properties. This healing included psychological illness as well. The magus
commonly counseled those whose behavior had become a detriment to the tribe. By
helping those individuals find narrative and thus meaning to their lives, and
cultivate empathy for their fellows, many could be turned from violent and
self-destructive patterns.
How did a society without microscopes, limited knowledge of
biology, and before the invention of the scientific method learn to do this?
Perhaps, if we take off our lenses of racial and cultural superiority, and took
these societies at their word, we would know. For the magi plainly state that
the spirits imparted this knowledge. For almost all of the cures and miracles a
magus performed contained a spiritual element, most often the contact of spirit
entities. Another role of the magus in hunter-gatherer societies was to
contact, converse with, and keep a catalog of the spirits. It included spirits
both helpful and malevolent. The spirits advised the tribe through the magus on
when and where to hunt, when to move the camp, who should perform certain
tasks, and when to go to war. Through the spirits the magi learned of the wider
universe. This included the movement of the stars, the changing of the seasons,
and predictions of what was to come.
The magus was also responsible for contact with a certain
class of spirits—the spirits of the dead. In this respect, the magus kept the
history of the tribe, and taught others their shared heritage. In essence, the
magi created culture. The keeping of knowledge and the practice of ritual to
appease the spirits coalesced into the practices of drawing, music, and poetry.
The most basic celebrations that mark a human’s life, the seasons, the hunt, the
harvest, birth, adulthood, and death, were handed down to the tribe from the
spirits through the magus.
Into antiquity, the magi solidified these roles by becoming
the priesthood. They handed down the names of the gods and goddess, their
purpose, and created mythology. The magus became responsible for organization
and construction on a massive scale. As we have learned now, the first
large-scale constructions of many societies, even before towns and cities, were
centers of religious observance. The ability to inspire human beings through
the use of narrative and common cause cannot be over stated. In fact, it has
been one of the central reasons why a species of talking apes has been able to
spread to and transform nearly all of our planet.
One should note, however, that the magi have never been
strictly within the social order. Even as they rose to prominence in places
like Egypt, and coalesced into a monolithic Catholic Church in Europe, the
place of the magi was often outside the ranks of the majority of the society.
The Catholic Church being a prime example. While it certainly made it much
easier to reach a position of influence if one came from a wealthy or noble
background, even the lowest peasant could join a monastery and perhaps one day
become an abbot or a bishop. The prohibition against marriage for priests does
not stem from a moral directive. The nobility, in order to keep a check on the
power of the Church, insisted that their wealth and power could not be inherited.
In fact, the original prohibition was against marriage specifically, and did
not include celibacy. It’s not that priests weren’t expected to have sex, they
just could not produce legitimate heirs. Though they could rule vast lands and
be the advisors to kings, any attempt to create a political force was
eventually put down. The original ideas of separation of church and state comes
much more from the state insisting they keep a monopoly on force than some notion
of tolerance.
The very identity of the magi includes the idea that they
have always been the outsider. The other. Even in tribal societies the magi
were considered dangerous to the social order, and were often relegated to
living at the edge of the encampment, lest their practice disturb or inspire others.
As the power of the church in the West (and in many Eastern societies as well) waned,
the magi found themselves pushed even further into the outskirts. Into the
Renaissance and Enlightenment, the wealthy could still afford their eccentricities,
which included astrology and alchemy. The poor suffered accusations of witchcraft,
and at best were sought out only when needed, at worst, burned alive or hung
from the neck until dead.
The ultimate attack against the magi came from the
scientific revolution as those methods were applied to propaganda. Anyone
advocating drugs, sex, and the freeing of social bonds, anyone who would dare
to provide culture outside of what could be sold, were simply made
non-existent. No doubt science produces its own miracles, but to transform
other forms of magick into meaningless stories was a cultural choice, and
perhaps it was how materialism took over the creation culture is how it was so
successful. Persecution of the magi continued, more often taking the form of
social ostracism. To even believe in magick became a liability, and those
practicing it outside of more palatable, lukewarm, archaic institutions became
charlatans and crack-pots.
The only reason that magick persists at all comes from an
innate sense among certain individuals that the universe holds more than can be
observed. That we have some purpose to fulfill other than buying a new house,
new phone, or new car. This assault can only be turned back if the magi
re-discover one of their primary purposes, and return to being those who create
culture instead of consume it.
How to become a magician
I see a lot of advice on Tumblr. Most of it is from people
who are locked into a certain system of magick and they are giving you that and
calling it gospel. If you have your own deep spiritual beliefs, that’s great.
If your magick requires certain things from you, follow it. But don’t tell
people it’s the only way things are done. Magick is a highly varied ancient
practice. Also, highly personal. What works for you may not work for others.
Magick is an art. Would you tell an artist how they should
paint, or sculpt, or make music? No. It is up to the artist to learn the
fundamentals and then apply them as they see fit.
Here’s my advice. This is what has worked for me. Maybe give
it a try.
Do something with your magick every day. Keep your magical
consciousness active. Learn to see the world as a magical place. Magick does
not break the laws of nature. Magick is what the universe is made of.
Do it when you are tired. Do it when you are angry. Do it when
you are sick. Do it when you feel like there is no point to doing anything. It
can be small. A tiny intentional act. As simple as pouring water for your
ancestors. As simple as a prayer.
But keep doing it. Every damn day. Let it build. Keep doing
it until it is a part of you. Do it because you are magus.