I was
doing some work with Hekate recently, asking her to teach me more
about herself, and about magic and witchcraft in general. It was
interesting that she did not present to me anything I expected in
response to me asking. She, instead, told me that I already
understood enough about her, for the moment, but I needed to understand why I wanted
to learn magic and what I wanted to use it for.
I've
written before about knowing yourself, figuring out what you're doing
and why. I've been in groups where I've been encountered by questions
about myself and my goals as tools of initiation. I've been doing
magic since I was a small child, studying it since I was about 11
years old, so here, 24 years in, it felt really weird to be asked by
a Titan to examine myself and answer what was the point in doing
magic. Because of course when a god asks you a question like that,
it's not so much being asked a question as much as it is being forced
into an immersive mental space where you're confronted with the
ideas, and concepts of the questions and your own perceptions.
This kind
of mental juxtaposition can be useful for opening a student, or
ourselves, to truly exploring things beyond our current conceptions.
When I get a new student in fencing who has fenced elsewhere this is
similar to how I start their first lesson. I'll ask what their
favorite fencing move is, and what technique they are best at, and
what they're worst at. A lot of time our favorite thing and our best
thing are different, even if we assume they're the same, and
sometimes our worst thing is not as bad as we expect. Frequently once
we start the lesson we start to unravel their perception about their
relationship with these actions. We find the good things in what they
thought they were bad at, the bad things in what they thought they
were good at, and what about the thing they like best makes it their
favorite and how we can make it better. This helps a student gain
confidence as they begin with a new teacher because it shows them
value in the teacher's ability to probe and develop. It also shows us
that we have things we need to learn even in the areas where we
thought we were solid.
This can
be important for magic too. Sometimes we kind of coast through,
reading books because they seem like they're cool topics. Doing rote
rituals because we were told do them. Pray prayers because the words
should reach out to things we think we'll want to connect with.
Purpose helps make all of this more meaningful. And when we explore
our purpose sometimes we have to realize the purpose we thought we
had isn't real, or at least, isn't the ultimate purpose.
We might
say we want to do magic to learn to talk with spiritual forces, but
why do we want to talk with them? We want to learn things from them,
but what do we want to do with that knowledge? Maybe we want to
understand the hidden workings of the universe, but beyond reflecting
on its beauty what do we intend to do with that? We might say we want
it to make change in the world, but what changes do we want to make?
Why do we want to make them? What do we want to do after we've made
them? We might want to develop ourselves, make ourselves better, more
complete? But do we do it to become more powerful? What do we do with
that power? Do we do it to heal ourselves, and make ourselves more
complete humans? What do we do with our more complete selves? Do we
want to ascend and become saints in the heavens? What will we do from
that vantage?
That
paragraph was bad writing...but it illustrates a point which is much
more easily explored through active immersion in the question. Any
end we consider may be taken further, because our experience is not
so finite as the end we think we are seeking. Why are we seeking that
end, what is its more ultimate expression? We have to deeply know
ourselves, and deeply know our work in order to explore further and
truly understand.
Once we
understand, it can open us up to a different sort of power and a
different sort of development. One where through understanding
ourselves and our relationship to magic more deeply we can hone in on
how we're using it, and why, and what we're learning. One where we
stop hampering ourselves through the falsity, or at least incomplete
nature, of our assumptions.
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