A
few years ago I saw an info graphic displaying brain scans which were
intended to demonstrate the similarity between the brain's response
to opium and the brain's response to orgasm. It was pretty cool and
made a lot of sense on multiple levels. It was an easy way to
describe several experiences and behaviors that crop up with people.
But it wasn't something that seemed to have particular relevance in
regards to magic. Until a few days ago.
I'm
not a chemist or a biologist so I'm going to quote from a few
websites to establish more about the connection between the two. Then
I'll explain the magical relevance and give some quotes for that,
followed by an explanation of the recent experience which caused this
relationship between opium experiences and faery experiences to pop
up in my head.
Significant
more for character than for science:
“Another
user, the English gentleman quoted in Jim Hogshire's Opium for the
Masses (1994), enthused that opium felt akin to a gentle and constant
orgasm.” - opiates.net
I
think this quote generally implies the driving elements of what I
want to get at with this. Euphoria occurs as part of sexual
experience, as part of orgasm, because of the brain's release of
various neurochemicals including endorphins and dopamine. Both
opiates and orgasm can create an experience of detachment, like
floating along a rolling sea of clouds, experience is elevated and
extended but in a way in which the pain and attachment of stress and
discomfort are temporarily mitigated. Curiously opiates impact how
our lungs work, they can make our breathing more relaxed, or they can
make it more shallow...less control over our breath in regular
circumstances would usually create stress of fear, but again opiate
experiences are characterized by an awareness which reduces that
stress and fear.
So
they feel kind of the same, but that might not make for a meaningful
link...so...the science of their sameness..
“the
human brain's neurons had specific receptor sites for opiate drugs:
opium, heroin, codeine and morphine. But then there was the obvious
question. Why would nature put in our brains a receptor for a plant?
After all, humans beings didn't evolve over millions of years eating
opium or shooting heroin.
...the active ingredient in all these opiates - morphine - had a chemical structure similar to endorphins, a class of chemicals present in the brain. Endorphins are feel-good chemicals naturally-manufactured in the brain when the body experiences pain or stress. They are called the natural opiates of the body.
...The rush is often described as a heightened sexual orgasm, and a great relief of tension, which pervades the abdomen. After the rush, the high lasts for four or five hours and is caused by the morphine diffusing from the bloodstream into the brain. It is described as a warm, drowsy, cozy state. Addicts report a profound sense of satisfaction, as though all needs were fulfilled. ” - Frontline, PBS
...the active ingredient in all these opiates - morphine - had a chemical structure similar to endorphins, a class of chemicals present in the brain. Endorphins are feel-good chemicals naturally-manufactured in the brain when the body experiences pain or stress. They are called the natural opiates of the body.
...The rush is often described as a heightened sexual orgasm, and a great relief of tension, which pervades the abdomen. After the rush, the high lasts for four or five hours and is caused by the morphine diffusing from the bloodstream into the brain. It is described as a warm, drowsy, cozy state. Addicts report a profound sense of satisfaction, as though all needs were fulfilled. ” - Frontline, PBS
“One
well-known opiate commonly used today for the treatment of severe
pain, is morphine (after Morpheus the Greek god of dreams).
Distributed
throughout the nervous system, the opioid receptors, OP1-OP4, are
involved in all of the calming effects we might expect, such as pain
relief and reduction in anxiety - but are taken to extremes by
illegal drugs, such as heroin. The natural partners to the opioid
receptors are the endorphins, released during certain activities,
such as running (thought responsible for the 'runner's high'), pain
and orgasm.” - Drugs and The Brain
The
second quote even hints at the magical associations of opium. The use
of opium can be traced back to 4000 BCE in Sumeria and in what is now
Switzerland, some suggest it might go further back to the
Neanderthals. It was prevalent throughout the classical world in
Greece, the Near East, India, and Asia. It was almost always
considered not simply medicinal but holy or magical, a gift from or a
symbol of the Gods. The gods of sleep in Greece were shown with
poppies in depictions, and Pharaohs were entombed with artifacts of
opium use. It was significant in the ancient world as medicine and as
a magical substance, as is evidenced by its names:
“Physicians
commonly believed that the poppy plant was of divine origin; opium
was variously called the Sacred Anchor Of Life, Milk Of Paradise, the
Hand Of God, and Destroyer Of Grief.” - opiates.net
There
are lots of drugs which help with pain, or which create altered
experiences, and many of them have been associated with magic and
with religious experience, but opium has a pervasiveness beyond many.
Further it has had a strange position in history. While some
intoxicants were made illegal in Islam, opium notably was not and
remained popular in Arab countries. China made opium illegal and so
the British Empire went to war, twice, to make sure they could still
get it. Globally international legal provisions against opium have
been made, but it is still prevalent in medicine internationally.
According to Christian Rastch, who makes reference to opium several
times in the book Witchcraft Medicine,
it was the only reliable narcotic in the ancient world.
Ratsch
also notes that the opium poppy is amongst the candidates for plants
which may have been moly, the mythological plant referenced by the
gods as the greatest. He links the plant to Demeter, the goddess at
the center of the Mysteries of Eleusis. He includes it as a
traditional common element in witches' flying ointments. This last
association is probably the most interesting for our purposes.
Flying
ointments don't actually make witches fly, they create a state in
which the witch is altered both in terms of awareness and in terms of
physical condition. The exposure to poisons, things which adjust how
the witch breathes, and which create stimulation and a shift in
awareness, put the witch in a state where the body no longer impedes
awareness of the magical forces and spirits with which the witch
comes into contact, or allows the body to relinquish the spirit
temporarily for a spirit flight. Much of the lore of opium describes
these same sort of elements, The strange parallel of something which
detaches and relaxes but which also leaves the ability for mental
clarity despite sensations being adjusted.
Some
people historically have even linked opiates to mild visionary
experiences.
“While
I was sitting at tea, I felt a strange sensation, totally unlike any
thing I had ever felt before; a gradual creeping thrill, which in a
few minutes occupied every part of my body, lulling to sleep the
before-mentioned racking pain, producing a pleasing glow from head to
foot, and inducing a sensation of dreamy exhilaration (if the phrase
be intelligible to others as it is to me) similar in nature but not
in degree to the drowsiness caused by wine, though not inclining me
to sleep; in fact far from it, that I longed to engage in some active
exercise; to sing, dance, or leap...so vividly did I feel my vitality
- for in this state of delicious exhilaration even mere excitement
seemed absolute elysium - that I could not resist the tendency to
break out in the strangest vagaries, until my companions thought me
deranged...After I had been seated [at the play I was attending] a
few minutes, the nature of the excitement changed, and a 'waking
sleep' succeeded. The actors on the stage vanished; the stage itself
lost its reality; and before my entranced sight magnificent halls
stretched out in endless succession with galley above gallery, while
the roof was blazing with gems, like stars whose rays alone illumined
the whole building, which was tinged with strange, gigantic figures,
like the wild possessors of lost globe...I will not attempt farther
to describe the magnificent vision which a little pill of 'brown gum'
had conjured up from the realm of ideal being. No words that I can
command would do justice to its Titanian splendour and immensity...”
- William Blair 1842 (opiates.net)
This
kind of visionary experience, the use of opium in flying ointments,
these things connect us back to magic and to the faery folk. The
witches' sabbat is based largely in the experience of ecstasy. The
body writhes in pleasure at the touch of the Black Man of the Forest
and the spirits he brings. Freedom from the stresses of common life
is experienced. The witch is elevated while brought into a visionary
state amid spirits.
In
the explanations given by witch hunters the witch slept with the
devil and his demons but even in those accounts the witches were also
said to enter the faery world to dine with the Queen of the Faeries.
At times she featured as the contact from whom witches derive their
powers. Faeries familiars were also tied to the learning and
experience of witchcraft. Even the demons given by the Devil sound
more like faeries than like demons. Whether they were faeries or
demons though there was a clear sexual component involved in this
interaction.
According
to Walter Stephens in his book Demon Lovers
the Devil would first encounter potential witches when they were
alone and discouraged and therefore susceptible to being seduced.
Sexual congress with the devil and with demons was often believed to
be the source of a witch's power. Curses and malefica were performed
by way of the demon who was the witch's lover. When the witch flew to
the Sabbat or from the Sabbat through the night across long distances
the witch was being carried by a demon. The Church theories on the
witch couldn't give them such an amazing power and so the power had
to be facilitated by demons who were paid in sex.
Some
have suggested that this fixation on sex with demons was a form of
misogyny, but it occurs in all the accounts of male witches as well.
Some have suggested it was another way to simply accuse witches of
perversion and debase the idea of sex. But what if the sex was
actually a part of the magic?
We
have many accounts in faery tales of faeries who seek human spouses
or lovers. Sometimes it's an ongoing arrangement, others it is a more
sinister and deadly encounter, but in either case, we frequently see
faeries desiring sex with humans. We also know faeries have a history
of desiring to kidnap human women and to have children with humans,
or to kidnap human children and raise them as faeries.
When
we look at medieval magic we see accounts of magic specifically
designed to have sex with faeries. Regarding this as a trend
Fredericka Bain in her presentation of the “Four Spells to Bind the
Faery Sisters” which appeared in Preternature says: “It is well
understood that the traditions
out
of which early modern fairy lore arises are complex: sexual binding
or forced sexual congress in particular, of or by fairies or demons,
is referenced in romances, ballads, and witchcraft trials, as well as
throughout medieval demonology.”
Even
the power of transvection, by which witches fly by the aid of demons,
is something we see in demonologies, either spells in which demons
convey someone across distances or grant instant travel, or even
obtaining faery horses that allow the magician to fly on them from
place to place or travel long distances. Some accounts of witches
include them attributing their power to curse to elf shot, or arrows
given to them by the faeries when they feast with them.
So
the powers given by demons, the sex with spirits, both are things we
see associated with faeries in sources on magic. Along with these
when we look at tales of the faeries we see feasting, dancing, and
music. We see fantastical creatures and magical places. The faeries
exist in a magical other space which is like our own but somehow
different.
Even
in modern depictions of the faery world we see this same sort of
imagery. Surreal magical landscapes like our own but slightly
stranger, heightened colors, things just beyond the ordinary enough
to draw us in to their glamor. A mild hallucination that could be
real or maybe not. A place which creates euphoria to draw people in
and allow them to forget whatever else was there before they were
brought there. Most recently the faery world has been depicted in
this manner in popular media in Jonathan Strange and Mr
Norrell in which the kingdom
of Lost Hope is an on going ball, similar to one in a human castle
but with various slightly bizarre elements and in which the object of
the faery's affection is caused to forget the human world. We also
see faeries in The Mortal Instruments
depicted in the television adaptation Shadow Hunters
in which faeries can't lie but they can manipulate the truth to
entrap people, and they have a separate world whose glamor can trap
people by keeping them lost, and in which one could believe they are
in the natural world, but only made more magical, surreal, and
brilliant.
This
is in part where the connection to opium comes in. To me, the ability
to create a feeling that is related to orgasm, and to take away
worldly cares, to numb pain, to give us an otherworldly euphoria,
these are traits which seem to be shared both by opiates and by
faeries. It's a similarity I probably wouldn't have connected if it
hadn't been for an experience that happened a few nights ago.
I
had received a couple signs that suggested I needed to connect with
some spirits on their turf rather than ritually doing so here. When I
was younger magic that involved spirit flight was a big part of what
I did, but I'm not generally as keen on it anymore. In this instance
I also didn't have the time to fully invest into that kind of work.
So I figured it was best to approach it as dream work. To that end I
called upon a faery and asked that he take me in my dreams where I
needed to go. I was fairly clear that I did not want to do
trance-work, I just wanted to hitch a ride in my dreams.
The
faery arrived, and as sometimes happens when you work with spirits,
the magic did not go as planned.
I
told him what I wanted, and he responded "your body still needs
to be ready if your spirit is going to leave" and he reached out
towards me and I felt euphoria, then my breathing dropped very low, I
felt like I was floating as if rocking on a soft wave. As I was
drifting away from normal awareness I thought "this feels like
the euphoria opiates cause." As my breathing became more and
more shallow, and my body heavier and heavier until I no longer felt
most of it I realized he had put me into a super heavy meditation in
like a matter of seconds. It was impressive. I had not really done
trance-work for awhile so it was no longer a feeling I felt often so
it was pretty curious. I continued my protest that this wasn't what
I'd wanted but he insisted that it was necessary and that I should
just go with him. He explained that if I wanted an experience that
wasn't just within my mental space my body needed to be pushed to a
point where it could let go of me. It felt really wonderful, and I
had a flash of shimmering visionary experiences showing the way from
myself to a wholly other place. Unfortunately I didn't get where I
was going...partially because he took me by surprise.
So
in the end, I had a cool experience for like a half hour. More than
that I had an interesting conceptual connection. Was there a reason
that a faery's touch should feel like taking opiates? In stories of
faery and human interactions one of the most common elements is
humans being “faery led.” This capability to force a trance state
filled with euphoria and visionary awareness would explain some of
the experience of being faery led. It would also explain some of the
sexual elements of faery encounters. The author of the Four Spells to
Bind the Faery Sisters describes the faery with whom he sleeps as
having beauty to rival a queen or empress and implies that she has
immense sexual prowess. Faeries often are described as being ugly and
stealing human babies and seeking human lovers because humans are
more beautiful. These could simply be conflicting elements of stories
or they could be different types of faeries. Alternatively it could
be part of their magic, the glamor of faeries could be the same
potency which lets them manipulate the minds, bodies, and sensory
experiences of humans. Perhaps the beauty and sexual prowess of the
faery lover is driven by the euphoric otherworldly awareness created
by her touch.
Magic
occurs outside of our minds, but we still experience it through the
lens of our mental faculties, just as is true of all other phenomena.
I am not one for explaining magic through science or trying to make
magic scientific. I don't believe faeries secrete some kind of other
worldly spirit opium. I don't think we need this sort of mechanism
for trying to create a way of viewing faery interactions
scientifically. Magic is magic it isn't science, it doesn't need to
be science. But recognizing that faeries may have the ability to
impact our sensory experience, regardless of the mechanism, gives us
insight to their powers and how we can interact with them. It lets us
consider folklore and how we engage it. To me its a jumping off point
as to how and why some things may relate and how some things may have
been real that we thought weren't.
If
you enjoyed this exploration of sex, drugs, and faeries...please
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