Tag Archive for 'chaos'

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The Spear and the Serpent: Symbols, Reality, and Survival

“People in distress will sometimes prefer a problem that is familiar to a solution that is not.” – Neil Postman

I was in the woods. The light from the campfire glowed in the corner of my vision – a distant beacon in the late afternoon light filtering down to the forest floor.

Earlier that day we had set up camp, and with an axe I had sharpened the tip of dead sapling. It was a straight piece of maple, and it was my companion.

I walked, listening. Taking in the sounds, breathing in the smells, seeing the chaos and the patterns of leaves and trunks. My footsteps rustling in the leaves coating the forest floor. All the trees and green leaves swaying in the breeze. Rocks beneath my feet. Roots rising up from the ground. The world was full of perceptions, all coming at once.

I had shed my reality filter. I had lost the symbols, and I was gliding through the forest, spear in hand, ready for the hunt.

There in the woods, I felt a freedom I could not feel in a city or a town or a suburb. It was a freedom from symbols.

Think about yourself: everyday, from the moment you wake, you are bombarded with symbols; The label on your toothpaste. The sound of your alarm clock; The time readout on your cell phone; Your shampoo; The hot and cold handles of the sink and shower; Your steering wheel; The gas pedal and the brake; Your license plate; Emergency sirens; Blue and red lights; The name of your street; The contents of your wallet; A dollar bill; Law; Your keyboard; The Internet; Television. Right; Wrong; Left; Goodness and Evil; Reading Writing Talking Mathematics Photographs Newspapers Magazines Blogs Poetry Literature Music Pictures A Kiss. A Name. A Word.

In the forest, the symbols were gone. I was facing an unfiltered reality. There were no words to describe it. The words were gone. Everything flowed together. The trees were watching over me. The wind and the fire and the trees were in harmony. It was peaceful without being at peace. There was no such thing as peace. There was only the moment. When I was in the woods, I was free from the symbols that define the everyday of civilization and reality.

“[…]imagine an infant lying in its cradle, and the window is open, and into the room comes something, marvelous, mysterious, glittering, shedding light of many colors, movement, sound, a transformative hierophany of integrated perception and the child is enthralled and then the mother comes into the room and she says to the child, “that’s a bird, baby, that’s a bird,” instantly the complex wave of the angel peacock iridescent transformative mystery is collapsed, into the word. All mystery is gone, the child learns this is a bird, this is a bird, and by the time we’re five or six years old all the mystery of reality has been carefully tiled over with words. This is a bird, this is a house, this is the sky, and we seal ourselves in within a linguistic shell of disempowered perception […]” (Terence McKenna, Ordinary Language, Visible Language, & Virtual Reality)

“[…]As the Firesign Theater used to say, ‘Everything you know is wrong.’ But that is a very liberating understanding, because if everything you know is wrong, then all the problems you thought were insoluble can be framed differently. And there’s a way to take the world apart and put it back unrecognizably. […]” – (Terence McKenna, Interview with Carla Sinclair)

I feel that we have an imperative to assess our symbols and reframe our picture of reality. With all the problems we are facing that are both global in scale and mounting severity, we must begin to see solutions to problems differently, and the will to act on those solutions

Reality requires nothing less than a cultural shift on a fundamental level. A redefining of symbols and reclamation of language so that individuals can solve problems on an individual, bottom-up basis. Right now we lack a foundation, and the disparity between those in power and those who lack power is a dangerous mixture to combine with a global recession and a trend of centralizing authorities.

We do not need familiar solutions to problems. These have proven themselves ineffective. Bailouts, social reengineering, and top-down command and control structures are no longer effective tools, and one can make a case that they never were.

Our survival depends on our ability to sensewisdom out of our limited knowledge and perspectives. It’s time to break free of the old ways and embrace the serpent. We need to take another bite from the apple.

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Laozi must have been tripping

Webster’s Dictionary defines hardcore as:

1: a central or fundamental and usu. enduring group or part: as a: a relatively small enduring core of society marked by apparent resistance to change or inability to escape a persistent wretched condition (as poverty or chronic unemployment) b: a militant or fiercely loyal faction.

Dynamic, on the other hand, is defined as:

2 a: marked by usually continuous and productive activity or change

So what do we make of this seeming contradiction?  At once, “hardcore dynamic” suggests both a state of unswerving dedication that resists all change, while dynamic suggests a state of constant change.  In fact, there is no contradiction here at all.  Change is the only constant in the universe.  Hardcore Dynamic represents an unswerving uncompromising dedication to living with change, leveraging change, and being an agent of change.  No, this is not some Barack Obama hyperbole – but its no coincidence that “change we can believe in” has become a marketing slogan for a presidential candidate who really did beat many odds.  Change is the power of chaos inherent in the universe.  It is a power that can be futile resisted, or it can be embraced and utilized.  This unswerving dedication to change is actually the power of chaos magick.

Grimorium Verum - The Magic Place

Magickal power is found in the seeming contradiction between loyal, unswerving dedication and continuous change.  The power in “contradiction” comes from manifesting The Tao – uniting the duality inherent in the universe, a duality that exists in everything and is free of judgment.  In the same way there must be balance in all parts of nature, from good and evil, man and woman, light and dark, there is a balance between hardcore and dynamic.  Two powerful means that when united are capable of transforming the world.

Spiritual people are often caught up in a “search for truth.”  But in reality, the lie is just as important, if not more so.  The lie, the illusion, the deception – these have been tools all too often used for evil, but they can be used for good as well.  Lies are a powerful agent for personal change.  What is hope in the face of seemingly insurmountable odds but a calculated self deception?  What is an entertaining magic trick but a deception of the senses?  What is faith in that which we have never experienced or personally known but an illusion?

O Noble Fool! A Worthy Fool!Finding balance between two poles through unity is the basis of what is currently known as magick and it is really a way to break out of social programming, to overcome the mold we have been cast in and to achieve what we want.  We value this balance, but often set these “positive” activities apart from what they truly are – contemplating and wrestling with the polar opposite of what we label as “good” in the world.  My commitment to the left hand path (and perhaps to libertarian politics) recently caused an intimate friend to call me a “darkworker” – she, of course, was fully in the “light” as she cast judgment upon me.  In reality, we are both on the same spiritual path – which is why we found each other.  We simply have different socio-political and aesthetic sensibilities.  The spiritual path I speak of is to unite the poles within our souls and without in the universe, to embrace the world and commit to the present, despite the light and the dark, the good and the bad, the change and the stasis – to transform ourselves and ultimately transform the world.

The magick tradition has techniques that allow one to do this.  Magick, especially chaos magick, is not really an occult art but a set of methods for profound personal change through the use of symbols.  Interestingly enough, we see magick fused with chaos.  Crowley defined magick as causing “change to occur in conformity of the will,” or to put it simply to control ones personal reality – and this magick is set against chaos, by definition a force over which we have no control.

The Forsaken (1600x1200)Returning to the truth vs. illusion metaphor, in many chaos magick rituals, the practitioner creates an illusion of change in the mind, and then represents this illusion in a symbol, or sigil, therefore forcing the illusion out of the mind by creating a tangible  symbol for it.  Thus the intangible becomes the tangible, and ultimately the conscious illusion turned unconscious symbol ultimately manifests as reality.  Is it not alchemy?  To turn iron to gold was simply another metaphor for the profound effects of merging  opposites to manifest the Tao.  Illusions and darkness seem to be everywhere these days, but it is up to us to leverage these powers, to merge our conscious and unconscious, illusions and truth, chaos and control – to create The Tao.  This is the Hardcore Dynamic.

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