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Post by swampiewolfess on Jan 22, 2008 18:25:24 GMT -5
The Chaos Files
by Joseph Max jm555 (at) necronomi.com
I have decided to publish my (as yet unedited) manuscripts on the World Wide Web. They are copyrighted and I retain all rights to my intellectual property, but I grant free license for electronic only reproduction on the Internet.
Some of the following chapters are finished works, others are in various stages of development. I apologise for the occasional gaps or dangling endings.
I actively seek feedback from readers, so please feel free to send critiques to the address below.
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Preface
Forewar(ne)d
What is Chaos Magic?
How Does Magic Work?
A Brief History of Magic
How To Begin
The Basics of Chaos Magic Practice
Sigil Magic
Chaos Magic Ritual
Servitors - Work in progess...
Sexual Magic
Combat Magic
Divination
Group Magic
Coming Out
Dangers
The Game
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Post by swampiewolfess on Jan 22, 2008 18:26:40 GMT -5
Preface
The current is changing. Again.
Magic is no longer the exclusive province of grey-beard occultists, tree hugging crystal mongers and blue-haired old lady fortune-tellers.
Once again the world is seeing a magical "revival". In fact, this time it's a revival within a revival. Ever since the 1960's, the magical world-view has been rising in popularity, although most of this current was siezed upon by the New Age bunny-foo-foo-white-light-feel-goodys, and we get to squirm at the spectacle of yuppies with more money than sense dropping thousands of bucks to participate in seminars teaching cheap tricks like fire-pit walking and spending simililar amounts on "crystal healing vibration generators" consisting of a cheap plastic box, six square inches of velvet polyester and a rock.
On the other end of the spectrum, we have the grand exalted pooh-bahs belonging to "mystical Orders" with pretentious names like The Ancient and Accepted Brotherhood of Magickal Adeptus Majors . Occasional variants include the Tai Chi Masters of the Secret Hidden Tanrta or the Followers of the Great Magus What's-His-Nameus . These types will be notable for their ability to rattle off long lists of enlightned authors of sacred tomes, usually only acceptable if their sources are (supposedly) over one thousand years old, are unpublished outside their "circle", and/or are written in Latin, Mandarin or Sanskrit. If you really think it's your true purpose in life to spend a couple of decades practicing your "kerazzas" or "middle pillar" exercises under the tutalage of some old guy with a stick who must be addressed as "master" and then only with your head on the floor and your butt in the air, then please drop this book now and go find them. You'll be happier, trust me.
Be aware that due to the pressure of political correctness these days, only the occasional "avatar" of the Sacred Seunzikiko Whoopie will be so boorish as to insist that theirs is the "only" way to enlightenment/power/nirvana/cosmic truth. With a condscending smile they will inform you that, yes, there are many paths to the "truth", but theirs however is the only one that any person with sense/strength/seriousness/dedication/the right stuff/in their right mind could possibly choose unless they were a total idiot. And since you're not on their path, this means you, you upstart little Chaos Mage.
This by no means implies that old-school occultists are all like that. I have many friends in such organizations and they are very pleasent companions; they appreciate the rush of fresh air that Chaos Magic has brought to the occult world - it keeps them from taking themselves too seriously.
However, there are some people who are taking up the study of magic with a clear head, and trying to integrate the theories of modern science into a magical paradigm that can function without the need of being sanctioned by a "higher power"; to take the advancements of philosophy and apply them to something other than sarcasm and cosmic one-ups-manship. Religion has held the rights to mystical experience for far too long; it's time for a new way of thought that transcends transcendentalism.
Nor is it the first time this has happened in the long history of the mystical arts. The priests of Horus overthrew the followers of Set in ancient Egypt. A millenium later Moses out-magicked the heirs of that priesthood to set his people free. And their entrenched hierarchy was in turn overthrown a millenium later by a precocious young carpenter and magician extraordinare from the small town of Bethlehem.
And so it goes.
It seems like spiritual revolutions are a requirement of history. Only now they come, like everything else, fast and furious. The unpretentious carpenter's pretentious heirs did their level best to stamp out all competition, but along the time that we now call the Rennesience came another revolution in mysticism. However, getting there was not much fun, as many, many thousands of people were put to death in Europe alone for worshipping the wrong god.
In the 19th century some people tried to unearth the old occult knowledge, and succeeded to some degree; the period saw the emergence of the Rosicrucians (whose desendants still run those cute ads in the backs of comic books) and a particularly successful offshoot called the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. One of their notable alumni was an eccentric Englishman from a well-to-do family named Alexander (aka Aleister) Edward Crowley. He was considered quite the wet-behind-the-ears radical in his time. He got called "The Wickedest Man Alive" by the English press and spent most of his life trying to live up to the label. He produced what might have been the forerunner of modern "performance art" as well: a series of magical ceremonies conducted for a paying audience in London. The fact that many of the scenes featured nudity was probably what annoyed the Victorians so much.
Then he really annoyed the occult establishment by publishing a lot of the Golden Dawn's and other "secret" occult societies "secrets" for consumption by the general public, and proclaimed himself the "Magus of the New Aeon".
He's had a lot of company since then.
New Aeons and Magi to accompany them come, as I said, fast and furious these days. The life expectancy of a Magical Aeon is about five years as of this writing. Why is it all coming to a head now?
We are lucky (or unlucky) enough to be incarnate at the dawn of a new millenium. If one happens to have a propensity for dabbling in the occult arts, then the lesson of history should be heeded. The last time a millenium change rolled around, most of Europe was caught up in a raging case of "Millenium Fever". The appearence of the Black Death did nothing to assuage the creeping feeling that the world was coming to an end. Doomsayers filled every public square. People cast off their worldly goods in a frenzy, scourged themselves bloody, went off on impossible pilgramages of hundreds of miles on foot and generally went stark raving mad, all because a particular calendar date loomed in the near future. It didn't matter that the date itself was completely arbitrary - in fact, as near as modern historians can figure, the carpenter-magician's year of birth was probably what we would call 4 BC, so one thousand years hence would have been 996 AD!
As we well know, both that date and 1000 AD came and went and the Second Coming didn't come. So Chrisendom celebrated their reprieve by throwing the Dark Ages and spent the next couple of hundred years roasting alive a few million heretics. Those people sure knew how to party.
Now the town squares are filling with raving doomsayers once again, and mass graveyards are filling with the bodies of the poor saps who didn't have enough sense to just say no to the kool-aid. The strange thing about "End Of The World" cults is that when the end of the world is, as usual, a no-show, the followers don't do the sensible thing and rip the arms and legs off of the leaders that deceived them. No, instead the leaders manage to transfer the blame for their lack of divinitory talent onto those who didn't believe them in the first place and their sheep, being sheep, go along with it! It happened one thousand years ago ("...it was those filthy heretical Moslems who controlled Jeruselem and made it an unfit place for Christ to return to - yeah, that's it...") and believe me, my magical brothers and sisters, it's likely to happen again!
And the stakes are even higher this time around. The Cold War may be "over", but there's still more than enough megatonnage scattered around to turn the planet into a radioactive slag heap. And sooner or later, some group of religious fanatics is going to get their hands on a nuclear device and decide to do little cleansing of the heretics somewhere. It's bound to happen.
What's a magician to do?
Even among the occult cognesetti, a whole lot of time and energy is wasted lambasting each other, either as groups or individuals, that would be better spent doing just about anything else. There are easily dozens of magical "systems" and most of them have the same nasty habit as the religionists: thinking that theirs is The One And Only True Way .
The Chaos Magicians are here to announce: there is no One And Only True Way . All systems are equally right, and all of them are equally wrong. The evidence is clear, if one bothers to take off the blinders and look at it.
First one must assume that magic exists in the first place. All systems of magic throughout history have proceeded from this basic assumption. Remember that the scientific method itself must always proceed from basic assumptions before it goes about testing them. The logical error that has invariably crept into magical thinking is that when a certain system's techniques yield positive results, it is some sort of proof that said techniques are the only ones that yield positive results. It's like saying that because one catches a fish with one kind of bait, then that is the only kind of bait that can catch a fish!
So we end up with dozens of magical systems, each one claiming, due to their limited successes, that theirs is the The One And Only True Way of magic.
The challange of the current generation of mages is to jolt the putrifying corpse of the occult back to life and then drag it kicking and screaming into the 21st century. The subject of this book is the answer to that challange:
Chaos Magic.
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Post by swampiewolfess on Jan 22, 2008 18:28:36 GMT -5
Forwar(ne)d
I'd like to make a few things clear from the start: the various magical techniques discussed here and the examples given are not to be taken as comprising some kind of unalterable system. I think that was a mistake on the part of virtually all mystico-magical systems that came before the time of the present "Chaos current", and I wish to avoid that mistake. Anyone who finds themselves adhering slavishly to the methods and examples given here for any appreciable length of time is missing the point entirely. Chaos Magic can only be "learned" by experiencing it by whatever means available.
Chaos Magic as presented in this book is the ultimate "secret" magical system, because you are expected to devise your own personal system that truly cannot be known in it's entirety to anyone else but yourself. Those who consider themselves bad poets or inept scriptwriters are at least expected to be able to collage together workings from other sources and add their own personal touches.
This book is not written in a "linear" style. Each chapter is a self-contained essay on a particular facet of this very multi-faceted subject. The chapters can be read in any order, which I think is appropo for the subject.
These essays describe Chaos Magic as I have experienced it, and others who might call themselves Chaotes will likely disagree with some or all of what I present. I certainly hope so. We're as bad as the practioners of any other Art. That is the final paradox of Chaos Magic - it cannot be accurately described beyond a personal expression of Art. It is what it does, not what it says it does. This is the prevailing attitude, and I think it shows a healthy skepticism, which is the surest protection against the Arch Demon DOGMA. This does, however, account for the dearth of writings on the subject. All I can hope to do is transmit some basic knowledge to give you a jump-start to developing your own path.
So you will not find any "secret, unrevealed techniques of the ancient adepts" here -- the real adepts had their own techniques, and they likely wouldn't work as well for you anyway. The essence of magic is non-verbal and personally unique. The key is the imagination, and the doors are the altered states of consciousness. You can burn all the candles and chant all the incantations you want, but if your mind isn't transported to another place in the process, it isn't going to amount to much.
There are myriad ways to alter one's conscious perceptions in different directions, and part of the journey is learning how your consciousness functions and how to alter it in accordance with your magical intention. It's not like any old high will do for any given purpose. But there is generally more than one method suitable for a particular purpose, at least one of which is attainable by a dedicated practitioner. This also goes hand in hand with the ultimate goal of developing one's own style.
Drugs are totally unnecessary, although I know many Magicians who use drugs magically with great effect and cause neither themselves nor anyone else any harm. Neither is sex required, though it is a powerful way to alter one's state of mind (and definitely the most enjoyable!) and has great magical potential. Many of the "ultimate secrets" of occult orders involve the use of sexual energy for magical purposes, which goes along way toward explaining these groups fanatical secrecy requirements during their heyday in the Victorian Age.
Meditation is a powerful and useful practice, and mastering some form of it is a basic requirement to get anywhere with magical work. There are easily dozens of "schools" of meditation, and each one has something to offer to the Magician. The goal is to become proficient at a form of psychic quiessence, to aid one in attaining gnostic trance via mental inhibition. So it doesn't matter what form of meditation you decide to practice - choose one that fits your personal preference. A simple system of meditation will be detailed later, and the reading list at the end of the book suggests a few easily obtainable books that can get you started if you wish to teach yourself. Alternatively, there are many teachers and classes available to the public that can be used. Don't worry about whatever philosophical teachings that they may wish to "educate" you with in the course of learning their meditation system, for these can be easily discarded once the actual techniques are mastered. (Probably the least dogmatic of the popularly available styles is the Sylva Mind Control System.)
The advantage of mastering a meditation technique is that once it is learned, it is always available for use and requires little in the way of paraphenalia. Quite often simply being able to but oneself into a moderately deep trance state for a few moments is more than enough to provide the requiste gnostic trance to empower a magical working. The section on meditation in this book will provide you with a simple system to use that many people find very effective, and requires no great effort other than the determination to keep at it until you fet the hang of it. But if you have already invested time and effort in learning to chant "Om" until your third-eye chakra opens then by all means don't abandon it in favor of the system presented here.
Neither will you need to spend time, effort and money in gathering a collection of "magical tools", unless you happen to like working with such things. I do myself, so there is a chapter devoted to methods of devising magical tools. But I know many powerful magicians who can work bare-handed to tremendous effect. A few simple objects are recommended to use as focusing points, at least in the beginning of your work; and you will need some common everyday things like pen and paper. Beyond that, investing in fancy robes, crystal balls, magic wands and formidble looking swords is totally up to your personal taste. You won't be sent out at the first full moon of summer to locate a yew tree and remove the highest branch with a single stroke after depositing a drop of your own blood on it's roots.
Finally, I'll say right up front that this path isn't for everyone. This book is not an attempt to proselytise. As a rule, practicing Chaotes tend to be a rather elitist crowd in the first place, and the urge to "convert" others is probably much less present than even most neo-pagans and other magical types. If you aren't driven by your own Free Will you're not going to get very far anyway.
All you need is a personal commitment to learn to live in a magical reality.
In Chaos, Joseph Max 1998 CE Berkeley, California
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Copyright ©1998, 1999 by Joseph Max. All rights reserved.
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