Chaos: Word of The Day: Chaos-Undefinable But Describable
Chaos: Word of The Day: Chaos-Undefinable But Describable
Chaos: Word of The Day: Chaos-Undefinable But Describable
The Chaos Magic movement had its first stirrings in the late nineteen
seventies, in England. While the new phenomena of punk rock was grabbing
the newspaper headlines, and scientists across the world were beginning to
delve into the mysterious mathematical world of fractals and non-linear
dynamics, a new approach to magical practice was being synthesized in the
wilds of West Yorkshire. At the time, English occultism was very much
dominated by the three strands of popular Witchcraft, Western Qabalah, and
Thelema. At least, there were enough people interested in these approaches
to spawn supporting magazines. In one such magazine, The New Equinox,
there appeared the early writings of Peter J. Carroll, who is considered the
foremost exponent of modern Chaos Magic. By 1978, there appeared the first
advertisements for the "Illuminates of Thanateros", an order whose practices
were composed of a blend of shamanism, Taoism, Tantra and Thelema. The
announcement of this new order was shortly followed by the first edition of
Peter Carroll's Liber Null, which while describing the basic philosophy and
practical approaches, did not contain the term 'Chaos Magic'. Liber Null was
closely followed by The Book of Results by Ray Sherwin, which lucidly
explained Austin Osman Spare's great magical innovation—sigil magic.
Austin Osman Spare is considered by many to be the "grandfather" of Chaos
Magic.
2. Ways to examine your life to look for, understand and modify behavior,
emotional and thought patterns which hinder learning and growth.
4. A widening of your perception of just what is possible, once you set heart
and mind on it.
Magic can do all this, and more. It is an approach to life which begins at the
most basic premises—what do I need to survive?—how do I want to live?—
who do I want to be?—and then gives a set of conceptual weapons and
techniques for achieving those aims
Core Principles of Chaos Magic- Condensed Chaos by Phil Hine
3. Technical Excellence.
- One of the early misconceptions about Chaos Magic was that it gave
practitioners carte blanche to do whatever they liked, and so become
sloppy (or worse, soggy) in their attitudes to self-assessment, analysis,
etc. Not so. The Chaos approach has always advocated rigorous self-
assessment and analysis, emphasising practice at what techniques
you're experimenting with until you get the results that you desire.
Learning to 'do' magic requires that you develop a set of skills and
abilities and if you're going to get involved in all this weird stuff, why
not do it to the best of your ability.
4. Deconditioning.
- The Chaos paradigm proposes that one of the primary tasks of the
aspiring magician is to thoroughly decondition herself from the mesh
of beliefs, attitudes and fictions about self, society, and the world. Our
ego is a fiction of stable self-hood which maintains itself by
perpetuating the distinctions of 'what I am/what I am not, what I
like/what I don't like', beliefs about one's politics, religion, gender
preference, degree of free will, race, subculture etc. all help maintain a
stable sense of self, while the little ways in which we pull against this
very stability allows us to feel as though we are unique individuals.
Using deconditioning exercises, we can start to widen the cracks in our
consensual reality which hopefully, enables us to become less attached
to our beliefs and ego fictions, and thus able to discard or modify them
when appropriate
5. Diverse Approaches.
- As mentioned earlier, 'traditional' approaches to magic involve
choosing one particular system and sticking to it. The Chaos
perspective, if nothing else, encourages an eclectic approach to
development, and Chaos Magicians are free to choose from any
available magical system, themes from literature, television, religions,
cults, parapsychology, etc. This approach means that if you approach
two Chaos Magicians and ask 'em what they're doing at any one
moment, you're rarely likely to find much of a consensus of approach.
This makes Chaos difficult to pin down as one thing or another, which
again tends to worry those who need approaches to magic to be neatly
labeled and clear.
6. Gnosis.
● One of the keys to magical ability is the ability to enter Altered States of
Consciousness at will. We tend to draw a distinct line between 'ordinary
consciousness' and 'altered states', where in fact we move between
different states of consciousness—such as daydreams, 'autopilot'
(where we carry out actions without cognition) and varying degrees of
attention, all the time. However, as far as magic is concerned, the willed
entry into intense altered states can be divided into two poles of
'Physiological Gnosis'—Inhibitory states, and Excitatory states. The
former includes physically 'passive' techniques such as meditation,
yoga, scrying, contemplation and sensory deprivation while the latter
includes chanting, drumming, dance, emotional and sexual arousal.
● Many yearn for this state, feeding the ego with feelings of superiority
and the wish that others may see them as 'wise'. What is less often
stated is that the adept magician, who feels his separateness all too
keenly, is more likely to mourn the loss of innocence, if only secretly.
● New situations tend to generate performance anxiety due to their
unfamiliarity. Stepping into a situation where there are many unknown
possibilities and contingencies, we find it difficult to transfer
confidence; that is, to stay relaxed, and to still the little doubts and
fears.
○ If one can work within the proposition that such new situations
are not 'difficult', but "novel", then any physical sensation can be
reframed as excitement. When interest and curiosity are
engaged towards a novel situation, we tend to pay more
attention to what is going on in the environment, rather than the
demons of the ego. In other words, there is a common tendency
to, when faced with a new or unfamiliar situation, to label it as
difficult and frightening, and then retreat from it. This raises
anxiety and hence difficulty becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.
● The ego requires knowing how much Time has passed. The ego needs
a sense of time passing to keep itself together as a 'fixed' entity. Any
technique which serves to disturb linear awareness will trigger a
reaction from the ego.
● Confidence requires a degree of Self-Love, which in turn requires self-
awareness, particularly of your own nested desire-complexes. Surface
desires are often blinds thrown up by the Ego, to disguise something
which cannot be admitted into awareness. Such conflicts eventually
become the magician's nemesis.