READERS’ QUESTIONS (DL7)
Leaving aside the question of the
validity of a “general view”, you should only believe what you want to believe,
what feels right for you. An attitude which appears quite frequently is the “witch-hunting”
mentality or, even more regularly, a fear of other Occultists’ “witch-hunting”.
Orthodox
religions impose restrictions; Occultism should not, but it sometimes does,
perhaps because its practitioners are seeking to re-establish the comfortable
security of their former faiths. Without experience, it is not possible to
evaluate. A system which prohibits its adherents from experimenting with other
ideas is revealing its own insecurity and trading on the insecurity of its
followers. If you refuse to believe in, say, reincarnation, you will be
expelled from your coven. They might be doing you a favour. You ask where would
you go. Why do you feel the need to go anywhere? You are where you always have
been, with yourself.
The
questions are not related. Many people, of whichever path or none, do not
realise that good or harm is a subjective judgement until one has reached
Adepthood and the power to see everything in true perspective.
That’s
the real difference. Not being good or evil, but understanding what good and
evil are.
This
is a question which cannot be answered. I know who will make it and who will
not, and I also know who will benefit from going part of the way, but there are
no standard qualifications which all pupils must have.
Don’t even utter the obvious,
because by speaking it you give it more credence. The attributes you mention
are more appropriate to a junior clerk than to a potential Adept.
Everything
is a matter of energy. Like rivers or electricity, energy flows from one place
to another. Some places take more of the energy I have than others take. If I
stayed in them long enough, I would, like a battery, become discharged. There
are certain places in the country where I do not go. A few are the exact
opposite, places which invigorate me, where I get more powerful instead of
being drained. There is nothing you can do to alter this energy, it simply exists,
in its various forms, and some of those forms are not compatible with certain
individuals. (Remember non-compatibility does not mean hostility). Avoid the
places which drain you or, if this is not possible, try to arrange things so
that you compensate for the effects.
These
are areas where a traumatic event or series of events has been absorbed by the
ground, to the extent that it can be felt by a sensitive person. This is not necessarily
the same as the energy forces referred to in the previous question, where the
reaction varies with the individual. “Bad ground” is inimical to all. The
influence can in some cases be strong enough to prevent plants, even weeds,
growing on neglected soil, though this can be artificially created for
propaganda purposes. Millions of gallons of disinfectant were pumped into the
ground of a concentration camp; nothing will grow there for strictly practical
reasons, though it is another interesting indication of the part that
superstition plays in warfare and its aftermath.
You
should only attempt to “heal” bad ground if it is essential that this be done
and if you can foresee all the consequences of your action. At that stage, you
will not need to ask me how to do it.
People who summon spirits
successfully are sure of an interesting conversation because they are talking
to themselves, though probably they and their associates are not aware of this
fact. One’s own subconscious contains the Universe, though most people find
this difficult, if not impossible, to accept.
Merlin would appear to be the
personification of an ideal, something which must be attained if what is, in
effect, a young nation, can go any further. It does not matter whether or not
he existed, or what ideal he represents, because it is something that was
thought necessary at the time. The same applies to systems of Magick, which
will continue to exist as long as people feel a need for them.
Be
careful of thinking that there could be such a thing as a non-harmful stance;
it may be the thin end of the wedge when you are not sufficiently advanced to
be sure of your ability to avoid stances. Providing the outcome of the game has
no effect on your everyday life, this form of participation is not dangerous,
but keep a close watch on yourself. Beware that dividing-line. Holding your
breath as a player pots the black is all good fun, but, when you switch off the
television and go to make a cup of tea, are you whistling happily because your
favourite player won, or clattering crockery because he lost? If so, the stance
started after the game was over.
From the Dark Lily Journal No 7, Society of Dark Lily
(London 1988).