Culver City - October 1995
To: anon@nagual.com
The Phantom Tollbooth -- My Time With the Sorcerers
LA the stalker's moon of 95
It had not been a good week. It started off disaster and the situation
would not stabilize. I worked all night, and ran home to shower and
run to the airport. On the way I caught myself being impatient with
my fellow drivers. And I made it in the end. So my anger was probably
unjustified. Not an auspicious beginning to what I hoped might prove
transcendental. But I still had until evening, and hoped to adopt
a warrior's mood before then. The flight actually wasn't bad--I had
to change in El Paso, but both flights found me with an empty seat
beside me, which is important when you're gorilla sized.
An odd thing happened in the El Paso terminal. I found an unobtrusive
seat on the border of two adjacent gates. Directly in front of me but
several rows away there was a hispanic family, parents and three daughters,
the youngest of which was early twenties. They were all attractive, but
the father caught my eye--he was very lively, and had a contagious grin.
He laughed and joked with everyone in his party, he hugged his youngest
daughter. My gaze moved on. I happened to look their direction and
caught them both watching me as they talked, perhaps coincidentally--
and perhaps not. I tuned in in time to catch his last phrase, as he
noticed my attention and smiled at me. He was saying, "...shouldn't be
so aloof."
The car was another lesson in patience. I shuttled quickly out to the
remote agency. "If you have a reservation, go through the doors to
the left," the tough chicana chick driver rattled into the mike. This
turned out to be Alamo Rentals' version of a one way ticket to the
killing fields on the cattle car express. I was pipered through the
automatic doors, like the wickedly inocuous gates of a concentration
camp/retail outlet, and stood blinking in betrayal--the line was eighty
people. Five clerks. No way out. No where to run.
I used to be disgusted, but now I try to be amused--the flaming
self-importance of the rants in the queue was silly. I felt superior
now--briefly. It is very much a stale joke, to be vain about one's
humility. What's more obnoxious than self-righteousness? I mean, if
you won't be a warrior, insist on fucking up, at least have some
fun--rock and roll, dude. Don't whine about it. And get off my case.
I cruised down the couple miles to the Travelodge and checked in. I
slickered up and arrived on time. Carlos asked us not to take notes
during the lectures; here's what I wrote beforehand:
6:30 FRIDAY EVENING--How Many Techs Could a Toltec Toll,
If a Toltec Could Toll Techs?
"I am in a large hall filled with smecking and govoreeting 'sorcerers.'
Personally, I am in a state of lowered awareness, having had no sleep
for the last twenty-two hours. I have filled out a form reminiscent of
a high school field trip permission slip; perhaps this is why we're in
a high school cafeteria. I feel a great spaciness, and I'm not sure
it's all within myself. As I looked at some geometrically patterned
wallpaper back at the hotel, I recaptured some altered states in
transforming the paper into a 3-D pattern by crossing and unfocussing
my eyes (largely involuntarily.) In other words, for this evening at
least, I am a less than unbiased witness.
We sit Indian style on the hardwood floor surrounding a 10X10 square
stage in the middle of the room, for about an hour. All around old
acquaintances are being renewed, while I try not to stare at the
purty girls."
So. Let me run it down for ya. The trip from the hotel was as
interesting as any sojourn into strange country. I learned that
the LA drainage ditches have precedence over the through streets.
I parked next to a public tennis facility, part of a large high
school sports complex. There were people everywhere, and
competitions at the various fields. I followed the directions
through campus, and was given the aforementioned form to fill
out, and had to pass through two checkpoints. I entered the
cafeteria, which looked as though it had been converted from an
old gym. It had a hardwood floor, anyway, and was bare except
for the stage. I found what I considered the most strategic of
the available seating. I got bored with sitting, so I wrote the
tripe above.
Eventually, a tall bespectacled man took the stage and fiddled with
a wireless microphone. (For no good reason, I formed the opinion
that this was Bruce Wagner, the director/sorcerer--I believe he
introduced himself as Daniel.) He welcomed us all, and ran us
through a few points of business (the second video may be pre-ordered,
there will be a caterer/roach coach available outside at meal breaks,
breaks the news about no note-taking), and left the stage.
A few minutes later a group walks in through a door at the left end
of the room, and everyone stands and applauds. (This became the
standard greeting and farewell at each lecture.) It is not until
Carlos has stepped on stage that I can even see him, for he is
several inches either side of five feet tall. He is a dark Latino
(definite Indian blood), he is in fact Argentinean. Carlos looks to
be in his sixties, but is very animated. He punctuates every phrase
with fluid and elegant gestures. His close-cropped hair is gray,
nearly white. And English is definitely his second language,
something I would never have guessed from his books. He is articulate,
but speaks with a distinct accent. Carlos has a stalker's gaze--he
constantly checks out the details of the expressions and body language
of those around him, never lighting anywhere for more than a second
or two. He has a very charming manner and winning smile, yet on the
few occasions when he did make eye contact with me, his gaze was
very penetrating and yet detached, like a bird of prey. Trite, but true.
Carlos began by stating that the sorcery passes we were to learn
were discovered by men thousands of years ago. Don Juan had told
him that it was on the order of 10,000 years, but Carlos had always
had difficulty reconciling that with his archaeological background.
Carlos pointed out that an important part of the warrior's way was
to pass through the world without leaving a trace, that it would be
impossible to prove the existence of don Juan himself at this point--
he felt that we might infer from this that the very earliest of the
"old sorcerers" were indeed from the time of the nomads, pre-
agriculture, and thus don Juan's time frame was correct.
Carlos then reiterated that there should be no note-taking. What
we were about here was deploying energy, and the full participation
of everyone was essential at all times. He said that the Chac-Mools
would be addressing the energy body directly, as was he, and that
our bodies would like it, and bring us back for more.
Since the Chac-Mools had come into his group and re-energized
them all, Carlos had come to view the secrecy and rituals that
had historically attended the passes as a waste of time. Energy
is all that is important. The passes gather and redistribute
energy. It is not necessary to understand how they work, or to
believe that they work--it is only necessary to do them. He said
that when he confonted don Juan with the same issue, don Juan had
given him the same answer--"Humor me," he had said. Carlos asked
us to do the same. He again stated that since note-taking was
only going to get in the way, he asked us not to do it. (I
interpreted this to mean during the actual sessions--an "individual
interpretation of the rule.") Carlos acted out the way he used to
take notes in the pocket of his windbreaker, on little pads with
numbered sheets. Don Juan once asked him if he was playing with
himself, since his pen and hand-motions resembled it. When Carlos
explained what he was doing, don Juan told him that if he was going
to waste his time on tiny masturbations like that, he might as well
do the real thing.
As to why Carlos had decided to "open sorcery" to the world, he
invited us to invent a reason, as it was only another tiny
masturbation--beliefs and rationales don't matter in the sorcerers'
world, only action does.
Carlos pointed out that he had been a well-read member of academia
before he became a sorcerer. The sum total of all academic philosophy
and religion amounted, it seemed to him, to "Life's a bitch and then
you die." He finds this proposition odious, and has continued to
seek out "gurus," even after becoming involved with don Juan's world.
As he put it, it is hard to believe that only one man, don Juan, is
not prepared to accept that proposition, and instead try to become
a "navigator of infinity." And not with the "soul" or "spirit,"
terms which have no meaning for sorcerers, but with the total package
that comprises us, body and all.
Carlos had asked this of don Juan--was sorcery the only path to
knowledge? Don Juan pointed out that Carlos was the latest link in a
long chain of evolution, which had placed him at the door of sorcery.
He said that although it was indeed possible that Carlos might be able
to seek out an alternate way of knowledge before Death found him, it
seemed to him a risky waste of time and energy, since he was already
standing at sorcery's door. As, Carlos pointed out, are we. And as
don Juan had done for him, he invited us to go through it, to become,
ourselves, navigators of infinity.
Carlos then recounted his meetings with several wise/holy men. I
regret that I cannot recapture the supreme raconteurship with which
the stories were told, but can merely try to recall the facts.
1) Baba Maharishi (sp?), an Indian sage, was interviewed by some
magazine at the time Carlos was introduced to him. They had to
speak through an interpreter, and the awkwardness of the situation
reduced Carlos to commonplaces, such as "So how long have you been
in America?"; "Do you like it?", etc. A thoroughly inane conversation.
Carlos was amazed that the transcript of the "meeting of the great men"
was published with fanfare anyway.
He also mentioned a radio interview he had given to some West Coast
radio talk show host who obviously didn't take him seriously;
therefore, as required by the art of stalking, Carlos didn't take
him seriously either, yet blathered on as if he did--controlled folly.
It wasn't until later that he realized that the interview had been
taped and sold through Esalen and others. He pointed out the danger
inherent in second-hand accounts, and again stressed the importance
of active participation. (Caveat emptor.)
2) Timothy Leary--Carlos asked Leary what he had brought back to us
from his 500+ trips into "no man's land." Leary's response was to
ask Carlos what sign he was. He accused Carlos of being a Capricorn
and a "structure freak." Carlos derided Leary's current enthusiasm
for computers, specifically artificial intelligence. Carlos maintained
that there was no way that a giant, miraculously fast adding machine
would ever embody human awareness. He used the example of a prosthetic
hand, and pointed out that in a simple flesh and blood hand movement
the algorithm went from the vast complexity of the organization of
matter into living cells, the organization of cells into tissues and
organs, and the supreme mystery of the awareness that could direct
the movement and how it did that, to the relative simplicity of the
actual movement. Man's "mechanical fallacy" was to go from a few
simplicities, such as nuts and bolts, steel rods, and flesh colored
latex, to the relative complexity of the artificial hand movement,
and call that as good as the real thing. (I thought of the intro to
The Six Million Dollar Man--"faster, stronger, better than he was
before!") He chided Leary's belief that he could be kept alive
cryogenically until technology could revive him.
3) The Pope--Carlos had a semi-private audience with the Pope. In
the receiving line, the Pontiff blessed him, and asked him, "What do
you do, my son?" Carlos became tongue-tied and couldn't answer--after
all, he said, the last thing he wanted to do was lie to the Pope. The
next man in line had no problem, however--he told the Pope he owned a
second-hand bookstore, and asked him to bless it. He had, Carlos
observed, "maximized his time with the Pope." (A parable, as we shall
see.)
4) An un-named (?) master in India--Carlos asked him about energy,
and was told that women were not created by God, but were lesser
beings, by virtue of the hole between their legs. When the male
energy wanted to unite with the female, it had to lower itself
through sex. Carlos parodied the conscientious note-taking going
on in the presence of this guru, and marvelled at how many of the
most attentive and adoring note-takers were women.
5) An un-named Chinese practioner--a psychiatrist friend took
Carlos to see a man "dripping with chi." Upon arrival, Carlos
was told that he was unworthy to enter through the front door,
to use the servants' entrance around back. Carlos and his friend
acquiesced, but when they got there, they were met by a large,
fierce man, who promptly stumbled coming down the stairs to meet
them and landed dead at their feet. Carlos' friend advised that
they flee, as he didn't want to be a "material witness." Carlos
didn't want to be one, either, and they left.
Carlos then talked about self-importance, and how it is evident in
everyday life. He pointed out that what passes for dialogue is only
two people, each of whom is waiting for the other to cease their
monotonous drivel in order that their own verbal brilliance can
shine forth. He laughed at psychiatry, which he said was paying
people large sums of money to listen to you talk about yourself.
He said that what are called cures occur when even you get tired of
hearing about it.
Carlos then made several oblique references to awareness-eating
entities called fliers, which can only be warded off through
discipline. He said that they quickly lose their appetite for
disciplined awareness. The Chac-Mools, he said, were going to
help us bring some of that discipline into our lives, and he
invited us to take them as peerless examples of such discipline.
He was then asked a few questions, all of which had been answered
(to my satisfaction) in the books, and turned it over to the
Chac-Mools.
The Chac-Mools then took over, with Kylie being the evident leader,
as in the video. She took the center stage, while Reni and Nyei
went to smaller stages at each end of the room. I gravitated to
one end, which is where Nyei was. (Over the course of the sessions,
they changed stages, each one teaching different passes from the
center, the others assisting from the ends. In this way, even though
most people stayed more or less in the same spot all three days, we
each got one-to-one interaction with all the Chac-Mools.) They each
wore wireless mikes, and were dressed exactly alike, as they would
be in each session, although wearing a different color each time.
As the great Texas songwriter Robert Earl Keen says, I am "no kind
of dancer," so it was with some trepidation that I awaited the
instruction. I had visions of being asked to do splits or some
other painful gymnastic movement, but this was not the case, in
any of the movements. The greatest requirement in all passes was
concentration.
The first pass we were taught was called Redeploying Energy to the
Center of Sustained Action. We practiced the pass until we could
do it without cues from the Chac-Mools. We then called it a night.
I went back to the hotel, and although I should have been exhausted,
I was strangely energized. I wrote most of what I related above,
as well as making a stick figure diagram of the pass, before I
finally went to bed.
DAY 2
Carol Tiggs, the Nagual Woman, took the stage at 9:30 the next morning.
She is a beautiful woman, shapely, with dark hair and black eyes. She
looks to be about forty, although as a contemporary of Carlos and the
others she should be decades older. She told us about herself when
she was younger, and don Juan was still around--how she lisped, etc.,
as told in The Art of Dreaming. She was the only one of the
female warriors who wore a skirt, and she joked that she was still not
used to being onstage, and was concerned with making sure that all we
could see were her knees.
Carol then took up where The Art of Dreaming left off, and told
us of her own meeting with the Death Defier. It apparently took place
in the same church where Carlos had his meeting. Carol entered the
church, and the sudden darkness caused her to stumble on an unseen
step. At that moment of self-conscious embarassment, she was seized
by an icy hand, while a raspy voice said, "Carol Tiggs, it is a
pleasure to finally meet you--I've been watching you for a long time."
Carol said that the Death Defier's use of her full name pacified her
understandable terror, for she felt it was a sign of the respect she
felt she deserved. Carol was still extremely frightened, and would
not even look at the Death Defier. The Death Defier told her there
was nothing to be afraid of, that she was "all woman." She grabbed
Carol's hand and put it on her large breast. Carol was aghast, and
told the Death Defier to stop before the other people in the church
saw them. The Death Defier explained that there was no cause for
worry, that they were in a dream, and those other people didn't
exist--only she and Carol did. The Death Defier then offered to
make a deal with Carol for some of her energy. Like Carlos, Carol
behaved like anything but a shrewd businesswoman, and basically
agreed to anything the Death Defier wished. The Death Defier
offered to show her the "Sea of Awareness," and Carol, expecting
some sort of trip to a cosmic beach, agreed. Instead she was given
a fleeting glimpse of something indescribable. She then felt a
heaviness in her legs, and a pain in her foot. She was in Tucson,
far away from the town in Mexico where she met the Death Defier.
She found a newspaper, and discovered that ten years had elapsed
in the instant she'd been gone.
Carol is no longer sure whether she is the same Carol Tiggs who left
that day, or a Carol Tiggs possessed by the Death Defier, or some
wierd amalgamation of the two. She is still trying, even in the act
of telling us her "tales of energy," to recover the memory of what
happened to her. She proceeded to share more of those tales.
Carol said that when the assemblage point moves to a place where it
assembles an entirely new world, sorcerers see the movement of pure
energy for just a moment, before the assemblage point, which dictates
not only what but how we perceive, imposes its interpretation on the
new world.
Carlos and Carol reached a point where they found themselves dreaming
together. Their entrance into that state took three forms--they would
find themselves walking together, driving together in a car, or in bed
together naked. She related a series of these experiences.
When they were driving, they would usually end up in front of a white
house, which Carol intuitively knew was her home. She usually woke
up before she ventured inside. Finally she did, however, and was
greeted by someone who was a dead ringer for the 1940's actor Gerald
Mohr, who apparently had a very distinctive voice. He said, "Hi, honey,
I'm glad you're home." Carol had the feeling that this was not a human
personage. This feeling was intensified by the demonic laughter that
issued from it. She bolted back to our world.
On another occasion, she and Carlos woke up together naked in the
bedroom of the white house. A little girl ran into the room, saying,
"Mommy, mommy, who is that naked man and what is he doing in your bed?"
She and Carlos freaked out, and Carlos yelled, "Twirl, Carol, twirl!"
(Apparently the sensation/technique of assembling a new world gives
one the feeling of spinning rapidly.)
At this point in their relations, Carlos and Carol had a great deal of
suspicion about each other. They each felt the other knew a lot more
than they let on, and that the other was in cahoots with don Juan and
his nefarious schemes. Carlos at this time was very fat, and loved
to cook. He would never let Carol so much as wash a dish, because
she couldn't do it well enough to appease his finnickiness. On
one occasion, Carlos outdid himself cooking carnitas with chiles,
which they found so filling that they postponed their daily run.
They laid down together on their dreaming couch, and were immediately
asleep and transported to the bedroom of the white house. The little
girl was knocking on the door and asking to be let in. Carol got out
of bed and slipped into her robe at the foot of the bed (as if she had
done so for years.) Carlos slipped into an armoir to observe what
happened. Carol noticed a newspaper lying there, and was dumbstruck
to see that it was definitely not in English. She wanted to show it
to Carlos, who had somehow gotten himself locked in the armoir.
Carol could not figure out how to open it, and was growing frantic,
as now both the child and Gerald Mohr were outside the door asking
her what was wrong and demanding to be let in. Carlos (who also had
an inexplicable familiarity with the house) instructed Carol to step
on a black spot on the floor, which opened the armoir. Now it was
Carol's turn to beseech Carlos to leave, which he post-poned to the
last possible second due to his anthropological curiousity about the
newpaper. When they returned to normal awareness, Carlos turned on
Carol. "You fucking bitch!" he yelled. "What did you slip into my
food?" Carol just smiled, for she had him, and said, "Fuck you.
You never even let me in your kitchen!"
Carlos was also afflicted at this time with terrible fits of rage,
which he attributed to high blood pressure. Carol would treat these
attacks with some form of acupuncture. On one occasion, she asked
Carlos which needles he preferred, the thick or the thin, and she
made an inadvertent wave with her left hand as she said it. The
left side of Carlos' face drooped as though he were having a stroke,
and in a slurred voice he asked for the thin ones. Carol was unable
to bring him around, and was about to go for a most drastic maneuver,
which required inserting the needle at the base of Carlos' scrotum.
This caused Carlos to rally his energy and snap out of his spell.
They argued for hours about what had happened, until finally Carol
went home in the wee hours. She happened to glance at herself in
the little-used mirror, and waved her left hand to clear the dust
from it. She woke up with her face against the mirror five hours
later when a car alarm went off outside. They then figured out
that Carol's left eye had become altered by her visits to the
second attention, and that she could mesmerize with it. She said
for awhile she took great delight in zapping everyone from the other
apprentices to the grocery checker.
Carol then gave us a demonstration. She called up an Argentinean girl
she had met previously, and mesmerized her. She then took a volunteer
stranger from the audience. She explained beforehand that what she
was doing was shutting off their internal dialogue. She urged us not
to regret that we weren't the ones on stage, that we could make the
demonstration "for our eyes only," and that we could also experience
the internal stoppage. It was her hope that our bodies would remember,
and that we would be able to utilize the memory as we needed it. I can
report that it worked for me, both times. Carol then turned us over
to the Chac-Mools.
We learned another pass, Crossing the Central Boundary of the Body, and
broke for lunch. Nearly everyone, it seemed, opted for the roach coach.
The line was too long to deal with, so I went and sat at a picnic table
near the door. At the next table, some members of the staff, who I assumed
were members of Carlos' group, were talking and eating. The guy who was
serving as master of ceremonies (Bruce? Daniel?) was talking about
Microsoft, and wondering rhetorically why no one was challenging his
dominance in the software field.
The line thinned out, and I went and got a plate. At the grill, a
long-haired cook asked of the four or five of us in line what we were
up to. I sensed a sudden tension. However, I saw no need for secrecy.
I asked the cook if he was familliar with Carlos Castaneda. He said no.
I told him that he was an anthropologist who had studied the magical
practices of ancient Mexico, and that he was teaching us about those
practices. "Cool," he said. He asked how much it cost, and whether
it was worth it, and I replied that it was to me.
2nd Lecture-- Florinda Donner-Grau
Of all the members of Carlos' party, Florinda is the one who most looks
the part. She has a face that brings the word elvish to my mind--
mischievous, animated, possessed of secret knowledge. She is very
attractive, with white hair and dark eyebrows forming a V. She has
a great smile. For some reason, I have a harder time remembering
what she said than any of the others. Part of it, I think, is because
she spoke of many things I have (at least intellectually) assimilated.
She spoke of self importance, and reiterated what she had written about
how devastated she had been by don Juan's assessment that her entire
self-worth was based on being born blond and blue-eyed in a dark-skinned
country. She said he always picked on her for being a "typical German,"
even calling her mein FОООСОИhrer. Whenever he wanted to get a rise out of
her, he would ask her whether she was being German that day.
Florinda said she hoped we had all benefited from Carol's demonstration.
She then asked us if we had noticed that Carol's eyes had been black.
Florinda said that Carol's eyes were blue when she was her normal self,
but black when she was an incredibly powerful sorceress. She said we
had seen something truly marvelous that day, which our energy bodies
would remember. She joked that the whole party, including Carlos, had
to beware when Carol's eyes were black. She said that she would call
Carol before going to see her, to ask what color her eyes were that day.
Florinda then gave the most straightforward explanation so far of what
Tensegrity was about. She pointed out that the idea of luminous eggs
was an artifact from the time of the old sorcerers, that man's shape
had evolved to where most people are seen as perfect spheres of energy.
In very young people, the energy is clustered at the center of the shell.
Worldly experience moves our energy to the surface of the shell, forming
a sort of energetic crust. This energy is not utilizable. The goal of
Tensegrity is to redistribute that energy from the surface of the shell
back to the center. This will cause our energy bodies to return to us.
Someone asked if the energy body is in our physical body. Florinda
answered that while it is part of our totality, it is not in the physical
body. Our energy bodies tend to become separated from us due to the
fixation of the assemblage point on self-reflection. She said that
don Juan used to joke with Carlos that his energy body was in Japan.
Florinda was luckier, though, he said, hers was only in New York.
A question was asked about the energetic effects of recapitulating
about someone you still dealt with everyday. Florinda cleared up the
misconception that we are retrieving energy from others. She said
that every being has a finite amount of energy--the retrieval process
is similar to Tensegrity's effects--one is bringing back one's energy
from the outer shell to the core.
Florinda then addressed the "poor me" issue. She said it was
meaningless to complain that one doesn't have the benefit of a teacher
like don Juan, or Carlos. She said Carlos had complained that don Juan
had the benefit of don Elias and don Julian, that she had complained
that Carlos had had more interaction with don Juan and his party than
she had, that the Chac-Mools complained that they never met don Juan.
It was all unimportant. There are no better or worse circumstances,
and there are no rewards associated with sorcery. It is an endless
challenge, and that's all. We all face infinity alone--energy is all
that matters.
Someone asked whether facing infinity alone implied that the nagual's
party was separated after the abstract flight. Florinda answered that
the final destination of the nagual's party is not known, but that we
were all facing infinity alone right now, even in that crowded room.
Someone brought up the subject of the "energy worms" left in the female
by the male after sex. Florinda said that this was indeed true, as was
the fact that having children made holes in the luminous shell. But she
asked, so what? She did not agree with don Juan's extreme strategy for
erasing personal history by leaving behind everything you knew. They
were not asking us to give up our families or our lives. What matters
is detachment, which follows from losing self-importance, which is a
product of energy.
Florinda exhorted us to use death as an adviser, and to lose our self-
importance. She then turned us over to the Chac-Mools.
We learned another pass, The Five Point Connection. This was
described as being similar to the charging of a battery. We broke for
dinner.
Evening Lecture -- Carlos
Carlos threw the floor open to questions. Someone asked him whether
he was working on a new book. He said that he was, and to remind him
later, that he would give us an idea of what it dealt with. Someone
then asked him whether it was true that he had actually written The
Art of Dreaming years ago, but hadn't been able to get it published.
He said that was more or less true, that his agent had told him that
it was too weird, and that he should write something more contemporary,
perhaps about computers. He went back and wracked his brains about
how to make it more palatable, but ended up leaving it as it was. He
explained that he was not really a writer, that don Juan had set him
the task of finding his books in dreaming, which he had done. All
he was doing was reporting the words he had found in dreams, an act of
immense concentration. He discussed the problem of writing or even
speaking about sorcery, as its taxonomy had little in common with the
everyday world's.
Carlos told us of a comment don Juan had made once about the everyday
world of the tonal. He had said that what we consider to be reality
was a contract that had been made far back in the past, a contract
which we were forced to uphold, even though we had not been in on its
negotiation. Why, he asked Carlos, did he feel obligated to uphold a
contract he had been given no say in? This is basically the essence of
sorcery, the renegotiation of that contract.
The subject of sex came up, and Carlos reiterated what has been said
about one's capacity for sexual activity depending on the energy of the
intercourse by which you were conceived. Carlos said that don Juan had
seen Carlos' moment of conception. His parents were very young,
teenagers, and had had hurried and furtive sex behind a door. Carlos
felt this was the reason he was himself furtive, and, he joked, short.
Don Juan told him that this made him a bored fuck, and that he should
therefore avoid sexual activity. Carlos did not like this, because at
this time he was young and even though he was very fat, he thought
himself very sexy. He said that he still wishes he were taller and
not a bored fuck, yet he is still the latest link in a five billion
year long chain of evolution, and he can not let these things be the
stumbling block that defeats him.
He told the story of a young man who came to him and told him that he
wanted to be a warrior, but that he had been sexually abused by his
stepmother. Carlos asked him how long the abuse had gone on, and was
told for three years, from the time he was eighteen until he was twenty
one. Carlos then got serious, and told us of a young girl who had
been abused first by her youngest brother, then when the older brother
found out, by them both, then when the father found out, by all three.
This started at eleven years old and went on until she left home.
Carlos said that this was indeed abuse, but that all he could think
to say to her was what don Juan had told him about personal history
many years before--"Then was then, and now is now, and now there is
only time for freedom."
A question was asked about losing the human form. Carlos said that
pragmatically what it meant was that one loses interest in the things
of vital interest to humanity. Someone had asked him at a previous
seminar, "But what should I do if I see a shapely ass?" Carlos said
that those who walk around crying about "What am I going to do with
my sexuality?" are the sort who would never do anything about it
anyway. The truly dirty minded, he said, keep their thoughts to
themselves.
Carlos talked about self-importance, and the way we like to collect
remembrances. He said that we accumulate an amazing variety of garbage
as adjuncts to our personal inventories--old letters, photographs,
even ticket stubs from shows we've seen. He told of an artist he knew
who had taken a photograph of himself everyday for the last forty years.
He also kept a daily journal. This person had already willed all of
his letters and other personal effects to various institutions which
he felt would appreciate them and do them justice. In the life of
sorcerers, there is a tendency to collect things as well, amulets,
crystals, and the like. He urged us to let go of such things, to
clean our personal inventories.
One of the Argentineans then asked in Spanish whether Carlos would put
him into the second attention. Carlos rolled his eyes as if to say,
"Here we go again." (I thought--Maximizing our time with the Pope.)
He told us that don Juan's lineage believed that forcing apprentices
into the second attention via the nagual's blow to the assemblage point
was the most expeditious route to gaining their acceptance of sorcery.
He said that such blows left dents in the luminous coccoon, and that
all of the members of don Juan's party had permanently dented cocoons
due to the number of such blows they had sustained. Carlos and his
party no longer subscribe to this way of thinking, and believe that
discipline and energy are all that are needed to gain access to sorcery.
Therefore the answer was no, we would have to accomplish this journey
on our own.
Carlos said it had taken him and the members of his party many years
to repair the dents that had been made in their cocoons. At birth the
assemblage point is not fixed on the point of self-reflection. This
only happens later, with socialization. They had also discovered that
a person's energy at birth is clustered at the center of the cocoon,
but that everyday living and the accumulation of experience caused the
energy to move to the outer shell, forming a sort of crust. The older
and more socialized a person becomes, the more of their energy is
crusted on their shell, and the firmer the fixation of the assemblage
point, locking them into their worldview. Hence Tensegrity, to return
the cocoon to a luminous sphere, with the energy in the center and the
assemblage point at the place of birth.
I then asked Carlos, "What does it mean to say that sorcerers face the
oncoming time?" He replied that this was one of the most elegant aspects
of sorcery. It meant that sorcerers faced existence without any a priori
assumptions, which arise from the habitual position of the assemblage
point. Carlos said that don Juan had evoked the metaphor of a passenger
on a train: ordinarily we perceive time as someone seated on the caboose
of a moving train perceives the rails. We only see what has just passed,
and the long line of the rails (our past) receding into the distance.
Sorcery allows one to race to the engine of the train, and see what's
coming down the line. The past is invisible from this position, all that
matters is what's happening now. This is only possible when we are no
longer concerned with our personal history, including the human inventory,
as it is defined by the assemblage point position of self-reflection.
Concern for ourselves costs us that precious moment needed to experience
directly; experience has to pass through the filter of our self-importance.
By the time we're paying attention to the world outside our selves, the
next event has arrived.
Carlos was asked something about the teleology of the sorcerers' new
stance. He replied that don Juan's group had succeeded in their aims,
and existed in a place where perception was 360 degrees. However, the
fact was that we are always forced to deal with how our assemblage point
perceives, even when we've gained a large measure of control over what
it perceives. Carlos reiterated that for sorcerers there was no
separation between the body and soul, and that when new worlds are
assembled, the body is unaltered. Thus, he complained, wherever in
infinity he went, he was still short. The problem don Juan was
experiencing was that he was still limited by his perceptual equipment,
and therefore could only simulate 360 degree perception by constantly
twirling. (Carlos did not explain how he knew this, whether he had seen
don Juan since he left, nor what happened in the shift below, for
instance when he became a crow. Questions for next time!)
Someone asked what had become of the Eagle. (I interpreted the
question as asked in the light of the change of focus Carlos' group
was experiencing.) Carlos replied that the Eagle was merely a name for
a vast impersonal force which imbues things with awareness, then takes
the enhanced awareness back when they die. In other words, nothing has
changed as far as the Eagle is concerned.
Carlos then went on to say that the sorcerers' new view was more
pragmatic than that of don Juan's lineage. They had realized and
accepted the limitations imposed by how the assemblage point perceives,
and were no longer interested in reaching the place of 360 degree
awareness. Instead, they had become navigators of infinity. They
wanted to visit, as themselves, as many worlds as they were capable
of attaining. In this way, they would in effect cheat death,
extending their lives indefinitely, while retaining awareness and
volition. The world of the inorganic beings is the escape hatch
they are going through.
Someone asked whether there was anything Carlos or we could do to help
don Juan out of his predicament. Carlos said definitely not, that
any offer of such help, if possible, would be met by don Juan's
spitting in our face. It is not possible to intervene in the
impeccably personally responsible decisions of a warrior, especially
one like don Juan. Such ideas of help or even compassion were not
worthy of his peerless warriorship.
Carlos made several derisive remarks about centering your existence
around playing the guitar and smoking pot. He said that at one time,
he had noticed that the luminousity of pot smokers was green, which he
had attributed to that habit. But he had learned that at one time
green was a common hue for human luminousity to take, and speculated
that these people he had seen were merely examples of this type of
human. He reminded us that he was a student at UCLA in the Sixties,
and that he had been exposed to all of the happenings of that era.
He said that it did not appeal to him. He was especially put off
by the sham mysticism--dressing up in "togas and flashlights and
weird hairdos" were only for fakers. True witches, he observed,
were burnt.
Someone asked about the difficulty in the modern world of losing one's
personal history. Carlos related the story of having to go to a doctor
about a problem he was experiencing with his vision. The doctor wanted
his age, height, weight, etc., when all Carlos wanted was his opinion.
The doctor told him that he was having retinal problems due to the
violence of his orgasms, but that the problem would correct itself
over time. Carlos said he could not bring himself to tell the doctor
that as a warrior he had been celibate for many years. Nor could he
tell him that he had realized that the most probable cause of his
problem was his twirling in infinity.
Someone then reminded Carlos that his time was almost up, and that
he had promised to tell us about his new book. Carlos sidestepped
the question, saying that he had to turn the stage over to the
Chac-Mools, lest one of his party stick a pin in his scrotum.
We then reviewed all the passes we had learned so far.
Day 3
Morning Lecture -- Taisha Abelar
Taisha introduced herself by asking whether the other warriors had
warned us about her. She said they accused her of having sold out
to the inorganic beings, and that they often used descriptive words
such as evil, malicious, and sly to refer to her. Taisha said that
she liked to change the emphasis, and referred to herself as
mysterious, enigmatic, etc. She challenged the crowd to come up
with other more suitable terms. No one responded. As she was
speaking, several of the lights in the auditorium dimmed and
brightened behind her.
Taisha is in fact similar to Florinda in height and stature, very
slim and fit, perhaps in her fifties, but very vital. [Note: my
perception then, but she's actually much taller!] Her hair is
still reddish gold, but worn very short, like all of the sorceresses
save Carol. She also has a quick and mischievous smile, and seems
the most accessible of the group--several times between sessions she
could be seen at the center of a crowd.
She told us that her two allies were with her, and that she called
them Phoebus and Globus. She explained that the inorganic beings
are not fearsome at all, that in fact they were sources of the
boundless abstract affection that sorcerers seek, and as such were
more like pets than anything else.
Taisha retold the story of her first encounter with an ally. She was
in bed in the sorcerers' house in Mexico, when she was awakened by
strange sounds outside the door. She attributed them to don Juan's
attempt to scare her, or worse yet, to carry out his nefarious sexual
designs upon her. She forgot about it and went to sleep. The next
day she confronted don Juan about it, and he told her that the
inorganic beings were after her. Taisha asked fearfully what she
could do to protect herself. Don Juan told her that her previous
response was probably best, to just not acknowledge them. However,
she was unable to carry this off on subsequent visits, so don Juan
told her that there was no hope for her, the inorganic beings had
decided to take her. The only thing she could do was confront the
inorganic being directly, to wrestle with it, and not to let go at
all costs.
One night the ally came in force. Taisha said she could see the door
outlined from behind by an eerie light, then the door started to
actually bulge inward, as though pressed upon outside by tremendous
force. The ally entered the room, and she "grabbed" it, although not
in the ordinary way we think of--there was just some sort of tangible,
voltional connection. Taisha said the only way she could describe
the ally's touch was as a sort of liquid electricity. She succeeded
in taming the ally, which is one of the ones she has constantly with her.
Taisha pointed out that all of the subterfuge and difficullties
experienced by Carlos in his dealings with that realm were the result
of the fact that he was male. The Universe is a predominately female
place, so women were largely matters of indifference to the inorganic
beings. They can come and go at will in that world.
Taisha said the allies like us because we live at a much faster rate
than they do. For all practical purposes, the inorganic beings live
forever, on the order of millions of our years. They recognize our
problem with the Fliers and Death, and want to help, but they cannot
overcome the power of our first attention, the habitual position of
the assemblage point. Thus the average man can only see them in
dreams. She remarked that often the allies would try to announce
their presence when she spoke at the seminars, by affecting the sound
system or the lights. (She seemed genuinely unaware that they had
already done that.) It is therefore up to us to bridge the gap
between our worlds.
Taisha threw open the floor to questions, and suggested that she might
tell us some techniques for calling the inorganic beings. Someone
asked whether the allies had ever taken her to another world in her
daily awareness. Taisha replied that this was indeed possible, and
that one can actually feel the ally entering the central nervous system
by entering the base of the spine and creeping upwards. The ally then
physically transports you wherever you want to go.
Someone asked what the inorganic beings looked like--Taisha gave a
similar description to Carlos' in THE ART OF DREAMING. They are either
bell shaped, candle shaped, or like a flame.
The question was raised that since the inorganic beings are female and
live so long, did the inorganic beings reproduce at all? Taisha smiled
at the question, and said, "I don't know, I'll ask them." She then
seemed to focus internally on the question for a few seconds, smiled,
and said that they had told her that although they were capable of
reproduction, it had been eons since they had, so for all practical
purposes, the answer was no.
Someone reminded Taisha that she had said she might tell us some
techniques to call the inorganic beings. She flashed her mischievous
smile, as if to say, "Ah, I thought you'd never ask!" She then told us
several ways that this can be accomplished. The first method requires
a dowel. One rests the forehead on it in a sitting position--it is of
the length proper to where you intend to sit, in a chair or on the floor.
She said a small piece of leather or other padding can be used to prevent
you from walking around with a circle on your forehead. One then intends
the presence of an inorganic being.
The second method entails taking advantage of the earth's twilight.
This is the time that the inorganic beings are most likely to attempt
to make themselves known to us, by owl-like hoots and whistles. Taisha
reported having been admonished by the sorcerers of don Juan's group to
never whistle in the twilight, but of course she had, since she did not
share their aversion to the allies. Whistling or making strange noises
at this time of day attracts the allies' attention.
The third method requires matches. (I believe Taisha describes this
method in more detail in her book.) The idea is to strike a match, and
gaze at the flame. As the match gets half to two thirds burnt, wet the
fingers with saliva and grab the burnt end of the match, turning it
upside down so it will burn completely. At this point, the flame will
turn blue, and gazing into this flame will call an ally.
It was now Taisha's turn to exhort us not to be downhearted about our
relative lack of luck in not being in the Nagual's group. She said
that the sorcerer's world knows no favoritism, that it is up to everyone,
from the most accomplished Nagual to the most inexperienced novice, to
seize every moment and optimize every opportunity. She told us we must
be bold and daring, like bandits, willing and able to pounce upon
whatever opportunity arises. Taisha said that when she was younger,
it had been her habit to piss on her opportunities, to take them for
granted--she reminded us what don Juan liked to say about the bird of
freedom flying in a straight line. One either attaches oneself to the
bird of freedom, or it is gone forever.
She then turned us over to the Chac-Mools. The Chac-Mools reported
that the last pass we had been taught was in fact two passes, and
they had discovered that the way they had merged them was improper.
They therefore separated them into two passes, the first called
Bringing Energy form the Sides and Top to the Liver and Pancreas,
the second remaining the Five Point Connection. We practiced
the new configuration, which came easily.
We then were taught a new pass, the Being From The Ground.
This pass imitates a burrowing creature, such as a chipmunk or
groundhog. It is accompanied by making an appropriate animal face
and barking noises, and makes one feel more than a little silly;
Kylie remarked that it was great for losing self-importance.
As if in agreement from the world, I had an experience when we took a
water break. I was third or fourth in a line of eight or so thirsty
warriors at the water cooler, when a guy walked up with an empty water
bottle, went directly to the front of the line, filled it and walked
away. I was amazed at the unmitigated gall of the man, but almost
instantaneously realized that it was self-important to care. Even
though I did not feel much offended, however, I still stared at him
for a second, wondering how such a self-important person had come to
be there with us real initiates. We all have a long way to go, I
realized, myself included. I then promptly forgot the matter.
2nd Lecture -- Chac-Mools Q&A
After lunch, Carol and Florinda took the stage very briefly. Carol's
eyes were definitely blue. They thanked us for our attendance and
attention. Carol intimated that our allowing her to tell her tales
was helping her to remember. They then yielded to a question and
answer session with the Chac-Mools. These three warriors let their
guard down a bit, and seemed very forthright and accessible.
The origin of the passes was brought up. We were told that Carlos
found the passes in dreaming, which were then learned and sometimes
adapted by the Chac-Mools. We were told that each group of passes
should be performed as a group and in the same order as taught. It
was recommended that the passes be done from four to six times, and
at whatever speed one felt comfortable with.
Someone asked whether the Chac-Mools would leave this world with
Carlos' party; Kylie replied that they would or would die in the
attempt. They had put their lives on the line with their decision
to join Carlos' group. They reiterated that it is a seeming paradox
to say that infinity must be faced alone, but only because we don't
realize that we have always been in that state and always will be.
A person said that they had heard that it was recommended that the
passes not be done barefoot. Kylie said that sorcerers don't like
their feet to be uncovered, because the feet are the main point of
contact with the ground, and thus the source of possible unwanted
energetic influences.
The question was raised as to whether it was alright for us to teach
the passes to others. They replied that while they were not forbidding
it on grounds of secrecy or the like, they did not recommend it. This
was because a great deal of the instruction was given directly to the
energy body, and only someone aligned with the intent of the passes
like they are could properly give that instruction.
Kylie then started to speak about self-importance, and how it related
to the "poor me" syndrome. They stressed that it was foolish to be
jealous or covetous of their good fortune in being accepted into
Carlos' party. Sorcery was available to all of us, and the first
steps we had to deal with were the recapitulation and Tensegrity.
We each had to decide whether we really wanted to become navigators,
or would rather live in a world where people's actions are always
offensive--where we could complain that someone was not playing fair,
was richer or better looking or luckier, where we could say,
"Look at that asshole--he just cut in line." As she said that,
Kylie looked directly at me. Her gaze was ferocious but detached,
her eyes seemed abnormally large. The only thing I can compare it
to was a look I got once when my gaze locked with a huge Bengal
tiger's at a circus. I could not help but feel that her comment
was directed at me, and referring to the earlier incident, self
important as that is.
Someone asked whether the passes that had been taught at other
workshops would ever be offered again, and how could we deal with
the problem of forgetting the particulars of the movements? Nyei
said we should watch the video tapes and practice; Kylie replied
that we should intend to remember--that it was important not to
give up on a pass because we were stuck at some point. Our energy
bodies knew, and the knowledge would return to us in its own time.
During this conversation, Nyei unconsciously reverted to the hand
movements from the Being From The Ground. This coupled with
her slight (but beautiful) harelip made her seem the embodiment of a
human groundhog. Everyone laughed.
We then broke into our Tensegrity mode; I caught Nyei and asked her
if she had inferred that the videos would eventually catch up with
the workshops. She said that to some extent they probably would,
but that the passes might have evolved by then.
We then learned the final pass, the Being From The Air. This
pass replicates a bird in flight, from take-off to landing. We
reviewed all of the passes, and added in arming words of intent which
Carlos had decided should be used to increase the power of the passes.
I can only say that I felt a lot of energy as our voices simultaneously
shouted our intent.
We were told that the Tensegrity portion of the seminar was over, and
that there would be actual chairs at the lecture that evening!
Final Lecture--Carlos
The stage was moved out of the round, and chairs were set up as promised.
The first two rows were reserved, as it turned out for the members of
Carlos' party/Cleargreen (if there's any difference?) They all walked
in together, and Carlos, dressed for the first time in a suit, took the
stage.
Carlos began by saying that long ago, before history, Man discovered
many truths about the nature of awareness. These practitioners, over
time, became the people we term the old sorcerers. They saw that Man
has a fundamental difference in his luminous shell from all other
things on Earth. This is described as a sheen, a sort of superglow
on the glow of the luminous shell. The old sorcerers discovered that
the brighter and more pervasive this sheen, the greater their capacity
to handle awareness. Soon they were able to accomplish marvels.
Unfortunately, they made the mistake of pride (remember that old
Garden?) They announced themselves to the Universe, much like Little
Jack Horner, saying "Oh what a good boy am I!" What they were not
aware of was that we are not the only game in town. In fact there
are entities out there in the vastness who feed on just such a sheen
as we humans possess. One of these entities, the fliers, noticed
the old sorcerers and took us for prey. This predation continues to
this day. The form it takes is that all of the sheen of awareness
is eaten away except a small band at the foot of the luminous shell.
This is exactly the area which is conducive to self-reflection, and
thus self-importance.
In this fashion, we are in effect ranched by the fliers. The
sorcerers joke that we are kept like chickens in a coop. According to
the sorcerers, every idea, religion, nationalism, artistic statement,
etc., is fed to us or allowed by the fliers, because it keeps us busy
wrangling in our coop, over sexual, political, material dominance,
which makes their job just that much easier. Through luck, talent,
or both, a chicken may indeed escape his confinement. But the fliers
have the same philosophy about that as a human chicken farmer--it's
not worth the effort to chase him, and anyway, the cat will get him!
And this is unfortunately true, for this is, after all, a predatory
Universe. But the sorcerers have seen the way out. Discipline,
the warrior's discipline, makes the sheen of awareness unpalatable
to the fliers. Thus left free from predation, the sheen rejuvenates
as the warrior's way is followed, until finally, when the sheen
completely encases the luminous shell, one is capable of seeking
freedom.
Don Juan knew all this, but he was afraid of the inorganic beings,
and dismissed wholesale all of the old sorcerers' knowledge as
leading inevitably to entrapment in that world. He chose instead,
as was the new seers' bent, to Burn With The Fire from Within, and
go to the 360 degree world. Ironically, now he is trapped there.
Carlos, on the other hand, liked the world of the inorganic beings,
and he liked the Death Defier. Carlos reiterated how the Death Defier
had fooled the inorganic beings by becoming female. He said also that
since he is the last Nagual of don Juan's lineage, the Death Defier
will no longer be able to remain here on Earth, and has therefore
attached his destiny to that of Carlos' party. When they leave this
world, he will go with them. And Carlos intimated that it is largely
at the Death defier's behest that the magical passes are being shown.
He knows he will never return to this world, and that unless his vast
knowledge is shared now, it will be lost. As payment for the
extraordinary life he has led, he wishes to divest himself of that
knowledge. (I thought of the Biblical proverb about the camel and
the eye of the needle.) The "opening" of sorcery is a result of the
Death Defier's intent. What Carlos and company have learned is that
the inorganic beings' world is the gateway to infinity, and that Death
can be successfully kept at bay indefinitely there. It will (has?)
become for them a home base for their navigations in infinity.
Carlos recounted how he had pestered don Juan with his need to
understand the processes of sorcery before he could be expected to
use them. Don Juan laughed, and asked Carlos to tell him something
he knew was absolutely true. Carlos thought, and replied, "I know
that 2 + 2 always equals 4." Don Juan replied that this was so, but
yet Carlos had no idea what 2 was, or what 4 was, except as abstract
propositions, propositions that nevertheless could be applied to the
real world. Neither could Carlos say he understood the process of
addition, although he could mechanically manipulate it, and see
verifiable results. The sorcery practices work the same way, are
just as abstract and thus unfathomable, yet yield the same result every
time. Thus we should recapitulate and do Tensegrity, without worrying
overmuch about understanding them.
Carlos reiterated that man's exalted idealities in fact were
manipulations by the fliers. He related that he had once met Alan
Watts. Watts invited him to his home, and Carlos anticipated a wonderful
discussion. Instead, Watts asked him if he'd ever slept with a man,
and would he like to go upstairs? Carlos tried not to be offended,
and changed the subject. He told Watts that he had always admired his
views on the joining of East and West, and that as a teenager he had once
hitchhiked for miles to attend one of his lectures. Carlos said Watts
then broke into tears, saying that it was his cruel fate to have wonderful
ideas but not be able to make them come about in the real world. Then,
in the midst of his tears, he said, "Are you sure you don't want to go
upstairs?"
Carlos then opened the floor to questions. Someone said that they had
heard that he'd spoken of six Naguals he knew of, and asked him how we
could tell the real Naguals from the fakes. Carlos said that he had
never said any such thing, that in fact he had only known of one other
Nagual, a rich Mexican who once ran for the Presidency of Mexico. He
died of a heart attack while giving a speech in the campaign. Carlos
said he had been contacted by members of the Nagual's party, who asked
him what they should do now? He told them, recapitulate, lose self-
importance, etc.
Someone asked if the Earth is indeed a sentient being. Carlos replied
that this is what he had been told by his teachers.
Someone asked what chance we had without a Nagual. Carlos said that
the Nagual was only someone with extra energy which allowed him to lead.
He reiterated that personal power is what matters, and that we all have
a given finite amount. Therefore, all of the resources required to
succeed in sorcery are already possessed by each of us. The Nagual's
function is to show you his fight, and expose you to abstract affection.
He can only lead by example. The rest is and always has been up to you.
Carlos told us that don Juan had told him once that all Naguals kept a
book, a book in which they kept the important events of their lives.
He told Carlos it was time that he started his book, and asked Carlos
to try to remember a suitable tale. Carlos could not think of
anything--all of the supposedly important events in his life, such as
being accepted into UCLA grad school, didn't seem that important anymore.
He told don Juan, who laughed and said he wasn't talking about stories
that reflected Carlos' personal history, but ones that were stories of
the Spirit. He reminded Carlos of a story he'd told about a whore in
Italy.
Carlos related that he had been an art student in his youth, and had
studied in Milan. He had a friend there who was a reknowned cocksman,
and a darling of every bordello in Italy. He used to regale Carlos with
stories of his sexual adventures, and invite Carlos along, but Carlos
always refused. On one occasion, however, his friend would not be
denied. He claimed to have found the best piece of ass of all time,
and he could not live with himself if Carlos did not come and
experience it for himself. At length, more to get rid of him than
anything else, Carlos agreed. His friend took him to an ordinary-
looking bordello, and set him up with the Madame. Carlos was taken
to a room, and told that the girl would join him shortly. In a few
minutes, an older, homely looking woman came in, and said, "Ah, I
guess you've come to see my figures in front of the mirror." Carlos
guessed that he had. The whore then put a record on a photograph,
which played what to Carlos was an indescribably haunting melody.
The woman then strip-teased in front of the mirror, and that was all.
Don Juan said that this was the perfect story for Carlos' book, for it
was a true indication of the Spirit. For this is what life in the world
of self-reflection amounted to in the end, just figures in front of a
mirror.
Carlos and his party then bade us farewell.
AND NOW, A WORD FROM OUR SPONSOR.....
So. Why Tensegrity? What does it all mean? Here's what I think.
The design of the Spirit was that don Juan and his party would
mistakenly take Carlos for the next link in the continuing chain
of their lineage. Only when it was too late for them to replace
him was it revealed that this was not the case. By some untold
link with the Spirit, don Juan came to the conclusion that Carlos
should write the books, detailing the knowledge and practices of
his lineage, but only if they were accomplished in dreaming. This
was possibly used as a measure to filter out any self-importance
that might otherwise intrude. Note that it is not unprecedented
for the sorcerers' path to undergo such radical shifts. As
explained in the books, sorcery at one time was practiced overtly,
albeit from a stance of self-importance. Only when the old sorcerers
were conquered from without did sorcery become an underground movement,
pitting itself against the petty tyrants. Now it seems that sorcery
is undergoing another massive shift, back into the open, but without
the self-importance. It was stated by don Juan that the abstract flight
is nearly impossible under the best of conditions, yet a warrior with
enough personal power and impeccability would need only a single hint
at Man's possibilities to accomplish it. Therefore, as is asserted
both in the books and at the workshops, only energy matters.
As is also stated, this energy is not something found in the
outside world, it cannot be gathered or stolen. We are all born
with what we're going to get. The goal of living the warrior's way
is to redistribute that energy from useless tasks like upholding our
exalted self-image and to put it at the service of knowledge. At a
given point in a warrior's life, the energy scales are tipped and
sorcery becomes pragmatically available. Every technique of the
warrior's way is aimed at accomplishing this energy redistribution.
Given that the lineage has apparently met its end in Carlos and his
immediate party, Carlos has decided to give the world a cubic
nanometer of chance to realize Man's possibilities. The point being,
we have always had little or no chance, so the fact that our odds may
not be much improved by Tensegrity is of no consequence. Nuthin' from
nuthin' leaves nuthin'. Controlled folly.
The passes can obviously be taught via videotape. So why the lectures,
and the books? What part does Reason play in all of this? Only this,
in my understanding--to convince ourselves that sorcery may be worth
the effort. It is the act of recapitulation, of Tensegrity, of living
like a warrior that moves us toward the goal of the abstract flight.
Understanding is not required, and perhaps not even possible. We are
dealing with the mystery of the Universe here, and it is Man's self-
importance that makes us feel entitled to an answer to the Grand "Why?".
However, we must rationally make the decision to make the attempt.
Our bodies, energy and otherwise, want us to make that decision. So we
talk about it amongst ourselves at home or on the net, and listen avidly
to the tales of power of the sorcerers. The important thing is to
remember that it is ALL folly, and keep our folly under control. To
act as though we believed when in fact we believe nothing. As I
understand it, this is the road to power. Not over others, but
ourselves. For it is only we who need to be convinced that we are
all by our very nature sorcerers. And this is the relevant point --
no longer can we wait for a personal Nagual to come and lead us by
the nose, with power plants, secret caves, visits from allies,
etc. It is up to us, in the full light of Reason and assuming total
personal responsibility, to either leave sorcery as a fascinating tale,
or live it as the moment to moment battle for our very existence that
it is. The Rule was made to be broken, and the proof is in the pudding.
In this predatorial Universe, only those who can adapt to changing
conditions will survive. Same as it ever was.
"Life could be a dream, sweetheart..."
With permission from: http://members.aol.com/saucerer/tens.html
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