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Monday, February 28, 2022

Guided By Memory, a Tintinnabulum to Ward Our Studies

I really hope Bobby is okay with me using this.


Editor's Note: Nothing will ever be "sharp" with me, angels know nothing of Time.

We will begin with the beginning- with the six quotes especially included in the Hilaritas Press edition of Sex, Drugs & Magick as well as Rasa and Christina's Foreword to the Forewords/Afterwords to the 2021 Edition. 

My memories of Sex, Drugs & Magick are appropriately hazy. For many years, I kept it as a constant resource, constantly referencing chapters three and four while occasionally revisiting the interludes. I can vividly remember the sense of pure disgust I always felt at the denouement of the "Slouching Towards Bethlehem: The Story of Leonard." I can also vividly remember how Wilson guided me to an understanding of the Ninth Degree Ritual of the O. T. O.. Teaching moments that are buried deep inside whatever construct I am after years of trying to be something beyond the realm of the rational. My New Falcon copy is properly tatty at this point, so I am glad to have another before me. 

At first, I avoided this book. I wasn't interested in the "drugs" part and believed that I could entirely avoid the "drugs" side of sex, drugs and magic. Which is entirely laughable, almost Shakespearian in how my prudish, classist conceit was brought to its knees by the sweet, smokey lure of chronic cannabis usage. Reading Sex, Drugs and Magick probably became viable because of an early, overly-solemn, in only the way a young magician can be, wintertime experience with psychedelic mushrooms. And then a further three experiments, in quick succession, over the Spring. Because of one of the authors quoted in the first pages of the text that we are beginning to explore, I somehow believed it was more responsible for me to try psychedelic mushrooms than smoke a joint- I was, and continue to be, very dumb. But I did the mushrooms and as I geared up I excused myself to watch something, I wasn't quite sophisticated enough yet to remember to memorize Crowleyean rituals beforehand- ha! What I watched was Moore's eulogy for Wilson, given in London a few months after our Great Human's Great Feast.  Later that night the world fell apart and I heard the story of Tulsi Das and His Monkey Army. Good stuff. (Moore)

So months later, after reconciling myself with what I had perceived as the rambling and hippy-dippy language of Illuminatus! and Promethea, I read Sex, Drugs and Magick. There were secrets here, primed to slip into a spellbook; descriptions of potent drugs and the states of consciousness they could engender. Lush historiography of mankind's gropes towards ἐλευθερία  (eleutheriacoupled with suspension-of-disbelief-requiring accounts of its grand, occult successes.  Is it crude, bold and somewhat foolish compared to Wilson's later writing? Sure, but that's why I love pre-Illuminatus!-being-published-by-Dell RAW. He was brash and silly and full of It. He had the broken spectre and glory of a newborn magician. Wilson the Magician. I wouldn't argue that this is our closest contact with that persona, but I would argue it is one of the more straightforward. 

I started smoking cannabis on the reg a few months after reading Wilson, and almost wouldn't have been ready for it. I wasn't ready to have that many laughs with my friends. It was a brilliant blanket experience that spread over me and filled my mind with a royal road that united disparate sections of myself- the euphoric, the abstract, the mundane and the foolish. I am a being of smoke whose pleasure imitates the Prophet's, peace be upon Him, in that I love, above all things, perfume, prayer and women (woman) with the addendum of certain drugs. (The Koran, as well as the Bible, is imminently more entertaining and lucid under the influence of THC. I believe, if hazy memory serves, this is mentioned in Sex, Drugs and Magick.) Needless to say, all I have said in this paragraph is entirely based on my own experience and mileage may vary. (Marincolo) (Thompson) 

I have changed since the last time I read Sex, Drugs & Magick. Changed in many ways. The cannabis abuse still remains; I find myself in complete agreement with Alan Moore's alter ego in Jerusalem,  Alma Warren, that "anyone who doesn't think marijuana is addictive isn't trying hard enough." The magic remains; I will bang my head against this door until it cracks. The sex, thankfully and improbably, continues- which is more than I deserve. If someone were to ask me what was good about life, I would easily answer "sex, drugs and magic." Still can't mark the purpose, not yet. But with these tools, these necessary cyborg tools that cling and peel from our innermost selves, we continue to grope towards something beautiful, something harmonious, something immortal. That's the Art that we all strive for- life is nothing less than drudgery without that hard-pressed vintage of the human imagination, that faculty which brushes against the (underbelly?) of something greater and grander than our fleeting impressions. (Eno) (Havens) (Crowley)

Thus do I end my catechism. 

And, according to Christina and Rasa's promising words, we will be treated to the reflections of eight, much more impressive, magicians by the time we are done with this fanned-out edition of Wilson's tome- written during the tumult of the counter-Revolution and the first nuclear-blast blindness of the post-Sixties era--in this blessed year of Our Lord 2022. The world has changed--I have changed--since this was published last year and it landed in my hands. I wonder how we shall change before we have concluded. 

(Havens)



10 comments:

  1. Nice post. Coincidentally, Mohammed's "perfume, prayer, and women" came up in my Ibn 'Arabi study group last Sunday.

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  2. Not only okay with, but actively enthusiastic about!
    Keep up the Great Work :)))

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  3. Great to have this new reading group starting, many thanks Apuleuis!

    I really enjoyed The Mindscape of Alan Moore documentary, found it to be so much more than just about Moore the comic books artist.
    And Brian Eno definitely is a favorite of mine. Always a pleasure to start the day to the sound of his ambient albums.

    I usually consume cannabis daily. Unlike Marincolo, I would not say that it helps me to focus, but I can agree with most of the rest. I would also add that in my case, it appears to sort of put a lid on the mind. Every now and then, I find myself in a situation where access to THC cannot happen, and I usually feel fine about it. But 2 to 3 weeks without, and I start noticing myself being much more nervous and anxious. At the same time, I do not enjoy being high all day as it just makes me feel tired and unproductive. Different people reacts differently, I guess.

    Goddess only knows how the world will look like in a few months, when we're done here. With so much chaos around, and increasingly so, I wonder what a good Discordian answer could be...
    Fifty years later, perhaps we need back this mantra:
    DROP ACID NOT BOMBS

    And as RAW to Arlen, blessed be...
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WDyNT43wiRw

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    Replies
    1. I'm curious to know what kind of strains you indulge in? The results you describe sound like what I experience with Indica heavy stains, whereas I experience Sativa always as a kind of Acid Light.

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    2. Hmm. I'm new to this and thought I was signed in. My name's Jamey Heather, but it's showing up as "unknown". Sorry 'bout that....

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    3. I think you might have to create a blogger account to have a name or nickname to appear. Perhaps you can also sign in with a google account or something. While on some other blogspots it is just fine to not log in and still write comments using a nickname, I know I created an account specifically for the previous reading group here.

      An issue with consumming cannabis in a country where it still is illegal is that one is not always very clear about which strain one is getting. Besides, most by now are hybrids with a high THC content, which somehow renders the kind of strain less important. On average it seems to me to be sativa dominant, though.

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    4. Yup, looks like I do need to create a blog account. One of the nicest things when they legalized pot in OR was knowing the strain. For me, the high THC content still has different effects depending on the strain. But I can only speak for myself, of course. Most o my friends don't seem to care....

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  4. Thanks for opening this discussion.

    Interesting how times have changed since the first publication of Sex Drugs & Magick. Getting caught with a joint could land you in jail. Now we can openly talk about different strains of the glorious weed having a different effect. The intelligent use of drugs and sex, beyond painkillers and procreation, did not find many forms of expression at the time, this book seemed a god-send full of practical, useful information like how to handle a psychedelic trip that feels a little too intense.

    Sex and Drugs: A Journey Beyond Limits, as the book was originally called, gives a sense of hedonistic pleasure seeking and indulgence of the type that usually leads to over-indulgence, because where else can you go? Wilson's original title Sex Drugs and the Occult got vetoed by Hefner. The current title seems the most accurate and represents the ambition, evident in the text, to connect sex and drugs with self-determined brain-change, transformation, and higher modes of consciousness. That implies connecting sex and drugs with a discipline, connecting them with discipline to achieve the aims of magick, to be who you are and do what you do.

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  5. @Spookah: Yes, when marijuana is legal the buyer can pick which strain to buy and has many consumer choices, but perhaps an even bigger reason to legalize it is health and safety -- when you buy in a regulated marketplace, you know what you are getting, and you don't have to worry about pesticides or other drugs being mixed in.

    This is an underrated aspect of the harm done by the war on drugs. Using heroin would be a dangerous hobby even if it were legal, but when it's illegal, buyers never know whether it's laced with fentanyl or something else. A lot of the "heroin overdoses" in the U.S. are because of fentanyl contamination.

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  6. @Eric and Bobby- Thank you both!

    @Spookah- I find that most of the time I can concentrate if I decide to do so. I find reading certain material much more engrossing and "alive" under the effect of cannabis.

    @Unknown- Welcome, and I'm sorry for the technical problems. I live in an uncivilized and barbaric land so I can't talk to strain varieties too much.

    @Oz- The original title was certainly meant to titillate. I always liked that Hef said he wouldn't include "Magick/the Occult" because only housewives were interested in that shit. Discipline is all important. Routine is a powerful magic word.

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