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Title: Folk Magic as Insurrection Author: Dr. Bones Date: December 15th 2015 Language: en Topics: Egoist-Communist, spirituality. Magic, paganism, Insurrection, Occult, liberation, witchcraft Source: https://web.archive.org/web/2020*/http://godsandradicals.org/2015/12/16/folk-magick-as-insurrection/
âFor me, wherever I go, I know my natural and eternal environment, and I
know it as part of me and me of it. Beyond whatever we think, there is a
darkly glimmering mystery far beyond reason and sanity, but full of the
wholeness of beauty. It perpetually sustains and bestows all things with
their own nature and being- perfectly, fully and without need for
further elaboration or rectification. This is the sorcerous conception
of deity.ââ Robin Artisson, The Toadbone Treatise
Itâs December and the air is warm here.
I peer out my window with drink in hand, watching the blood-splashed sun
collapse beyond the horizon and into the highway. For a moment I relish
being in a State where drinking a lime-juice cocktail isnât a desperate
plea for warmer days. Here winter never comes, and as such, we never
need to change our tastes to heartier or heavier food and drink.
The Southeast is the only home Iâve known: a land of sweltering heat,
mosquitoes the size of your arm, and uninterrupted madness via Florida
Man. Where I dwell is nothing special: an average middle class town, the
wonder and mystery of the city far away and only faintly sensed. The
hustle and bustle of modern living remains only a faint rumor on the
wind. Life moves along uninterrupted, save for twinges of change here
and there. I can imagine such a life would not be enough for some, and
truthfully itâs not enough for me. But in the meantime, thereâs no rush;
I drink deeply from the land and Spirits around me.
I think about Gordonâs piece on Natural Magic, the equation of
Self+Spirit World+Place. It rings true to me. I think about the natural
world around me, my own slice of it. Underneath the regular suburban
dregs still beats the heart of that wild Florida, in every thicket and
every wood. In them Iâve rattled open doorways between realms in areas
smaller than some public parks, Iâve spoken with Swamp Spirits and
learned the unspoken keys to plant identification, and Iâve traded
payment and favors with the local Dead and seen them manifest right
before my eyes. All these things happened in my hometown not in spite of
it, but through it.
The great lesson of Folk Magick has always been that magick was right at
hand, that you didnât need a library of books or special clothes and
wands to do it. In Hoodoo a quick trip to the grocery store and some
significant places around town will allow you to hurl just about
anything at people. When Iâm particularly stuck for an ingredient I
always go Journeying into the Spirit World and ask my friends there what
might do the trick. And often the most powerful gifts are the simplest.
I came to read playing cards, to cast my eyes into the twisting nether
realm of probability and possibility not through some online course nor
through paid lessons from a teacher. I went down to the crossroads for
nine nights around 11:45pm and called out to the One Who Dwells There to
teach me, the only sacrifice being the time I spent there. And teach me
He did. I found whole new ways of looking at the cards, as books and
ideas seemed to drop into my view from all over; I read what I could,
but the biggest advances seemed to come from just being out there, alone
and in the dark, hearing whispers in my head and seeing symbols dance
before my eyes. I read the cards now with great accuracy, with my window
into the shifting seas of potentiality amounting to an admission fee of
one dollar.
Often in life our own worlds can seem disenchanted, our existences too
far away from any of âthe actionâ to feel meaningful. As in spirituality
so too in politics: the same way my heart longs to stir up the dead in
St. Augustine it flutters at thoughts of joining in armed resistance
somewhere in the streets of Rojava; as I ponder the possibilities of
protective mojos made and blessed with the dirt from Castillo de San
Marcos, I wonder what revolutionary potential I could add to the
peopleâs struggles in Baltimore, Oakland, Chiapas, and Greece. Economics
and familial ties, at least for the moment, always get the upper hand.
But I do not rest on my laurels. I read, I study, I speak with those
around me. I consider myself the advance guard, the agent behind enemy
lines. I gather folks of like mind around me and we plan, we plot, we
create pockets of resistance and freedom. We are the first cells of the
revolution you see, mitochondria that will one day evolve into a greater
being. We put pamphlets, we put up posters, we engage in Direct Action.
Rather then wait for âTHE Revolutionâ Iâll do what I can here and now,
building âthe new world in the shell of the old.â
Those that simply wait for monumental change, or worse vote in the hopes
it will come, display a distinctly unmagical air about them: they donât
believe anything can change unless everything does, they canât imagine
that their actions could move even the tiniest mole hill, they huff that
the time is never quite ripe, that until some Unknown Messiah arrives
weâd best simply hope for change.
Surely we, through direct experience, know better then this?
Canât a hidden gesture or half-mumbled phrase move someoneâs mind? Wonât
a fervent prayer, a simple oil, and an intensity of Will attract unseen
hands to guide you? Doesnât the simplest mix of red pepper, black
pepper, and sulpher cause the flames of hell to leap up at our command?
You canât have it both ways: either you and your allies can literally
shift the movinâ and shakinâs of the luck plane as well as this artifice
we call physical reality, or itâs all a sham.
I donât know about you but Iâve got notebooks filled with proof that
what we deem âinevitableâ or âunmalleableâ is plainly not so.
Magic presupposes we can change the foundations of the world around us.
Why do our political beliefs so often not follow this maxim? Why are we
waiting for some Vanguard, some Party, some Candidate, to rip up the
noxious weeds of Capitalism and The State? Did we come by any of our
magical knowledge by waiting or did we simply go out and start doing
what we could? Wasnât every bump in the road a lesson, every victory a
confirmation that even against the odds we can win?
My tradition courses through the land and was born in struggle: against
the State, against the Boss, against the Police. Under candle light and
shroud of burning herbs I can feel the air thick with those that
whispered or sang prayers in other times; they know, they understand:
the battles may be different, the symbols may have changed, but the
struggle has not. Candle flames burst with the same heat and energy
raging away in my heart, teeth gritting in Nietzschean Will to change
the world and break anything that stands in my way. Road Opener work or
Revolution, whatâs the difference?
My tradition is not alone: anyone laying hands on the practical magic of
the past is touching a Peopleâs History. You did what you could with
what you had on hand, including whatever ghosts and goblins happened to
be around. These people were in the same boat we are: under the heel of
an oppressive state apparatus, one that could kill them at any time, all
for the service of an economic elite. They too watched an increasing
portion of all the value they created get siphoned away, hunger pangs
and anxiety the mother of many a prosperity spell. Any good witchcraft
carries with it the sublime scent of necessity; by the time youâre in
the woods at midnight making pacts with unseen things itâs safe to say
the usual channels of change have been blocked.
What else is magic but the metaphysical embodiment of Anarchism, of
politics on a spiritual plane? That YOU could defy the laws of the
âLordâ and make new arrangements for yourself, that YOU could gain
insights and knowledge beyond your âstationâ in life, that YOU neednât
wait for someone to save you because you were going to save YOURSELF?
Isnât that what Sorcery is all about? Wasnât it a battle against the
dragon Zarathustra spoke about, the one that must be defeated, that must
be slain?
âWho is the great dragon whom the spirit will no longer call lord and
god? âThou shaltâ is the name of the great dragon. But the spirit of the
lion says, âI will.â âThou shaltâ lies in his wayâŠâ
The day is dead now, street lights and shabby store signs acting as
artificial suns. The lights manage to keep the hum-drum thoughts of day
still near, a collective religious belief in the firm and unvarying
nature of reality, that nothing has nor will it ever change. The lights
bring stability and safety. In this warm paradise where winter never
comes itâs easy to believe the lie that most things are unwavering, that
some things just stay the same.
For instance, global capitalism or a clientâs bad luck?
But I have neither the time nor the inclination for such adult bed-time
stories. I close the blinds and set about the work of changing the world
around me. To succumb to the thoughts of static existence, of even
settled accounts is preposterous. I call out to the Unseen with
techniques and tricks propelled into the future by the most
disadvantaged in this region while the plantations of the past have gone
from places of frightening power to mere relics. While others buy and
sell my soul flies right down to the primal, throbbing tap-root of the
land around me; what was once an altar in any other townhouse becomes
the Crossroads of All Existence; my voice no longer my own, my body
wracked with spasms, I become a conduit for things that others claim
canât or shouldnât exist.
Impossible? Canât? Wonât? Shouldnât? All these words are nothing to me!
There is only The Will.
And if you Will it, it is no dream.