From: lgt1@unix.york.ac.uk (Laurence Tyler) Subject: Re: Alternatives to Drugs Date: 7 Mar 1994 22:15:43 GMT james.a.parker (jap@cbnews.cb.att.com) wrote: > Someone I am working with does not know how to open herself to > spiritual experiences without using psychoactive drugs. She very > much wishes to learn to do so without needing the drugs as a crutch. > I would very much appreciate any practical advice I could pass on. And also: Alexander Walker (walkea@vccnorthd.its.rpi.edu) wrote: > Lots of trappings tend to induce an altered state of conciousness > proper for working magick (in my experience). This sounds like good advice. Your friend may be finding things are too 'flat' without chemical aid, and adding a lot of drama and trappings might very well help there. Even more so, I would suggest, if worked with other people there who are experienced in 'unassissted' workings. They could take the lead and help provide your friend with a higher level of external stimulus and so help energy to start flowing. If your friend gets the well-known 'hair-raising' feeling during the working it's probably going well. Another suggestion might be to take themselves well away from their day-to-day environment, such as finding a sunny wood and walking in it for a few hours, preferably away from paths and other people, and just BE-ing. I would suggest to your friend that in such a time/place it's easier to tap into mindsets and ways of seeing things that have been a profound part of their previous experiences and to pull them into the present situation. The knowing, the seeing, and the magic are all still there to be reclaimed - it's just that they are more subtle when operating without special aids. Maybe your friend could find something material to use as a trigger or key to their previous experience, such as a smell of incense/flowers/wood, particular music, special clothes, something that they associate with their past experiences, and use it to help foster the spiritual/magical atmosphere. In time, of course, your friend should be able to discard these props as well, and get straight to the heart of things. Good luck to them! Laurence. -- Laurence Tyler (Systems Group) University of York Computing Service, UK email: lgt1@unix.york.ac.uk