Hermetic Philosophy, Theory and Symbols

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Failing to rise above the field of experimental findings, we have ceased to understand the ancient authors which were based on rational laws of all existence. Their theories about nature and secrecy of its operations appear to us as childish vain; thus the Hermetic Philosophy is in our eyes a tissue of dreams, like alchemy seems definitively relegated to the burial of dead science.  But a particular cause was mainly motivated strikes discredit the doctrines popular in the Middle Ages until the eighteenth century: we lost the key to the language used to express them.The way we talk nowadays is quite different. It was not known previously to serve us our claims rigorously precise terms: approximations would suffice, because the simple truth is fatally inexpressible. The ideal of True will be imprisoned in any form. As a result, a certain kind, every word is a lie, since only imperfectly expresses the idea that it should be translated. The intimacy of thought, its basic spirit is elusive, it is a divinity that escapes continually and agrees that at most times be reflected in the images. As Moses, to whom Jehovah was not able to show that back. 

Figurative language had to be used whenever it came to take shape transcendental notions. This is not a whim. Pure thought comes to us veiled; but her veil is transparent to discern who knows.

Hermeticism is for thinkers that innate vocation grows any further. The universal laws of generation, conservation and transformation of beings can only be represented by patterns including a superficial mind can not grasp the scope. Also the teaching of sages remains unintelligible to which stops outside the meaning of words; but it is for everyone to learn by himself, drawing three words of the Gospel:

Ask the Light and you will receive;
Seek truth and you will find;
Knock on the door of the Temple and the door will be opened.

TRIA-PRIMA

THE TRADITION  

Faith and Philosophy. – Gnosis. – Hermeticism. The slaves of the letter. – The contemporary occultism.

Alexandria was once the intellectual capital of the ancient world. Famous schools are attracted sages of all nations: the East and West met in this cosmopolitan center that put in contact Phoenicia, Chaldea, Persia and India with classical Greece, Rome and Gaul . All these countries brought the religious and scientific traditions before the throne of the Ptolemies. Hellenized Jews translated their Bible, which was first made available to the Gentiles by the so-called Septuagint. The Babylonian Berosus produced a similar úuvre by recording everything he knew about his homeland. Valuable lessons were thus collected from all quarters and compared. We tried to coordinate in a philosophical synthesis which, while remaining unfortunately only the state of Nien draft nonetheless exerted a powerful influence on the development of Christianity. 

It was initially recruited from sincere people, but little light. The early Christians were ardent spirits hit the vices of their time they intended to fix. In their secret meetings, they seemed to conspire against the established institutions: they feared them as wild revolutionaries, enemies of all social hierarchy. They proclaimed men equal before one God, and admit a supernatural revelation, made accessible to all by faith. Any independent search for truth became their reprehensible eyes, as well as the arts and sciences of the pagans.

To these men of action tightly disciplined, these advocates of democratic equality thrust into the field of intelligence, opposed much harmless dreamers. They called themselves gnostics and pretended initiated into the mysteries of the ancient hierophants. Cultivating knowledge accessible only to the elite minds they boasted of having the most hidden secrets of nature; also, on occasion, they showed theurgists and therapists. The Christians were in their eyes dangerously fanatical ignorant they despised rudeness; meanwhile, they indulged in subtle speculations without managing to agree on a uniform doctrine. Every follower of Gnosis aspired to become direct confidant of divinity and, therefore, did not believe in himself. Gnosticism is thus divided into a multitude of sects giving the show a complete intellectual anarchy. 

Gnostic Christians and necessarily had to fight. The fight lasted but the victory was a foregone discipline and many. Become great, the Christian party triumphed definitively upon the conversion of Constantine. Now implacable toward his adversaries, he outlawed all that was connected to the old cults and especially persecuted the followers of Gnosis.

Hounded as heretics, they had to hide their doctrines under the guise thicker veils.

Thus were born the secret or occult, an ingenious symbolism hidden from prying curiosity. One of these is alchemy, art metallic transmutations, which served as a frame to a whole vast system of allegories. We designed the mystical metallurgical, modeled on those operations that nature does in living beings. Deep Life Science hidunder special symbols; she tried to solve the most perplexing puzzles and sought the foundations of the Universal Medicine. 

It was to remedy all ills, both those of the mind and soul than those of the body, moreover, it was for him to heal social ills as the infirmities of isolated individuals.

All these benefits were related to the preparation of the Elixir of Life and the famous Philosopher’s Stone. The followers were seeking a way to ensure that all beings unalterable health and put man free from all miseries. To this end, they proposed to lead everything to the degree of perfection of which it is capable; it is what they called turn lead into gold. They practiced the Great Art, Art par excellence, or Art of ancient priestly and royal insiders; in their capacity as priests, they interpreted the laws of universal harmony, they applied as kings. 

Such grand designs are popping too narrow skulls. All alchemists were not men of genius: greed aroused gold diggers closed at any esoteric;they took at face value, so their extravagances were soon no bounds.

While vulgar blowers indulged in this incoherent kitchen which freed later if modern chemistry, philosophers worthy of the name, friends of the intrinsic wisdom, cared for “separate the subtle from the gross with delicacy and a rare prudence “, as recommended by the Emerald Tablet of Hermes Trismegistus: rejecting the dross from the dead letter they retained the quickening spirit of the teaching of teachers.  Butthe public has been confused with the wise fools He bloc rejects everything that is not in its most immediate significance or has not received the stamp of the pontiffs who captured his confidence. 

However, among our contemporaries, some adventurous spirits dared to enter the catacombs of lost traditions. The way was opened by Eliphas Levi (Abbe Constant A.-L.), of which Mr Stanislas de Guaita in its tests cursed Sciences and Serpent of Genesis reveals the most brilliant disciple.

This research has extreme importance of the therapeutic point of view occult. They have appreciate treaties Alchemy, which decrypts again, despite their figurative style to excess.

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THREE PRINCIPLES  

The light. – Sulphur, Mercury and Salt. – The Azoth of the Sages. – The Binary and conciliation.

Hermeticism first traces the origin of all things to radiation which starts simultaneously from everywhere: it is the infinite Light, AOR Ensoph the Kabbalists (Alchemical theories were summarized with remarkable clarity in 1864, for the first Dr. Ch. Vauréal in his Essay on history ferments, doctoral thesis which then caused a sensation within the Faculty of Medicine of Paris). 

This creative light emanating from a center that is located nowhere, but that each be found in himself.

Considered in its omnipresent unit, center is the source of all existence, of all thought and all life. 

It manifests itself in beings as the focus of their expansive energy, which seems to refer to an internal fire, which would be maintained by what the alchemists call their SULPHUR.

But Central ardor for each result to be a refraction him to ambient light, crack is eager to penetrate the body and represents the influences on them from outside.  Thus the Light-Principle is manifested in relation to beings as two opposite aspects: it converges to the center under the MERCURY name, and it radiates from this radical home as sulphurous fumes.

Mercury therefore refers to what goes and what comes out at Sulphur; but input and output assume a stable container which is what remains, i.e., the SALT.

All that is relatively fixed results from a balance struck between the expansion and sulphurous mercurial compression. Salt is a bright condensation produced by the interference of two opposite radiation; it is the receptacle that seeps mercurial mind to excite the sultry heat. 

In all that can be seen as a distinction exists of necessity Sulphur, Mercury and Salt; for one can not imagine anything that would have its own substance (salt), to be simultaneously subject to internal influences (Sulphur) and external (Mercury).

Considered in its universality, as spread everywhere ether that penetrates all things, Mercury takes the name of Azoth of the Sages. That’s when the divine breath (Ruach Elohim) that Genesis shows us moving on the face of the waters, which are represented by the Salt.  Originally all lies in Ashdod; but by the operation of the divine Spirit the Word is incarnated in an immaculate Virgin, who gave birth to the Redeemer. This is none other than the Will harmonized particularly with the General Will; Sulphur is allied to Mercury in a perfectly purified salt.  This alliance allows individuality to conquer the fullness of being, of life and thought; because individuals do exist, live and think only insofar as they manage to assimilate líêtre life and thinking of the community to which they belong. We are nothing by ourselves: everything comes from the great All. Man must therefore seek to unite closely to the permanent source of all things. 

But the intimacy of a similar union depends on the degree of purity which is worn Salt. This explains the importance attached to the purifications of all time, who still hold today a prominent place in ritualism of Freemasonry.

The predominance of Sulphur exalts individual initiative and results in manly qualities energy, enthusiasm, courage, boldness, pride, taste of command. It grows to create, invent; it encourages the movement, action, and door to give rather than to receive; also the man is based there unless the woman on the receptive faith: he prefers to develop his own ideas rather than to assimilate those of others.

Mercury develops instead the feminine virtues: gentle, quiet, shy, caution, modesty, resignation, obedience. It does not make inventive, but it gives the ability to understand, to guess and feel delicately; it is more like the rest, especially that of the mind; absorbed in reverie and vagrancy imagination.

As for salt, it creates balance, weight, stability; it is the middle one conciliator rightly took as the key symbol of wisdom.

Some More Trees of Life

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This is the Tree, showing the BOTA Tarot Keys on the 22 Paths.   Each of the 10 Sefiroth and the 22 Paths is a living Intelligence, a manifestation of the One, in the many coloured dream-coat of Life.

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And here is the Tree’s upper Face, like a map, with my own Tarot Arcana (1991) on the paths

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Trees of Life as cosmic model, showing the anatomy of a musical idea, and the sensory download of our physical world

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“A Tree of Life”:  the children of all the world;  each of us in our first-personhood the Seer, Malkuth;  the infinite Earth, or space for the other(s) to happen in.   This is one of my illustrations in Catherine Harding’s book Pierrot – the Explorers of the Real World – inspired by the late Douglas Harding’s life and work – On Having No Head.

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The Rose of the…

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Daily Chabad

RIGHT-TRACK

Continuously Everywhere …

There are no things. The experience of a world of static objects is an illusion. There are only words—a constant flow of meaning generating an entire universe anew at every moment.

There is no world. Abandon the notion that there is a G‑d who created a world outside of Himself as an artisan fashions an artifact.

There is only the energy of being, flowing continuously outward from the Source of Being, investing within countless strata of being, until ultimately crystallizing as our material reality.

Which means that if for a moment that current would cease, all of existence would cease with it. There would be no matter, no laws of physics, no fields of energy or dimensions of space. Not only would all these be gone, they would never have been, for time itself would be erased.

And if the current would begin again, in some different way than it was before, then the world would be a new world and the past would be a new past.

Which means that there is no room for worry or despair, and neither is there anything that can defeat your purpose. For you are intimately entwined in a bond of love with that Source of Being, and from there, at any moment, all of past, present and future can be annulled and created anew.

Shaar Hayichud Veha-emunah, chapter 1. Tzavaat Harivash 137

Tarot Attributes on the Tree of Life, by Rev. Marek Bazgrzacki

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The use of the Tarot fitted in nicely with the poem’s themes of the Fisher King and the Grail myths. A.E. Waite, a Grail obsessive, had worked numerous Arthurian figures and symbols into the highly popular 1910 Waite Smith Tarot deck. Along with the grail iconography Waite added aspects of the Christian Cabala and Hebrew Kabbalah, Gnosticism, Rosicrucianism and ancient Egyptian symbology into the deck [11]. This was done as part of a ambitious synthesis of the various occult traditions, a task undertaken by the grandly self-titled Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, a group in which A.E. Waite was a key member. The Waite Smith Tarot was the first deck to have the 22 cards of the major arcana and the 4 suits, each of 14 of the minor arcana cards fully illustrated, a companion guidebook The pictorial key to the Tarot was published alongside the deck with full explanations of the cards.

AE-WaiteFrom the mid-nineteenth century onward the 22 cards of the major arcana had become increasingly associated with the concept of pathways and the 22 letters of the Hebrew alphabet within the Kabbalist ‘tree of life’ and ‘by 1890 Kabbalistic teaching was integral to Tarot design’ [12]. As a body of knowledge the Kabbalah has its origins in Hebrew oral tradition, scriptures and Jewish rabbinical writing. Its early history is unclear, but it developed further between the 7th and 18th centuries. Its formative texts include the Zohar and Sefer Yetzirah.  A key point in its development was the writing of Etz Ha-Chaim, “The Tree of Life” by Chaim Vital in the 1590s, based on the teachings of Rabbi Isaac Luria. The concept of the tree of life entered a variety of Western esoteric traditions, being taken up by the Golden Dawn and their Hermetic Qabalah.

Allusions to the components and structures of the tree of life with its alphabetised pathways and the use of kabbalistic allegory has a long tradition in Jewish and European literature.

Consisting of ten interconnected sefira (plural sefirot), the tree of life is arranged vertically into three columns or pillars: the left hand pillar, the pillar of mercy, representing the principles of benevolence; the right hand pillar, the pillar of severity, power and strict justice; while the central pillar, representing harmony and the ideal balance of mercy and justice, uniting and balancing the two sides. Each of the sefirot has an associated vice and virtue and like a snakes and ladders board, the vices and virtues form gateways and trapdoors between the sefirot.

Though each sefira is as important as the rest, the tree is arranged hierarchically into the four overlapping worlds of the Kabbalah, a ladder from the physical to the metaphysical, a ladder that one may both ascend and descend, a ladder made up of the 22 pathways.

hebrew tarotThe ten sefirot of the tree of life may have had their origins as representations of the metaphysical but they can be used as templates for personality traits, states of mind, or the developmental ages of man and are in some ways similar to Jungian archetypes. These templates are subtler than cartoon stereotypes or the motions of type-cast character actors, coming from a deep tradition influencing literary culture as well folk and pop psychology.

Each of the 22 pathways is associated with a letter of the Hebrew alphabet. The names of the letters have literal meanings e.g. the word aleph, the name of the Hebrew character ? also has the literal meaning of ‘ox’. Each of the 22 pathways is also associated with one of the 22 Tarot cards of the Major Arcana. In the tarot tradition these have a recognized set of attributes and symbolic and mythic associations and cards will often have links and relationships to other cards in the deck. Though the cards often represent characters they should not be seen solely in those terms, rather they present situations or dilemmas within a plot, situations that the protagonists must overcome, being integral rather than part of a parallel narrative structure. The cards, like panels from a graphic novel are dealt, interpreted and stitched into a storyboard.

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For a detailed reference on each of the Major and Minor Arcana, access our Resources link here.

The Kabbalistic Tree of Life, by Z’ev ben Shimon Halevi

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Existence is governed by a simple set of basic laws. The first is that there is a unity between ten essential principles, with twenty-two minor laws that allow them to interact. Like other esoteric systems, the Tree has active and passive pillars with a central column of equilibrium. Within this scheme are various activities, levels and flows that lie behind every entity in the universe. The book sets out to show how this is so.

Next comes a brief history of Kabbalah starting from Biblical times to show how the Tree has its origin in the seven-branched candlestick in the Tabernacle and the Temple. It then goes on to explain how Hellenic ideas influenced this mythological version of the tradition. In the Middle Ages Kabbalah appeared as a solution in the debate between religion and philosophy then going on and had much influence upon European mysticism.

The origin and purpose of Existence is then presented in the emanation of the ten sefirot or numbers and the unfolding of the Lightning Flash of the Octave that brings the Tree into being. Then comes the notion that a human being is a microcosm of Existence. Each individual person is an image of the Absolute in miniature. The composition and dynamics of the psyche are seen in modern terms. This is followed by a study of the planetary archetypes and the relationship between Kabbalah and Astrology, the ancient form of psychology, and the influence of celestial conditions on the mind. The image of the Zodiacal Man resembles at a lower level that of Adam Kadmon, the Divine Man seen sitting on the Throne of Heaven, set in a great chariot of Ezekiel’s vision. Both these traditions root back to Abraham’s home city of Ur in ancient Mesopotamia. Included in this section is an example of how a birth chart can be put on the Tree diagram to get a deeper insight.

The idea of the four Worlds within one Tree is then explored to show the various levels within a human being, as symbolised by the garments worn by the Israelite High Priest. These correspond to the physical, psychological, spiritual and Divine dimensions within ourselves. The triads within the Tree and the Octave are explored to reveal ascending and descending processes and the purpose of the various functions as regards the body, soul and spirit. This is followed by an exposition of the paths between the sefirot and how the flows from one to another can bring about balance or imbalance between different parts of the psyche and indeed the body, which may also be seen as a Tree. The Hebrew letters associated with the paths and the Tarot are then set out on the Tree to show how each symbol represents a specific function.

The next section is about practice and application of the Tree. First comes an exercise in a form of a simple ritual in which one ‘goes up the Tree’. This, if done with the right frame of mind in a quiet place, will give one a sense of the Tree within oneself and be a reference point in any mystical experience, as well as in understanding any particular situation in terms of the Tree diagram. This exercise should be practised from time to time to accustom oneself to the Tree’s configuration.

The first application of the Tree is to that of Parliament, which is seen in terms of its structure and dynamics. Also included in this section is the horoscope of England, which was born at Noon 25th December 1066 when William the Conqueror was crowned King, giving an insight into the national character. God and Mammon are then examined in terms of the Tree. In this chapter every religion and its several levels is seen to follow a classical pattern as does any economic system. From this it is shown how any imbalance or excessive focus on one area can upset the balance and cause the entity either to degenerate into a revolt against a corrupt priesthood or board of directors.

To make the Tree less remote and more experiential I have used a love affair to illustrate how even a lovers’ quarrel is part of a cosmic process. Everyone believes their relationship is unique, but upon putting it on the Tree one can see how Mother Nature brings a man and woman together to produce the next generation. However, it must be said that a marriage between soul-mates is of another order as a higher Tree, that of the psyche, can generate a single spirit out of such a union.

Birth, Life and Death are then examined. Here the process of conception and gestation are seen underlying the building of the body, followed by the ascending Octave of passing through the stages of life towards death and the hereafter, as Kabbalah subscribes to the notion of Hell, Paradise, Heaven and reincarnation. These themes are developed in my later books. This leads onto Time and its various orders. In this Tree the several grades between the ‘Passing Moment’ and the ‘Eternal Now’ are placed between the scales of a human lifetime and that of the planets, galaxy and Eternity. This illuminates why mystics speak of different levels of perception. Such a view opens onto the Biblical version of Creation which is seen in terms of Darwin’s theory of Evolution. Each order of creature fits exactly into the Tree.

Schools of the soul are next to be scrutinised in Tree terms, which reveals how every spiritual tradition must concur with the laws of Existence, if its working method is genuine. This is seen in the progression of consciousness and the exploitation of what opportunities life offers. Then comes an exposition of Jacob’s Ladder and how it is the flexible framework of the Divine Name I AM THAT I AM. The word THAT represents Existence between the first I AM and the second I AM. As such, the universe is the Mirror by which the Absolute beholds ITSELF with the aid of humanity, which is the organ of perception for God. Finally, the last diagram shows the present state of the Divine drama, in which we all play either a conscious or unconscious role with every new life we live.

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Meditation Monday …

In our meditation practice, there is no one right way to create a routine that works for you. Keep your practice simple, and let it grow with you. Most important though is to be gentle with yourself.
 
One thing you can try this week, is to select one focus for yourself- and stick to that for the entire week. This can be a word you meditate on or a quality you wish to cultivate during your moments of quiet, such as compassion, patience, kindness, gratitude, or peace (or any other that appeals to you). Combine your creativity and self-discipline to make your personal program one that brings about a calmer, and more grounded you.
 
Use the scenery and the serenity from this simple Natural Beauty video meditation to help you get quiet, and choose your focus. Then let it flow for you this week, and see what new feelings and peace arise during the week. You can return to this link again and again for inspiration.

5 Ways to Embrace Your Home as an Archetype of the Divine Feminine ~ by Tisha Morris

Feng Shui

The rise of the Divine Feminine has become a popular concept in spiritual circles, and for good reason. The masculine energy (yang) has been the prevailing energy on the planet for thousands of years. And while it has led to improvements in productivity, industry, technology, commerce, and mobility, it has also come with abuse of power, war, corruption, greed, and superiority. This overbalance has hit a tipping point to where the feminine energy (yin) must be integrated to bring balance to the planet.

But how?

It is already naturally happening within businesses. The energy of the Divine Feminine has brought in a renaissance of new ways of doing things, new inventions with beauty, art, and design being the x-factor. This has also led to an immersion of spirituality into our everyday living. Businesses that are now thriving are based in fairness, creative innovation, and conscious design, while also fostering compassion to people, animals, and the environment. Incorporating the Divine Feminine energy has become essential to new businesses and the new economy, whether they are aware of it or not.

The emergence of women in the workplace and female entrepreneurs has also helped integrate feminine principles in business. Women have fought their way out of the home and into the workplace for years and with considerable success. In doing so, women have integrated more masculine energy while many men have begun to embrace traditional feminine roles such as child rearing and homemaking.

While gender does not define masculine and feminine energy, it is one of the more common expressions of it. Those who are on a path of self-actualization and ascension are coming more into balance of their individual masculine and feminine energies to where gender roles are becoming more blurred and a true integration is taking place becoming a model for the planet as a whole.

Because most of us have grown up and learned primarily under the reign of masculine energy, it is important to recognize what constitutes feminine energy in order to gracefully evolve into our new world. Regardless of gender roles, your home is a great way to integrate the energy of the Divine Feminine.

The sense of home—and even a house itself—embodies feminine energy due to its nurturing, protective quality. Simply bringing more beauty, intention, and creativity to your space can invoke the Divine Feminine into your space and into your life. Here are some easy, practical ways to do so.

  1. Create a Sacred Space in Your Home
    Masculine energy is action-oriented, while the feminine is about stillness and receptivity. In terms of space, feminine energy is supported by quiet space. This could be in the form of ameditation area, a cozy reading nook, an altar, or even empty space. If you think about music or art, it is the white space or negative space that often make the difference.

    In considering what you want in terms of a sacred space, reflect on this quote by Joseph Campbell:

    “To live in a sacred space is to live in a symbolic environment where spiritual life is possible, where everything around you speaks of the exaltation of the spirit. This is a place where you can simply experience and bring forth what you are and what you might be. This is the place of creative incubation. At first you might find that nothing happens here. But if you have a sacred place and use it, something will eventually happen. Your sacred space is where you find yourself again and again.” -Joseph Campbell

  2. Enhance Your Intuition Through Your Home
    We’ve all had an experience where our intuition told us something that simply did not make rational sense to our mind, only to find out later that our intuition was right. Intuition comes from our right brain, which is feminine energy, while logic and rationalization comes from our left brain, which is masculine energy.

    To enhance your intuition, create an environment that best supports it. Consider more abstract artwork. Specific imagery is finite in its meaning as opposed to allowing for creativity. Using monochromatic or soothing colors can also help the mind to dream and imagine. Also cutting down on clutter will minimize distractions and allow the monkey mind to rest.

  3. Promote Your Creativity Through Your Home
    Like intuition, creativity is a product of feminine energy. We are all creative, and each one of us has creative gifts that can benefit the world. Do you have space in your home that supports your unique expression of creativity?

    For example, maybe your traditional home office becomes your art studio. Do you want to write, but have no writing space? Or maybe the kitchen should become grounds for cookbooks and experimentation. Our home should support all aspects of ourselves. If your home isn’t supporting the best creative expression of you, then consider ways to make those shifts.

  4. Nurture Yourself Through Your Home
    The Divine Feminine energy is loving and nurturing to others and oneself. Your home is an extension of you, and when you love your home, you are loving yourself. When you take care of your home, you are nurturing and taking care of yourself.

    Extend love to your home with fresh flowers, music, or aromatherapy. Bless your home with a space clearing or just give it a nice cleaning. Like any relationship, when you give it love and attention, it will support you in return.

  5. Bring Beauty Into Your Home With the Five Elements
    In addition to being an energetic extension of yourself, your home also has a soul. One of the best ways to honor that relationship is to incorporate the Five Elements of Feng Shui—Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal, and Water—into your home.

    Your home is the connector between you and Mother Earth. It is where we have the opportunity to live in harmony with nature. In my book, Decorating With the Five Elements of Feng Shui, I provide various ways to do just that. As a result, your home will feel and look great, in addition to supporting your own personal energy.

    Some simple ways to incorporate the elements is using them in their rawest form. For example, use candles for Fire, plants for Wood, clay pots for Earth, crystals for Metal, and a fountain for Water. These are great ways to bring in natural beauty in fun and creative ways. In doing so, you will awaken the Divine Feminine within you and your space.

We all need a sanctuary to come home to—to nurture us, inspire us, support us, and surround us with beauty in ways only the Divine Feminine can. Why not create your sanctuary today?

Author Information

Tisha MorrisPhoto by Laurel Staples – NashvillePhotoGal.com
Tisha Morris

Tisha Morris is a feng shui consultant, interior designer, certified life coach, energy healer, and yoga instructor. She is also the author of Feng Shui Your Life (Turner Publishing, 2011). She is based in Los Angeles, California, and can be found online at TishaMorris.com.

Alchemical Transformation in the Golden Dawn ~ by Lyam Thomas Christopher

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The Great Work is not an easy task for the human animal. It is the alchemical change from human to more-than-human, and it brings the student of the occult into a direct relationship with the predicament of mortality and with the compromises that he has made in order to survive in the material world. Plunging into these issues when most people would turn back, the student finds himself on a journey through disillusionment, self-doubt, and a dreadful loss of purpose—and possibly a journey that arrives at a new vista of life going far beyond what ordinary consciousness can fathom. In the process of this magical work, life usually gets worse before it gets better. The immortal Self awakened by the Golden Dawn’s Kabbalistic techniques, by its very definition, brings with it a permanent joy and realization, yes, but these rewards are obtained by a journey through darkness. For the true thrust of the Golden Dawn comes as an assault from within. The Great Work brings forth an inner truth that destroys what we hold most dear. It dissolves from the inside the stranglehold that our biology has upon our spirit, subduing the animal and calling forth the god.

This is not good news to the ego, the “assumed identity” that you and I have adopted in order to survive in the world. We have spent at least eighteen years creating a fully functional personality capable of finding food and shelter, forming profitable relationships, and rearing offspring. To discover other possibilities beyond this baseline of existence poses a threat. The human animal fears the power of magic because, in its essence, magic seeks to supplant the animal motives with deeper ones. It seeks to penetrate beyond the boundaries of our daily survival drama. The fact that the body, which you and I work so hard to care for, is mortal—and obviously expendable in the hands of some deeper purpose—is the last reality we want to face!

For those of us morbid enough to value this kind of self-discovery there are available the hidden traditions that still maintain magical practices of self-transformation. The grade system of the Golden Dawn spells out one such program of practice for us. Granted, there are many modern-day offshoots of the Golden Dawn that have become too “respectable” and mainstream to explore the darkness of the human soul. They teach the rudiments of Kabbalah and Egyptology, revealing to us secret handshakes and granting us prestigious certificates, all while oozing an aura of empty mystery with every email. But for those of us who are looking for more than diplomas and historical trivia, there are the less impressive curricula that still teach the distasteful, hands-on work of killing and resurrecting the human animal.

To begin this not-so-glamorous process of transformation, the Golden Dawn student enters the first grade of the Outer Order: Neophyte. In most temples, the student’s primary responsibility in this grade is to perform two exercises every day: the Lesser Banishing Ritual of the Pentagram (LBRP)and the Middle Pillar. He must also complete a small amount of reading, study, and group ritual, but these formalities, as important as they can be, are secondary to the actual daily practice of self-initiation.

The LBRP and Middle Pillar exercises restructure the psyche of the student and set the stage for the transformation process to begin. To do this, the LBRP creates a cleared “space” within the student’s imagination. He draws a magic circle of protection, he intones Hebrew names of God, and he draws sigils with the intention of warding off the influences of the material world from his inner landscape. Following this, the Middle Pillar exercise invokes the highest, purest spiritual light from the student’s divine aspect, drawing it downward into the cleared space and into his body, all the way to the feet. The student thereby identifies himself with a continuum of pure, unconditioned consciousness. He becomes the Middle Pillar of the Tree of Life. This is not so much pictured as an actual tree, but as a framework of interconnected spheres, which symbolizes the creation of the universe from spirit into matter.

Neophyte is a probationary grade. By creating this cleared space, the student introduces himself to future possibilities. If he isn’t yet ripe for spiritual change, his ego has a chance to wage its war of resistance and win. And it often does win. The student who isn’t ready for transformation either stops the process honestly and quits the Golden Dawn (usually for very “rational” reasons) or he joins the social club of New Age charlatans, accumulating grades, certificates, and a storehouse of impressive and useless information. Invisible to him are the students who proceed onward into the inner roller-coaster ride of the grades that follow. No one can fully understand the changes that come next, except those who have gone before.

The next step then is to jump-start the process of dissolving the personality. The student proceeds into the realm of the four Elemental grades:

  1. Zelator = Earth
  2. Theoricus = Air
  3. Practicus = Water
  4. Philosophus = Fire

In each of these grades, he uses Kabbalistic ritual to call forth one of the Four Elements, experiencing intimately its inner psychic correspondences. His personality becomes temporarily unbalanced, preoccupied with anything that corresponds to that Element. In Zelator (the Earth grade), for example, he feels the heaviness and the grit of life in the world. The physicality of everything around him comes into sharp focus. Even the supposedly exalted phenomenon of light can appear as darkness, as just one kind of brick in the tomb of matter. In Theoricus (the Air grade), thoughts and daydreams become overly pronounced. Elation, wonder, and the temptation to chase after glamorous images become commonplace. This gives the student a chance to reach a better understanding of his powers of imagination and his habits of thought, and to organize them and eliminate obsessions. In Practicus (the Water grade), the student gains gradual perspective over emotion and intuition, seeing these as a playing field that reveals the influence of higher forces, similar to the way that the surface of water that displays the influence of wind. And lastly, in the Fire grade, his ritual invocations fan the flames of his animal powers. Passions and instincts rise from below, and the old personality begins to burn away and disappear.

These four grades call forth, purify, and consolidate the each of the Elements, showing how these four come together to produce the illusion of the personality. The student discovers that his ego isn’t inherently real or composed of any singular essence, but rather that it is an arbitrary patchwork, woven together from separate Elemental threads. The false image of the ego shows itself for what it is, and the question of whether anything lies beyond its ingredients becomes serious.

A new perspective begins to dawn, and the student realizes that the real work hasn’t even begun yet. The Elemental grades actually comprise the preliminary work, and a new landscape awaits him as he readies himself to embark on the Great Work itself.

The next task then is to balance the Elements—the facets of the personality—until their unity-in-diversity yields forth something more than the sum of its parts. The Portal Grade is therefore the last grade of the Outer Order, and it reverses the process of disintegration brought on via the Elemental-Grade exercises. All four Elements, which now stand in the four quarters (North, South, East, and West) symbolically untangled from one another, are brought back together meaningfully. This reintegration creates a healthy, sturdy base on which (or within which) to ignite the “oven” of the Great Work.

In Portal and the grades that follow, the language of alchemy, which has remained unreliable and even impenetrable till now, begins to make sense. The sturdy foundation (or vessel) that the student has built via the Elemental grades becomes tangible to the inner senses as a sort of inner, ethereal body, neither energy nor matter. In the midst of the four Elements the newborn adeptcan discern, for the first time perhaps, a sort of stasis field within which he can manipulate the three hidden alchemical principles: Mercury, Sulfur, and Salt. As he proceeds into adeptship, he graduates from working with the four visible Elements (the outer facets of the quintessence) to the threeinvisible principles of the Trinity (the inner aspects of the quintessence). These three supernal principles, expressed in their raw form, are the Salt, Sulfur, and Mercury of alchemy, and they comprise the intangible “guts” of the Four Elements, beneath the “skin” of tangible sensation. They must not be confused with the salt, sulfur, and mercury of common experience.

Into the stasis field—alchemical Salt—the magician begins to concentrate Mercury, the volatile, meandering aspect of mind, and Sulfur, discipline and concentration. His visualization ability now acts from a higher dimension, and it becomes nearly impossible to relay these deeper activities in words. But this kind of magical work has many symbols that attempt to explain it. The alchemists have sometimes represented the process as a crucified serpent, such as the serpent that Moses affixed to a cross in the desert. The cross represents the framework established by the preliminary work (Salt), the Serpent represents the volatile mind (Mercury), and the nails represent the fixation, the restraint and focus (Sulfur) applied to the volatile mind. The adept, in other words, is now capable of working with the quintessence. He can use visualization, breath, and ritual actions to contain his mind’s volatile tendency (Mercury) within a localized area (Salt) and concentrate it to crystallize into manifestation (via the principle of Sulfur). The end product of this effort is the legendary philosopher’s stone, none other than manifested spirit. His body begins to transform and take on the quality of invisible radiance.

Another image that represents this idea is that of the squared circle, common to Renaissance magicians. Renaissance humanists symbolized the unexpressed, divine self of an individual as a circle (Mercury). It’s expression in matter, in the outer world, they visualized as a square (Salt). So, for the magician of antiquity, the squared circle—or circle with a square drawn around it—represented manifested spirit. Sulfur he represented as a point in the center of the circle. The point is the constant, balanced pressure (or meditation) that gradually pushes spiritual potential into matter, forcing it to crystallize and come forth.

To summarize then, the Work in the Golden Dawn’s Outer Order is to dissolve the false personality and make it disappear. The Work in the Inner Order is to call forth the true “personality,” to make it appear or express itself tangibly in the physical world. Though at first glance, the mysticism of the Golden Dawn seems to focus on dissolving the self into spirit, become more subtle and airy, it may come as a surprise to many that the further work of the inner order actually reverses this process such that the adept actively comes out into the world as a direct expression of his Higher Self. In the open air of awakening, his outer world of appearances is consumed by the Worlds within and by the very process of transformation itself. His very presence, without effort, begins to act as a catalyst for magical change wherever he goes.

Lyam Thomas Christopher
Lyam Thomas Christopher (Florida) has been a student of Hermeticism and the Golden Dawn for over fifteen years. After receiving his BA in Liberal Studies he went on to receive his Adeptus Minor from Ra Horkhty Temple. A former bookseller, the author is currently a learning specialist at a regional community college.

Understanding Kabballah Concepts

Zohar2

For one to understand what has been written by a Kabbalist, much study, preparation and development through previous experience must take place. Kabbalah allows a soul to see the puzzle of creation in a perspective that is all inclusive. Physicality and spirituality are but one as the branch portrays what the root necessitates. When we wish to develop and have enough desire to engage in spirituality, the language of Kabbalah will open to us and our ability to perceive it as a composition for development will begin to blossom.

(Extremely Powerful) Crown Chakra Awakening – 963 Hz – Theta Binaural Beats

This video contains the 963 Hz Solfeggio Frequency along with 6 Hz Theta Binaural Beats for Crown Chakra Awakening.

===== General Questions =====

Q. What are Binaural Beats?

“Binaural Beats” is a term given to playing one sound frequency in one ear, and another sound frequency in the opposite ear, creating a two-tone effect in the mid-brain that is actually perceived to be one tone. This causes an “Entrainment” effect in the brain that has a variety of results depending on the frequency.

Q. What are Binaural Beats good for?

Lots of things. Meditation, Relaxation, Stress Relief, Deeper Sleep, Pain Relief, Mind Expansion, Brain Hemisphere Syncronization, and the list goes on and on.

Pretty much any element of the Mind / Body complex can be improved using Binaural Beats, which again is just Brainwave Entrainment.

Q. Do Binaural Beats Actually Work?

Indeed. Many scientific studies (especially as of late) have conclusive research on Brainwave Entrainment and it’s effects.

Q. Must I wear headphones for these videos?

You don’t have to use headphones, but the Binaural effect is increased if you do.

Q. Do I need to close my eyes while listening to this?

No, although you’ll find closing your eyes will generally lead to a deeper, more profound state while listening.