kimberlysteele: (Default)
On my last Open Post, I fielded a great set of questions about the Sphere of Protection (SoP). For those of you who aren't in the know about what that is, the Sphere of Protection is a religious ritual performed once a day, a "banishing ceremony" in Western magic that revolves around a triangle of daily practices: the SoP, divination, and discursive meditation.

As an aspiring Druid mage, I have performed the SoP once a day, usually in the morning, for the last six years or so.

As I have mentioned quite frequently on this blog, we are currently soaking in a collective astral morass which is the result of the human race becoming exceedingly materialistic and trashy. For this reason, many newbies are seeking out the SoP and Western magic in general in order to clean up the trash in their own lives, and to discover a connection with the Divine that does not involve grinning, cap-teethed preachers with multiple McMansions or sitting for hours in weekend corporate seminars church services pretending that the person in the pulpit knows more about spirituality than any average Jane on the street.

From my limited experience, and it truly is limited as I was a Hitchens-quoting atheist less than a decade ago, the SoP is a way of cleaning up one's vibe and one's mind, but not in a brainwashing sort of way. It starts a process that can only be complete with daily discursive meditation, which eventually transforms your way of thinking until almost all thoughts you have (aside from OOH YUMMERS CHOCOLATE CAKE!) are a form of discursive meditation. Divination is helpful too, but it is discursive meditation that is the crucial one. Divination is more of a prosthetic way of reaching the divine to get around normal human handicaps, such as the mental chatter over chocolate cake mentioned above.

The problem is the SoP is hard. It's hard to dedicate the time every day. I am able to perform it 365 days a year for 6.5 years because I am a high-functioning autistic with an addiction to routines. I get upset if my routines are interrupted, and I often seek to keep them at a high cost. I'll do the SoP late at night if I could not get to it in the morning, which rarely happens.

Another one of my autistic tics was catatonia: disappearing into my imagination for an hour at a stretch as a child. This panicked my poor mother when I did it on a crowded ice rink at age six and could not be woken up. Perhaps this ability to enter the imaginary space is why I have not had issues imagining portions of the SoP.

The person wrote to me:

Kimberly,
having watched your excellent video on the Sphere of Protection, and attempted the SoP consistently over the course of several months, I am perplexed about this practice.

Why? Aside from the major challenge of conjuring & sustaining visualization of the many requisite images with sufficient focus, vividness & clarity, there are a couple of key ingredients I have been struggling with.
JMG has been dismissive (YMMV), so I turn to you in hopes you may have some helpful insights thru your experience.

1. Vibration. According to JMG:
"Vibrated? That's a way of pronouncing words used by ceremonial magicians. To learn how to do it, try chanting a simple vowel sound like "aaaah," changing the way you hold your mouth and throat until you feel a buzzing or tingling feeling somewhere in your body. With practice, you can focus the vibration wherever you want, inside your body or outside of it, and it becomes a potent magical method. For now, do your best, and see how steady you can get the buzzing or tingling sensation."

Am genuinely curious how many people attempting the SoP have actually achieved the level of vibration & control JMG claims is possible (and indeed essential?). "Focusing vibration [at all seems a tall order, but:] wherever you want" -- really??As you are an experienced voice/song/music instructor, I imagine you may be better qualified than most to speak to the technical possibilities here.


2.a
"imagine as intensely as possible the deep places of the Earth and the immense powers that dwell there. Engage all your senses, so that you smell and feel and hear as well as see the imagery."

What? How? Are folks just glossing over the impossibility of this? What imagery, exactly? Am I'm just lacking imagination?

2.b
"imagine as intensely as possible the realms of outer space far above you and the immense powers that dwell there. Engage all your senses, so that you smell and feel and hear as well as see the imagery. (What does space smell like? According to astronauts, it smells a little like a scorched barbecue grill -- hot metal with an odd hint of meat.)"

Smell, feel and hear... "outer space". Wait, what? smh
How? Again, is the answer just: sorry, you lack imagination?

I want to believe the SoP is not just some sort of massive trolling exercise ala "The Druid's New Clothes."
Thanks for providing this open post & to you & anyone who can provide data points to help provide clarity.


I wrote a detailed post back to him/her which I have copy pasted here but with more detail than the original response. We autistics love our details! Of course I welcome questions about the SoP or my magical practices in general in the comments. It is my opinion that we need as many people doing the SoP as possible these days because the astral is so trashy, including Christians who can do the SoP using aspects of Jesus, the angels, God the Father, etc. Just don't do it around your own kids going through or under the age of puberty, for reasons that I will do my best to explain in a future blog. Keep in mind a gazebo somewhere in a forest preserve where your kids aren't there is fine, or at a friend's house as the energy doesn't seem to affect other people's kids.
My reply with even more detail:



The SoP is a tall order! It took me a couple of years to have any confidence in doing it. Even at the time I made that video, there were many hiccups to work out.

As far as asking JMG to help with the SoP, what's funny is that it's like asking J.S. Bach to teach a remedial music class for highly-caffeinated 9 year olds. It's hard for him to come down to their level. Not so tough for me, because "highly-caffeinated 9 year old" is one of my dominant personalities, plus my magical expertise is limited to the remedial at this point, so it's not as difficult for me to talk about basics.

For vibrating a sound, I made a video about that: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H7hOUkJzcCM

I hope it helps you. Notice that the humming sound has the "color" of an accordion note. It can take a long time to make that color but once you get it in head voice/falsetto, you will be well on your way.

2.a Yeah, I remember reading that and thinking "LOL whut?" Nobody has ever been to the center of the Earth, so what that would smell like is beyond comprehension. Personally, I have never been caving or spelunking, so I don't know what those "deep places" are like at all.

As far as the imaginary component of the SoP, do you ever look at a photo/video of a place and imagine what it would be like to live or travel there? For instance, this site recommended by Princess Cutekitten is especially good for "transporting" your imagination outside of your immediate
circumstances: https://www.window-swap.com/Window

The Gate of Air

For the Gate of Air, I often imagine a birch forest at sunrise in the early spring when frost is on the ground. I imagine what it would be like to be Agafya Lykova, waking up on a spring morning alone in the Russian taiga:

https://siberiantimes.com/other/others/news/russias-loneliest-woman-hermit-agafya-lykova-to-get-new-home-in-the-wild/ Of course I imagine other scenes for the Gate of Air. It all depends.

This morning, I imagined Minnesota's George Crosby Manitou State Forest. I have never been there, but it is one of the most ancient forests in the Americas. https://www.onlyinyourstate.com/minnesota/oldest-forest-mn/ As someone who loves talking to trees, I am considering a pilgrimage at some point in my lifetime.

I imagined morning sunlight pouring through the trees and a fine mist rising off the cold ground in early April. I imagined the feeling of coming home when I talk to the old beeches, maples, and oaks. I drank in the sights of squirrels running about and the sounds of birds chattering as they gathered food and made nests. Thoughts tried to intrude, for instance rehashing the visit with a relative yesterday that disrupted my precious routine, but I put them aside to "see" the pink morning sky through the tree branches.

The Gate of Fire

For the Gate of Fire, sometimes I merely imagine my own neighborhood on a hot summer day. I imagined watching people go into Dairy Delite from my sweltering car (I don't have working air conditioning). I imagine walking by my neighbor's house. She grows arbor vitaes in earthenware pots. I don't know what her secret is but they are very healthy and she leaves them all winter long. I "see" the plants growing in mine and other people's yards -- daylilies getting ready to pop, dandelions, purslane, plantain.

This morning, I imagined a river in Guatemala. I have never been to Guatemala but I have seen lots of pictures. The river is green with algae. There are tropical birds of the kind and color you would never see in Illinois. The water of the river shines black and brown and vegetation chokes the river banks.

The Gate of Water

For the Gate of Water, I imagined a beautiful mountain-surrounded lake in Colorado in Autumn. This one was easy because it actually is Autumn right now where I live. I have never been to Colorado, again, I have only seen photos.

I'll often imagine Alaska as well though I have never been there. My recent obsession is mountains and mountain lakes, despite having very little experience because travel isn't my thing. One place I tend to return to is a mountain lake that I believe is in Anchorage. I saw a photo of it once. Someone poured sand to create a small beach. Mountains can be seen in the distance. The picture is very blue (water is the blue gate) with a blue sky, blue mountains, blue water. Sometimes I get flashes of my past lives through the water gate and it was via this gate that I "saw" my previous life as Peter the Singing Sailor, a Portuguese man who I believe lived in the 1700s and died at sea when his ship got wrecked. I also believe I have seen one of my future lives, and that is why Alaska is so strong for me. I think one day I will have a future incarnation where I will spend a great deal of time in Alaska.

The Gate of Earth

For the Gate of Earth, I imagined my parent's house on December 31, 1968. They had just moved in at that point. The house used to be a khaki green color, so that was part of my visualization. Sometimes I imagine a snowy landscape further north than Illinois. It all depends, once again.

Many, many American Indians, including Mayans and Incans, believed the Milky Way galaxy was a sort of bridge to the afterlife. The dead were able to talk with the living during the sacred time we now identify as New Years. I imagine this bridge being bright and visible on a clear winter night, allowing me to talk and hang out with my dead loved ones once a year.

The Spirit Below Earth Gate

When we get to the Earth/Spirit Below Gate, I recommend rubbing your hands together vigorously, touching the ground, and then putting your hands on your naked belly. Imagine some healing spirits from the Earth coming up to to help heal your gut and to bring pragmatism and good sense of the "I don't let perfect be the enemy of done" variety into your heart. This I find to be easier than imagining the actual interiors of the Earth, which I have only experienced as mud and rocks when I have dug in my garden. I do however imagine tree roots reaching down, drinking up water. Trees often go as deep into the Earth as they are tall, which is a factoid I've always enjoyed.

The Spirit Above Sky Gate


When you get to the Purple Gate/Spirit Above, raise your hands to the sky and imagine light beaming down and being surrounded by the All-Fathers like this scene from The Dark Crystal:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WAHhpMJbfxQ

I once had a dream where a friend of mine and I took a detour into a forest and I encountered some old, long-bearded men chanting and singing in a grove. I introduced myself to them and they were generally amused by me and a friend of mine. My friend was excited to show off his magic and proceeded to do some parlor tricks which involved shooting colored balls of energy out of his hand. I started the prayer I was trying to memorize at the time... "Grant us, O Holy Ones, thy Protection..." and suddenly they surrounded me in golden light and took me somewhere. I don't remember what happened after that.

At any rate, I assure you, the SoP is not a trolling exercise! I sincerely hope this helps.



kimberlysteele: (Default)
 

When I was sixteen, heartbroken from my first failed romantic relationship, I turned to witchcraft with desperate hopes that I would gain the coolness and perspective of a sage adult.  My relationship with religion had always been complicated despite having an average suburban upbringing and average attendance at the local church.  I was confirmed in the usual way.  Truth be told, I never much felt adoration for the Christian god except for when we sang his music.  The music wasn’t enough to hold my interest.  At sixteen, frightened of my increasing hypnogogia and suicidally depressed, I dived into Gardnerian Wicca. 

 

In my opinion, Gardner is the type of occultist who is like a broken clock: he’s right twice a day and wrong the rest of the time.  His version of Wicca is more empty pomp and circumstance than substance — his rituals weren’t all that user-friendly to the sole practitioner, his explanations of what magic is and does were completely obtuse, and his frantic need to grant authenticity to his brand of witchcraft undermined its intention as a revival religion, which I would presume to be reviving a religion, to state the obvious.  I got myself a Tarot deck and it was the Thoth deck.  I love the Thoth deck to this day and I’m grateful for my early study of it, however, because of it I jumped from the frying pan into the fire.  I started delving into the works of Aleister Crowley.  Crowley, like Gardner, had no practical advice for other occultists and, like a bad music teacher, assumed every student was starting out with a basic working knowledge of the field's principles.  Crowley also was simply an awful person.  He’s a man who started out with everything in life: good looks, wealth, intelligence.  He squandered all of it, most likely molested children, and died broke and friendless in a fleabag rent-a-room.  His reputation as the “evilest man in the world” is somewhat of a joke, because shouldn’t a thoroughly evil man have bottomless sources of wealth and power?  Nevertheless, to dismiss Crowley’s labors, especially his magnum opus (the Thoth tarot deck) is to skip over a secret key to a vast storehouse of knowledge.  I bumbled through my late teenage and early college years, gaining a reputation among Christian paranoids at my city university because I dared display my esoteric books on an open shelf.  Yes, a small but rabid Christian constituent in my dorm tried to stop me from displaying 777 and Tarot: Mirror of the Soul.  Christians can be real asshats, and they don’t do their waning religion any favors by acting in such a fashion.

 

By the time I was leaving my 20s and college behind, I came to a watershed.  I was on anti-depressants because at seventeen, I voluntarily started taking antidepressants so I would stop thinking so seriously about killing myself.  As an adult, I decided the drugs had done their job.  My psychiatrist, a vacuous, incompetent, rich, comfortably numb boob, insisted I was nuts and that I would have to be on tricyclic antidepressants for the rest of my life.  This conflicted directly with me becoming an adult, and at the time depression was considered a pre-existing condition which could prevent me from getting health insurance.  I fired my shrink and weaned myself off of antidepressants.  My hypnogogia waned along with my antidepressant dosage, and it felt natural to stop thinking so much about Crowley, Tarot, and magical rituals that didn’t seem to do much of anything, let alone improve my life.  

 

By 30, I was atheist.  I still had hypnogogia and encountered odd things while in that state; I just chalked it up to the undiscovered scientific truth of inter dimensional bleed.  I still did magic, meaning, I threw my intentions in certain directions and uncanny stuff happened as a result.  Like any good atheist, I was a solipsist, trusting that I was God of my own mind and no other forces could possibly be at work there.  I condemned all forms of belief in God as various manifestations of the fear of death.  I ignored any and all beings who tried to talk to me; hidden deep down was the fear that my shrink was right, that I was crazy and soon enough the voices would prove I was insane.  I was gleefully nihilistic in my atheism.  Though I suppose it bothers some atheists that death is a one-way trip into a permanent void, that didn’t bother me at all.  In fact, I wrote my first novel, Forever Fifteen, as a look into the horror of being forced to exist in the flesh for a thousand years or more.  The protagonist, Lucy, longs for the black, permanent void of death, as boring as that may seem.  I have always loved tedium and the atheist version of what happens after death is about as tedious and boring as can be.  

 

Oddly, my atheist self also wrote a decidedly non-atheist music album, the Dream of Flight, which is an entire, programmatic album about what I only now belatedly understand to be the astral plane.  Occultists see human existence as the simultaneous manifestation of the soul or Individuality on approximately seven planes ranging from the lightest, the spiritual plane, to the densest, the material plane.  The astral plane, otherwise known as the plane of emotions and daily and nightly dreams, is somewhere in the middle.  Despite having written an album about dreams that talked about “bringing a whole world to life” via the dream world, I puttered on, quoting Christopher Hitchens and Bertrand Russell and not believing there was any such thing as a disembodied spirit, non-corporeal being, or god. 

 

Fast forward to around age thirty-seven, when I went vegan for the animals.  Veganism gets accused of being a religion for good reasons, one of which is that it takes tremendous will power and dedication to ignore opposing forces who would have you conform to their animal-eating and abusing ways. People in our anti-religious culture believe that sort of dedication can only come from belief in a higher power, but I would argue that humans are naturally religious and if the Christian god cannot fill spiritual needs, actually living ones values as a vegan rushes into that spiritual void.  Most vegans I know are atheists who suffer from the binary delusion of either having to have one God (usually the Christian god) or no god at all (atheism).  Most are not willing to hear (at least in my opinion) they’re both wrong.  When I went vegan, suddenly all that bilge I used to spew as an ova-lacto vegetarian about not wanting to take on the energy of suffering and sad animals by eating them actually made sense.  When you go vegan, the weight you lose is mainly spiritual.  I was one of the lucky people whose health benefitted from going vegan — it helped that I already cooked most of my own meals and didn’t subsist on junk food — however, the feeling of clarity and purity that happened when I stopped eating animals and their secretions was one I wouldn’t trade even if being vegan gave me cancer, so there’s that.  

 

Around the same time, my absolute hatred of the suburbs and car obsession led me to an author-blogger named James Howard Kunstler.  Kunstler is devastatingly witty and because of this, I became a constant fan of his podcast and writings.  Every now and then, he featured a guy on his podcast named John Michael Greer.  I began to read John Michael Greer’s blog The Archdruid Report, which ostensibly was not about Druids or their religion but about the same subjects as Kunstler wrote about: peak oil, people, and politics.  I quietly ignored Greer’s “other” blog, The Well of Galabes, which was about magic.  As an atheist, I hardly cared about woo-woo interests I had abandoned along with antidepressant drugs and childhood.  I’m not sure at what point I decided to read Greer’s other blog or the many books he had written at that time about magic, but I did.  Unlike so many religious people, Greer was high on the reliability meter and low on the hypocrisy and narcissism meters.  I read the Well of Galabes and just like the Archdruid Report, it contained pragmatic, well-rounded perspectives about the world, and it made its points about religion with no obvious or subversive aims to convert the reader.  When Greer brought Archdruid Report and Well of Galabes to an end, he began a new blog called Ecosophia, I followed it eagerly.  Comments on Greer’s blogs were always lively and fun, with many smart people throwing around provocative and intriguing ideas.  The Greer essays that gave me the most to think about were The Next Ten Billion Years, which over time got me to rethink my belief in short term human extinction: yes, that’s what Extinction Rebellion is blathering on about.  I no longer believe the human race is going to cause the end of a livable climate in the next 300 years, and I think the reasons why I used to believe that would happen is because the thought allowed me the luxury of thinking nothing I do matters.  Once he was on Ecosophia, Greer wrote an essay people had been asking for about reincarnation.  If there is a such thing as a life-changing essay, I believe Greer’s A Few Notes on Reincarnation was it for me.  That particular essay explained mysteries about my own experience and also helped me to understand the chaotic world around me.  I started considering the possibility that I was the reincarnation of a chain of people behind me and that I had many more human lifetimes to go.  I became nascently aware of realities I had considered impossible as an atheist.  

 

At this point, I started looking into Druidry, because as a long time writer of Celtic-sounding music and long haired tree-hugger, I figured, why not?  Druidry (and other magical paths) required three things on a daily basis:

1. Discursive meditation, which is not the mind-emptying Eastern kind but rather a disciplined form of rational thinking invented in the ancient West. 

2. Divination, which I already had some experience in via Tarot cards. 

3. The Sphere of Protection, an approximately 20 minute bit of solo performance that involved memorizing a script of invoking and banishing elemental forces (once you’ve got the elements down, you graduate and assign a pantheon of existing gods to each part of the ritual) designed to shape and master one’s thoughts and actions via unseen forms of energy.

 

I have no problem committing to a daily routine — as a highly-functioning autistic, routines are my bread and butter.  I began the Sphere of Protection on January 1, 2018 and did it every day without fail. The SoP has always felt helpful even when I was bumbling through it, barely memorized and doing it without a pantheon.  By about six months in, I chose to assign the Druid god pantheon because for me, John Michael Greer’s system outlined in The Druid Magic Handbook was the appropriate fit.  I would often be so overcome with emotion during certain elements that I would cry.  After the SoP would be discursive meditation, which I prefer to do while writing in a journal as it allows me to jot down thoughts as they occur.  I first started doing a daily three card Tarot divination, which gave me much insight into the old Thoth deck, however, I changed to Ogham as it is part of the Druid Magic Handbook course of study.  

 

The last two years have been the oddest and best of my entire life.  I now consider myself deeply religious.  I pray every day and I highly believe I am in near constant communication with deities and spirits.  Furthermore, I believe I may have always been talking to the non-corporeal entities without realizing it.  I think many people who talk to themselves don’t understand they’re actually not talking to themselves but a non-corporeal entity.  All I know is that the interactions I have with non-corporeal entities are of a far higher quality than they were when I was first experimenting with Wicca, and that’s due to the SoP and the discernment that accompanies discursive meditation. 

 

I’m not sure what we are to the gods we are working with.  As far as I can tell, they are super-beings who were wisely worshipped by the ancient Greeks, Egyptians, Indians, and Chinese and if you’re sensitive and kind to them, and if you ask them politely and respectfully, they just might mentor you and give you their excellent advice.  However, if you’re disrespectful and you do stupid human things like:

 

A. Arrogantly presume they can’t possibly exist because Jesus/Allah says you’ll burn in hell

B. Use and wear their name for a pair of overpriced sneakers

C. Curse them for not helping your lazy, regressive butt to win the Lotto 

 

You can expect to have a bad time, or at the very least, you can expect the gods not to care about you.  If an annoying hamster was biting my ankles, shouting at me in a high, squeaky voice to make it King of Hamsterland, I’d probably ignore it too, despite my soft spot for hamsters.  

 

In my two years of becoming religious, I became calmer, stronger, and more sanguine about everything in my life.  I have begun to understand that limits are the key to a happy life and that our culture has an insane disregard for them, most likely because of the absurd amount of petroleum wealth we have enjoyed for the last 200 odd years.  I became far more detached from money, that is to say, I began to look at it as valuable in terms of keeping me clothed and fed, and as far as having loads more than that, I have seen the benefits of rejecting the infinite perversions and complications that come of having too much.  I have come to understand why throwing your unexamined bad intentions around inevitably drags you into being a crappy person with rotten luck, no matter how much you insist you are one of the Blessed & Good People.  I have made the affirmation that I am a better person tomorrow than I was today, if only by the slightest amount.  

 

In this strange dialogue with gods, I have apologized for my pathological fondness for dad jokes (I simply must be reincarnated as a father, because I have WAY too many dad jokes to work out of my system) and I have heard birds singing in the middle of the night in winter, which is also known as clairaudience.  I have had conversations with dead people before they moved on to the next cycle of reincarnation.  I have discovered my past life as a traveling musician in an era of bards and my past life as an alcoholic Scottish laird.  I have felt my tensions drain away as I walked through a forest where the beings patiently wait for me to visit.  I had the privilege of talking to a few Greek gods (they seem to be the same as the Roman ones, for what it’s worth) as I arrange melodies and harmonies I’ve composed to flesh out the Orphic Hymns. What a fantastic journey it has been.  I certainly look forward to the remainder.

 


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Kimberly Steele

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