ecosophia: (Default)
[personal profile] ecosophia
Red HookMidnight is just a few minutes away, and so it's time to launch a new Magic Monday. Ask me anything about occultism, and with certain exceptions noted below, any question received by midnight Monday Eastern time will get an answer. Please note:  Any question or comment received after that point will not get an answer, and in fact will just be deleted.  If you're in a hurry, or suspect you may be the 267,446th person to ask a question, please check out the very rough version 1.2 of The Magic Monday FAQ here

Also:
 I will not be putting through or answering any more questions about practicing magic around children. I've answered those in simple declarative sentences in the FAQ. If you read the FAQ and don't think your question has been answered, read it again. If that doesn't help, consider remedial reading classes; yes, it really is as simple and straightforward as the FAQ says.  And further:  I've decided that questions about getting goodies from spirits are also permanently off topic here. The point of occultism is to develop your own capacities, not to try to bully or wheedle other beings into doing things for you. I've discussed this in a post on my blog.

The
image? I field a lot of questions about my books these days, so I've decided to do little capsule summaries of them here, one per week. As I mentioned last week, once I found a publisher willing to bring out my fiction, a lot of it found its way into print in a hurry, so we're going to be in tentacle territory for a while now.  This was my fifty-third published book, and we're back in The Weird of Hali. This book had the longest and most roundabout genesis of all my tentacle novels. I'd originally planned for the sixth book in the sequence to be set in Greenland, and I wrote six drafts of that novel before realizing that there was too much story to fit into the limits I'd defined for the Weird. So I set the Greenland story aside -- it appeared later, much amended and with different characters, as A Voyage to Hyperborea -- and wrote this one, drawing heavily on the handful of stories Lovecraft set in New York City.

Justin Martense, the central figure in The Weird of Hali: Chorazin, became the viewpoint character in this story, and gave me the chance to explore a heroic fantasy with a very unheroic main character; I later did the same thing to an even greater extent with Toby Gilman, the main character of A Voyage to Hyperborea, who's even more of a dweeb than Justin but rises to the challenges before him in his inimitably awkward way. If you're wondering why I put dorky characters into these two books, why, it's the same reason I made an utterly unheroic sixty-year-old college professor coping with terminal cancer the main character of The Weird of Hali: Dreamlands; I'm bored to tears by the specially special protagonists -- and did I mention that they're special? -- who infest so much fiction these days, and wanted to explore the much more interesting (to me) situation of ordinary people caught up in extraordinary situations. If that turns your crank, why, you can get a copy here if you're in the US and here elsewhere.

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I've had several people ask about tipping me for answers here, and though I certainly don't require that I won't turn it down. You can use either of the links above to access my online tip jar; Buymeacoffee is good for small tips, Ko-Fi is better for larger ones. (I used to use PayPal but they developed an allergy to free speech, so I've developed an allergy to them.) If you're interested in political and economic astrology, or simply prefer to use a subscription service to support your favorite authors, you can find my Patreon page here and my SubscribeStar page here. 
 
Bookshop logoI've also had quite a few people over the years ask me where they should buy my books, and here's the answer. Bookshop.org is an alternative online bookstore that supports local bookstores and authors, which a certain gargantuan corporation doesn't, and I have a shop there, which you can check out here. Please consider patronizing it if you'd like to purchase any of my books online.

And don't forget to look up your Pangalactic New Age Soul Signature at CosmicOom.com.

***This Magic Monday is now closed, and no more comments will be put through. See you next week!***
jenniferkobernik: (Default)
From: [personal profile] jenniferkobernik
Being pregnant for the second time, I’ve been thinking about this lately. I used to get a little uncomfortable about femininity being associated with receptivity, as it seemed sort of “second class” to me, as if the receptive side of things isn’t actually doing anything and therefore doesn’t really count or get any credit. Being pregnant and giving birth has made it very obvious that I can play a vital role in an incredible act of magic and creation without needing or even being able to consciously direct the process. Of course you can do things to tweak conditions favorably, but ultimately you don’t make any of the specifics happen. You’re not using your will to make them grow their ears or heart valves or whatever. And it’s also pretty clear that “relax and wait” in the case of gestation is neither a negligible contribution nor in any way less important than the, ahem, seminal contribution of the active principle. I don’t know if this example will help you, Jeff, but it has really helped me to internalize that not every important development that I am trying to foster in my life is dependent on or even aided by active striving.
jprussell: (Default)
From: [personal profile] jprussell
Hi Jennifer,

Thanks very much, this does help, and is a welcome perspective quite different from my own. Due to my own arrangement of bodies in this incarnation, I've largely been able to sidestep having to confront/embrace such an obviously passive/receptive, but also so obviously important and worthwhile, role in my life. I'm used to waiting or receiving being things to be, at best, accepted as "rules of the game" to be worked within, but not the "focus." So, again, this is a nice, concrete example of what such an attitude leaves out (albeit not one I can go give a try to experience myself!).

Thank you again, and I hope the pregnancy is going well and you've been able to deal with the energetic/spiritual unpleasantness you've been faced with lately,
Jeff
From: (Anonymous)
Thanks for saying this! "Passive" and "receptive" so often seem like negative (undesirable) terms. But it occurs to me that learning is a receptive process. We can't learn if we're not listening and receiving ideas and information. And learning is such a major part of what we're doing here.

I've also noticed that I get much more out of a massage when I consciously relax and decide to receive that energy. I've had so-so massages and wonderful massages, and the difference might be more in me than in the therapist. Healing works the same way. You have to be open, willing, to receive it.
jprussell: (Default)
From: [personal profile] jprussell
Oof, thought I was being clever and walked right into that one. Thank you for the reminder - relaxing and waiting more it is.
slclaire: (Default)
From: [personal profile] slclaire
How about spending more time outside sitting on the ground, relaxing into it and absorbing the energies? Not reading, just being. And spending more time near a river, lake, or ocean just being, absorbing the energies.
jprussell: (Default)
From: [personal profile] jprussell
Thank you, those are great suggestions! I've been trying to spend more time outside, touching the ground directly, at least for a few minutes at a time, and on shutting up my verbal mind, but maybe I can try to "open up" more when doing so, and find some time to be near bodies of water as well.
From: (Anonymous)
It occurs to me that gardening is an activity that develops both of these capacities in equal measure (patience and receptivity). It seems that if one is looking for a teacher, they can do worse than working with the very elements themselves.
jprussell: (Default)
From: [personal profile] jprussell
Thank you for this, that's a great recommendation - gardening has been on my "I need to get to this" list since before I took up druidry, so the reminder is appreciated.

Thanks again,
Jeff
From: (Anonymous)
Wow. I resonate with the benefits of gardening in cultivating waiting and receptivity. I associate waiting with patience. Although I am female this time around, receptivity and waiting have been challenging and I am just now in my later years beginning to enjoy those journeys. In particular, I'm enjoying being regularly surprised by what I experience when I wait and receive.

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ecosophia: (Default)John Michael Greer

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