![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)

One of the things that was just beginning to happen back in the waning years of classical American occultism's golden age was that certain Asian exercises were beginning to find a home in the occult repertory. That's a process that deserves to be restarted, because (for complex historical reasons) Europe and the European diaspora lost their subtle-body exercises a long time ago, while Asia kept the traditions going. Since occult training (as distinct from magical training) doesn't involve circulating energy through subtle centers in the body -- the thing that can produce messy results when you mix it with Asian ways of doing the same thing -- it should be possible to combine occult training with practice of some of the more widely available Eastern exercise systems.
"Should be possible" is a shaky reed to lean on, though. Thus I'd like to ask for some help from my readers.
I know a fair number of readers of mine have taken up the Sphere of Protection as a regular practice, using either The Druid Magic Handbook or my posts here on Dreamwidth as a guide. I know that some of you also practice eastern exercises or physical disciplines such as yoga. What I want to know is whether you've noticed any interaction at all between regular practice of the SoP and regular practice of Eastern movement arts, including but not limited to:
- Aikido
- Hatha yoga
- Karate
- Shintaido
- Tai Chi Chih
- Taijiquan
Re: Karate, SOP
Date: 2020-03-04 04:16 pm (UTC)I had some chat with Adam Robersmith about this on the AODA forum, and he specifically designed the 9 Hazels to be balanced in terms of yin and yang energy currents. It may just take trial and error to find out which qigong sequences will help and which could harm. I like qigong very much and would hate to give it up.
One of my main TSW experiences was actually an unpleasant interaction between the SOP and other energy experiences I had one weekend. I had attended a kundalini yoga class one Saturday morning, then a “gong meditation” experience on Sunday morning where someone played a large gong for an extended time. It may have been a couple days later that I did the SOP, and when I got to Spirit Below I began to feel really nauseous and dizzy. If I even thought about continuing to Spirit Above the feeling got worse, and I was sure I was about to toss my cookies. So I stopped the SOP, and recovered pretty quickly. Since then, I’ve done the SOP with no problem--but I haven’t done either kundalini yoga or anything involving loud, extended vibrations such as a gong.
Re: Karate, SOP
Date: 2020-03-04 07:30 pm (UTC)