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This title provides an insightful exploration of ritual, myth, and
oracles in Shang Period China (16th-11th century BCE). Combining
wide-ranging scholarship with pragmatic practicality, the author
shines a light on one of the most obscure and least-known areas of
ritual practice in the ancient world, demonstrating its value and
connection to the development of magical practices in China over a
period of many centuries.
Kali Kaula is a practical and experiential journey through the land
of living magickal art that is Tantra, guided by the incisive,
inspired and multi-talented hands of Jan Fries. By stripping away
the fantasies and exploring the roots, flowers and fruits of
Tantra, the author provides an outstandingly effective and coherent
manual of practices. Acknowledging the huge diversity of Tantric
material produced over the centuries, Jan Fries draws on several
decades of research and experience and focuses on the early
traditions of Kula, Kaula and Krama, and the result is this
inimitable work which shines with the light of possibility. Unique
in style and content, this book is more than a manual of tantric
magick, it is a guide to the exploration of the inner soul. It
contains the most lucid discussions of how to achieve liberation in
the company of numerous Indian goddesses and gods, each of whom
brings their own lessons and gifts to the dedicated seeker. It is
also an eloquent introduction to the mysteries of the great goddess
Kali, providing numerous views of her manifold nature, and showing
the immense but hidden role played throughout history by women in
the development and dissemination of tantric practices and
beliefs.Jan Fries explores the spectrum of techniques from mudra to
mantra, pranayama to puja, from kundalini arousal to purification
to sexual rites, and makes them both accessible and relevant,
translating them out of the Twilight Language of old texts and
setting them in the context of both personal transformation and the
historical evolution of traditions. The web of connections between
Tantra and Chinese Alchemy and Taoism are explored as the author
weaves together many of the previously disparate strands of
philosophies and practices. This book challenges the reader to
dream, delight, and develop, and provides an illustrated guidebook
on how to do so. Bliss awaits those who dare.
The runes are a pan-European magical language. Its roots lie in the
ancient pagan beliefs of our ancestors, who built many thousands of
stones circles, long barrows and dolmens throughout ancient Europe.
These same symbols and techniques were used by the pagan Celts and
Germans. This book is a complete manual of magick based upon arcane
symbolism and secret techniques. Contents: Meaning /Urda /Origins
/Futhorc /Magical inscriptions / Memorial stones /Fascism / Titles
/ Cosmology / Nature / Qabala / Vision / Werdandi / Rune stance /
Breathing/ Vowel song / Problems / Tune in / Health? / Divination /
Alignments / Sigil sorcery / Seior and Seething / Energy /lda /
Rune companion / Sources Jan Fries lives in Frankfurt near the
Taunus Mountains. He is a musician, artist and magician.
'...eminently practical and certainly breaks new ground.' - Ronald
Hutton (author Pagan Religions of the Ancient British Isles)
Recommended by The Cauldron 'a very meaty read...' PJ in Gippeswic
Preface to the new edition When I went to school, my history
teacher told us about the old Germani. In her opinion, the Taunus
mountains were populated by a bunch of brawny brawlers who wore
horned helmets and small pieces of pelt. They lived in hilltop
settlements which were fortified by ringwalls. Barely able to
manage agriculture, they had to rely on hunting to fill their
stomachs. They lived in shabby huts with mud-plastered walls and
when the Romans came, they fought the invaders with crude swords,
pointy sticks and by hurling rocks at them... Nowadays, the
ringwalls of the Taunus are known as the work of La Tene Celts, who
lived on the heights in well organised cities. For this new edition
much of the text has been rewritten and updated. A large section on
the bronze ages, the Celts, Germani and the later Vikings added.
The theme of Wodan and Helja has been elaborated with more detail
on pagan Scandinavia. The chapter on magical rune inscriptions has
been extended, on Seior/seething trances rewritten, the
bibliography updated and twelve pages of new illustrations added.
From the author of Helrunar: manual of rune magick, and Visual
Magick, a handbook of freestyle shamanism, comes the definitive
study of magical trance and possession techniques. The author is
inspired by the Nordic tradition of Seidr, said to have been taught
to the human race by Odin. The book provides an extensive survey of
the manifestation of this powerful technique through several
related magical traditions - shamanism, mesmerism, draconian cults
and even the nightside of European paganism. Seething is probably
the most useful magical technique I have ever learned. I first was
taken by the pleasure of it. My body felt warm and sensual, and
seething in the hips felt quite sexual. I liked the feeling of my
body taking over where the shaking was first voluntary - but I
could still have some control, making the shaking stronger or more
subtle. After a while I started to see visions - something that
very rarely happens to me. I could see (with my physical eyes, not
astrally ) the surface of the land in the centre of the circle
rippling, like waves of energy. It was a really moving experience
in a site that - until then - had not been particularly 'special'
to me... it ..has had a major impact upon my magical work which
used to be largely indoors, as at last I have found a way that I
can work outdoors. This gives my magical work a potency that it
simply didn't have before. - Shantidevi quoted in chapter twelve
'Rhythms and the Mind'
Imagine the forest. As darkness falls, the somber beeches disappear
in misty twilight and shadows seem to gather under their branches.
Far away, the blackbird's call tells of the coming of the night.
The birds cease their singing, silence descends, soon the beasts of
the night will make their appearance. Between tangled roots, hidden
by nettles and brambles, the earth seems to ripple. A few humps of
earth seem to emerge from the ground. They are the last traces of
burial mounds, of mounds, which were tall and high 2500 years ago.
Many of them have disappeared, hidden by tangled roots of beech and
oak, ploughed flat by careless farmers, others again show caved-in
tops where grave robbers have looted the central chamber. The
locals shun these hills. There are tales that strange fires can be
seen glowing on the mounds, and that on spooky nights, great armed
warriors arise from their resting places. Then the doors to the
deep are thrown open and unwary travelers have to beware of being
invited into the halls of the dead and unborn. Here the kings of
the deep feast and celebrate, time passes differently and strange
treasures may be found. Who knows the nights when the gates are
open? Who carries the primrose, the wish-flower, the strange
blossom that opens the doors to the hollow hills?
"Nightshades is the record of one remarkable magician's exploration
of the inverse regions of the Tree of Life. Aleister Crowley's
Liber 231 provides the map and Kenneth Grant's Nightside of Eden a
travelogue. "Liber 231, apparently started life as a text within
the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, as an exercise to develop
astral and trance abilities or perhaps in other more elaborate
rites. The nightside aspect requires some care and alertness in
case of accident. The correct attitude is said to be one of self or
ego-less witness. Or maybe it's just one needs Or maybe it's just
one needs the use of an all-embracing rather than a limited kind of
identity and self-identification?" "The Nightside is always with
us. It's so much older than the Dayside. Before the light began to
shine, the night was there. Some assume that we are dealing with a
simple polarity. On one hand the radiant world of colours and
forms, more or less thinkable, reasonable and meaningful. Like the
pretty picture of the Tree of Life it has its scenic cites, its
hotels, restaurants, shopping opportunities and highways in
between. On the other hand the chaotic world of uncertain and
incomprehensible mysteries. Both of them connected by the voidness
that makes them possible. It looks symmetrical. But when you reach
the Nightside it doesn't work like that. The Nightside is not
simply a reflection of the dayside with a few confusing and spooky
bits thrown in. The Dayside is a tiny island of experience in a
huge ocean, the Nightside, full of currents, island chains and
continents of the possible and impossible. All and Nothing are
present everywhere. Our island is not the opposite of the
world-ocean, it is simply a tiny and comprehensible part of it."
Jan Fries Nightshades comprises 72 intense drawings prefaced by an
explanatory essay detailing the background and genesis of this
ultimate magical adventure.
This title provides an insightful exploration of ritual, myth, and
oracles in Shang Period China (16th-11th century BCE). Combining
wide-ranging scholarship with pragmatic practicality, the author
shines a light on one of the most obscure and least-known areas of
ritual practice in the ancient world, demonstrating its value and
connection to the development of magical practices in China over a
period of many centuries.
Kali Kaula is a practical and experiential journey through the land
of living magical art that is Tantra, guided by the incisive,
inspired and multi-talented hands of Jan Fries. By stripping away
the fantasies and exploring the roots, flowers and fruits of
Tantra, the author provides an outstandingly effective and coherent
manual of practices. Acknowledging the huge diversity of Tantric
material produced over the centuries, Jan Fries draws on several
decades of research and experience and focuses on the early
traditions of Kula, Kaula and Krama, and the result is this
inimitable work which shines with the light of possibility. Unique
in style and content, this book is more than a manual of tantric
magick, it is a guide to the exploration of the inner soul. It
contains the most lucid discussions of how to achieve liberation in
the company of numerous Indian goddesses and gods, each of whom
brings their own lessons and gifts to the dedicated seeker. It is
also an eloquent introduction to the mysteries of the great goddess
Kali, providing numerous views of her manifold nature, and showing
the immense but hidden role played throughout history by women in
the development and dissemination of tantric practices and beliefs.
Jan Fries explores the spectrum of techniques from mudra to mantra,
pranayama to puja, from kundalini arousal to purification to sexual
rites, and makes them both accessible and relevant, translating
them out of the Twilight Language of old texts and setting them in
the context of both personal transformation and the historical
evolution of traditions. The web of connections between Tantra and
Chinese Alchemy and Taoism are explored as the author weaves
together many of the previously disparate strands of philosophies
and practices. This book challenges the reader to dream, delight,
and develop, and provides an illustrated guidebook on how to do so.
Bliss awaits those who dare.
This is a manual of freestyle shamanism. The book aims to develop
vision and imagination. It builds on the inspiration of such
figures as Austin Spare and Aleister Crowley and stresses the need
to develop one's unique magical way. It shows how magicians,
witches, artists and therapists can improve their visionary
abilities and strengthen the imagination. Activate the inner sense,
and discover new modes of trance awareness. The emphasis is on
direct experience. The book asks the reader to think, act, do and
enjoy as s/he wills. The book began as a small treatise on sigil
magick and automatic drawing and was circulated privately amongst
occultists. It is especially suitable for practising mind explorers
of the unorthodox variety. Both beginners and experienced magicians
will find it inspirational and insightful. Jan Fries has a
reputation amongst the magical community as a genuine adept. His
articles and luminous artwork have graced many of the best magical
journals.
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