Freedom
from authority is an extraordinary thing. It is called Spiritual Anarchism.
Thursday, January 9, 2020
Tuesday, January 7, 2020
How to Heal Our Disconnection From Nature
Peter Rabbit, by Beatrix Potter
"What would Robin Hood
have made of Country Life's recent excavation into the fantasies of
British 7-to-14-year-olds concerning the wild life and wild places of their
native land? Two thirds had no
idea where acorns come from, most had never heard of gamekeepers (do they mug
people or protect the Pokemons?), and most believed there were elephants and
lions running round the English countryside. A third did not know why you had
to keep gates shut -- was it to keep the elephants in (or was some joker taking
the piss just then?), or stop cows 'sitting on cars,' upsetting the countryside's
most vital beast -- the traffic?
Thursday, November 21, 2019
The Connection Between Shamanic Healing and Creative Unfoldment (essay)
Epona, by Susan Seddon-Boulet
...
The Wound is the Place
Where the Light Enters You
Rumi
…
In this
essay I will present my ideas of the connection between shamanic healing and creative
unfoldment. It is something I make aware of in my philosophical counseling practice, which I combine with forest therapy.
Monday, November 18, 2019
When We Remain with our Suffering Totally, then out of that Suffering Comes Passion
Art by Daniel Bogni
The Stoic concept of Apatheia
refers to a state of mind in which one is not disturbed by the passions.
Wednesday, November 6, 2019
A Religious Mind Must Know the Extraordinary Sense of Beauty
You go to the secret valley to sit in peace and
ask the philosophical question: What is a religious mind?
Saturday, November 2, 2019
The Beauty of Truth and its Subtleties is not in Belief and Dogma
The beauty of truth and its
subtleties is like the mist in the old garden. It is not in belief and dogma;
it never is where man can find it for there is no path to its beauty; it is not
a fixed point, a haven of shelter.
Friday, November 1, 2019
In the final step of meditation, all ideas fall away like leaves in the autumn
Painting by Aert van der Neer
In the final step of meditation, all ideas fall away like leaves in the autumn.
Thursday, October 3, 2019
The Faust Syndrome and the End of the Time of Enlightened Masters
Franz Simm:
Illustrationen zu Goethes
A phenomenon which I have returned
to many times in my books, especially in my book, Lucifer
Morningstar – a Philosophical Love Story, is the Faust-syndrome. It is a
syndrome which characterizes most Westerners: it is the dangers of ego-inflation
in combination with spiritual practice. Ego-inflation is at the same time based
on a great denial of our own collective shadow, or painbody, which are rooted
in original sin. It is a kind of compensation.
Monday, September 9, 2019
Seiðr Shamanism and the Art of Song Healing
Merlin, by Alan Lee
In Part One of this article, My
Life as a Vagabond, I described how I began to use alcohol in order to calm
down my kundalini symptoms. In Aalborg, in Denmark, and on vagabonding trips around the world, I actually lived more
or less like a "Dharma Bum" for 10 years. The alcohol abuse ended with a liver disease,
hospitalization, and a near-death experience.
Labels:
Annette Høst,
Art,
Dakinis,
Disir,
Eivør,
Fairies,
Inner Tantra,
Kalevala,
Kundalini,
Mary Shutan,
Merlin,
Poetry,
Rima Staines,
Seiðr shamanism,
Shamanism,
Storytelling,
Throat singing
Thursday, August 15, 2019
My Life as a Vagabond
From: The DruidCraft Tarot
In my Ebook, Karen Blixen – The Devil´s Mistress, I described how I began to use alcohol in order to calm down my kundalini symptoms. In Aalborg, in Denmark, and on vagabonding trips around the world, I actually lived more or less like a "Dharma Bum" for about 30 years (in a certain sense I still do, as this article will reveal). The period could be seen as starting in 1990, and ending in 2008, where I published my first book. But the period is actually longer. It started in London in 1985, and ended in 2016, where I was hospitalized with a liver disease. Here I had a near-death experience.
Thursday, August 8, 2019
The Matrix Hybrid between Digital Totalitarianism, Surveillance Capitalism and Chinese Communism
When I´m talking about a
coming Matrix Hybrid between Western Consumer Capitalism and Chinese Communism
this isn´t even a prophesy. We already see the beginning. The Slovenian continental
philosopher, Slavoj Žižek, sees the same: “capitalism doesn´t need democracy”,
he says in an interview. He says that the economical globalization increasingly
will be combined with stronger and more authoritarian national states. That is
our future, and we already see it with Trump, Erdogan and Putin, as well as what
is happening in China and India; an authoritarian capitalism. And he claims
that the one who is the father of such a way of thinking is Lee Kuan Yew from
Singapore. When Deng Xiaoping took the power in China in 1978, he went to the
authoritarian Singapore and here he saw, how that system functioned. He then decided
that it also should be like that in the the future of China, “and it works!”
says Žižek. “But do you know what makes me pessimistic about that development?
Slowly it happens – and this is very clear – that capitalism in lesser and
lesser degree needs democracy.”
Friday, July 26, 2019
My Temporary Involvement with the Italian Mafia
It was in 1990. I had just left my work in Harrods in London in order to
pursue a life of freedom and adventure.
Labels:
Corfu,
David Bowie,
Greece,
Henry Miller,
Homer´s Grave,
Hotel Rolling Stone,
Ios,
Lawrence Durrell,
Mafia,
Pelekas beach,
Shapeshifting,
The Guess Who,
The Wanderers,
Yugoslavia
Friday, July 19, 2019
My Suggestion for a New Kind of Activism
Mystical,
by Kevin Miles and Wendy
Schaefer-Miles
We are slaves to the modern culture, we are the
modern culture. I have suggested that this culture is characterized by a new
mythology, which I have called, The Mythology of Authenticity. This
mythology has two specific pedagogic methods: psychotherapy and coaching. These two
methods are again rooted in the counterculture, which are inspired by
philosophers such as Nietzsche, and occultists, such as Aleister Crowley. Quite
central are concepts such as will and choice.
Thursday, July 18, 2019
The Spiritual Kindergarten of Ken Wilber
The self-proclaimed “philosopher”
Ken Wilber (he dropped out of graduate school where he was studying
biochemistry) has sought to bring together the world´s far-ranging spiritual
teachings, philosophies, and scientific truths into one coherent and
all-embracing vision: the integral theory.
Thursday, July 11, 2019
Can you discover or experience something which is indescribable?
Mystical
Night, by Michael Z Tyree
It all starts with the
Wholeness. The Wholeness is indescribable since it can´t be put in opposition to
anything.
Monday, July 8, 2019
In Order to Handle the World Crisis, We Must Find a Common Ground
Yellow
Flowers by Krupa Shah
“You, Bedouin of Libya who saved
our lives, though you will dwell forever in my memory yet I shall never be able
to recapture your features. You are Humanity and your face comes into my mind
simply as man incarnate. You, our beloved fellowman, did not know who we might
be, and yet you recognized us without fail. And I, in my turn, shall recognize
you in the faces of all mankind. You came towards me in an aureole of charity
and magnanimity bearing the gift of water. All my friends and all my enemies
marched towards me in your person. It did not seem to me that you were rescuing
me: rather did it seem that you were forgiving me. And I felt I had no enemy
left in all the world.”
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, Wind,
Sand and Stars
Wednesday, July 3, 2019
Strange Days in Tangier
La Plage de Tangier, by David Minett
I´m using the Amazon used book market quite a lot. It can be interesting to receive a used book. Someone else has read it, and often it has a smell attached to it, which can bring you to unknown places.
Friday, June 28, 2019
On World Crisis and Responsibility
Art by Susan
Seddon Boulet
You
and I are walking in the forest. We are taking a journey, together, walking along a
quiet path, as if it is a long endless road all over the world where one sees
appalling terrorism, the killing of people for no purpose, threatening people,
kidnapping them, hijacking, murdering, wars.
Monday, June 24, 2019
In the Dark Forest of Fear
Fur,
Feather, Tooth and Nail" by Arthur Rackham
“In the middle of the journey of our life I
came to myself within a dark wood where the straight way was lost. Ah,
how hard a thing it is to tell what a wild, and rough, and stubborn wood this
was, which in my thought renews the fear!”
Monday, June 17, 2019
Monday, June 10, 2019
On a Storyteller´s Night
The Star Fishers, by Jeanie Tomanek
"A people are as healthy and confident as
the stories they tell themselves. Sick storytellers can make nations sick. Without
stories we would go mad. Life would lose it’s moorings or orientation. Even in
silence we are living our stories."
Ben Okri (in Birds of Heaven)
You are lying in bed. You are
ill with the modern illness, stress. The doctor has prescribed some pills. It
is a summer night. The window is open. Outside is the garden. The curtains are
moving.
Friday, May 31, 2019
On Beauty and the Art of Growing Wings
Bouquet of
Sunflowers, by Monet
The
mind that is whole has a quality of passive listening presence. It cares, and has
this quality of a deep abiding sense of love
of wisdom. Such a mind is the whole that you come upon when you
begin to inquire into what meditation is. Then we can proceed to find out what
is sacred.
Wednesday, May 22, 2019
The Quest for The Tangled Roots of Our Forests and Fairy Tales
"He
Too Saw the Image in the Water" by Kay Nielsen (Kay Nielsen spend his last years in poverty since nobody was interested in his works)
In Gossip from the Forest: The Tangled Roots of Our Forests and Fairy
Tales, Sara Maitland writes:
"I believe that the great stretches
of forests in northern Europe, with their constant seasonal changes, their
restricted views, their astonish biological diversity, their secret gifts and
perils and the knowledge that you have to go through them to get anywhere else,
created the themes and ethics of the fairy tales we know best. There are secrets,
hidden identities, cunning disguises; there are rhythms of change like the
changes of the seasons; there are characters, both human and animal, whose
assistance can be earned or spurned; and there is -- over and over again -- the
journey or quest, which leads first to knowledge and then to happiness. The
forest is the place of trial in fairy stories, both dangerous and exciting. Coming to terms with the forest, surviving its
terrors, utilising its gifts and gaining its help is the way to 'happy ever after.'”
Monday, May 20, 2019
Children, Wildlife, and the Art of Shapeshifting
Birdbrain, by Lori Field
Long ago the
trees thought they were people.
Long ago the mountains thought they were people.
Long ago the animals thought they were people.
Someday they will say, long ago the humans thought
they were people.
Long ago the animals thought they were people.
Someday they will say, long ago the humans thought
they were people.
Native
storyteller Johnny Moses
In his novel, Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens, J.M.
Barrie writes:
Labels:
Barrie (J.M.),
Birds,
Children,
Cornelia Funke,
Environmentalism,
Goethe,
Lori Field,
Merlin,
Peter Pan,
Poetry,
Rachel Carson,
Rick Bass,
Shapeshifting,
Storytelling,
Wilderness,
Wildlife,
Wonder
Friday, May 17, 2019
Why we shouldn´t seek spiritual experiences as a way to Reality
Painting by Gleb Goloubetsk
We are all seeking spiritual
experiences, and we are bragging about spiritual experiences and abilities.
Thursday, May 2, 2019
A Celebration of the Brave Old World
'We must go back to freedom or forward to slavery'.
G.K.
Chesterton
The British writer and
idler, Tom Hodgkinson, has a relaxed approach to life, enjoying it as it
comes rather than toiling for an imagined better future. He is the editor
of The Idler, which he established in 1993 with his friend Gavin
Pretor-Pinney.
Monday, April 29, 2019
On the Nature of Sensitivity and Beauty
Look at all the birds, the trees, and at the
dirty streets. Look at people. Look at your parents and teachers; notice how
they talk to you, what kind of words they use.
Saturday, April 27, 2019
An Inquiry into Fear and Pleasure
Flower Painting
by Anita Nowinska
There is a lot of fear in our
lives. But when we talk about fear we must also go into the question of pleasure,
enjoyment, joy, and a sense of beauty in which there is no demand for
expression.
Friday, April 26, 2019
On the Problem of Belief
Why
do you believe anything that you read? It does not matter whether it is in the
Bible or in the Gita or in the sacred books of other religions.
Tuesday, April 23, 2019
Philosophy as a Rite of Rebirth (a Shamanic Ritual)
According to Aristotle
(De Philosoph, fr. 8), wisdom (Sophia) covers any ingenious invention and
conception (all of which ultimately are gifts, sent down by the gods);
therefore to do any thing well, skillfully, according to the divine paradigms
and models, is to follow the way of “wisdom” which finally leads to the highest
metaphysical goals, to the noetic realms where Wisdom itself, the graceful
goddess, dwells. No wonder that every nation loves wisdom and has
certain “lovers of wisdom”, be they goldsmiths, artists, healers, singers,
priests, or magicians.
Algis Uzdavinys, Philosophy as a
Rite of Rebirth – From Ancient Egypt to Neoplatonism
Sunday, April 21, 2019
On Spiritual Anarchism
I
have told about thought distortions, and how important it is that, seeing how
inevitably corrupt the various types of religious, secular, and social
organizations are, to belong to any of them not only prevents the unburdening
of one’s conditioning but also prevents one from seeing things clearly.
Friday, April 5, 2019
Storytelling as a Spiritual Exercise
by Carme Magem
In fact, it is only his body that lives and has its residence in the state;
his soul, however, holds all this to be puny and meaningless, and contemptuously
wanders all over the place, “under the earth,” as Pindar says, and measuring
whatever is on its surface, and “above the heavens,” observing the stars, and
in general thoroughly investigating the nature of everything that is, but
without lowering itself to the level of any of the objects in its vicinity.
Plato, Theactetus, 173c (this is Plato´s description of
the philosopher, which, probably with roots in facts, sounds like a description
of a shaman. Philosopher in this sense, simply means what the word means: a lover of wisdom. But it also depicts the exercise of a storyteller. Modern philosophers are so removed from this, that it only is the name they have in common).
Wednesday, March 27, 2019
Five Basic Exercises in Philosophy as a Spiritual Practice
Streets of Naples, Italy
The
hunger after doing something positive, opposite the negative, makes us strive
after being something else; in this struggle we feel, that we are alive, that
there is a purpose with our life, that we gradually can remove the causes of
the conflict and the sorrow. We feel, that if we no longer were active, we
would be nothing, be lost, our lives would be completely without meaning.
Therefore we continue, and that will say: we continue the divisions, the
conflicts, the confusions and the opposites. But in this process we at the same
time feel, that there is something more which we all the time lose, that there
exists something, which is quite different, something, which is above and
beyond all this distress and misery. This feeling is the existential guilt, the
guilt over the unlived life. In this way a permanent struggle is going on
inside us.
Monday, March 25, 2019
Greco-Roman Philosophy as a Path of Enlightenment
A
central inspirator for my philosophical
counseling practice is Pierre Hadot. Hadot's recurring theme is that
philosophy in Antiquity was characterized by a series of spiritual exercises
intended to transform the perception, and therefore the being, of those who
practice it; that philosophy is best pursued in real conversation and not
through written texts and lectures; and that philosophy, as it is taught in
universities today, is for the most part a distortion of its original,
therapeutic impulse.
Friday, March 22, 2019
Thought Training, Incubation and Meditation Upon Death
The Ancient
Greek Healing Tradition called Incubation. Incubation was also a spiritual
practice.
Question: I have been meditating for many years, and I have had a lot of benefits from it, but now I seem to have reached a point where there doesn´t seem to happen anything further. I can´t stop my thoughts, they keep on repeating the same themes. How can I progress further?
Monday, March 18, 2019
Meditation as an Art of Life - The Ancient Logos
In my
book A Dictionary of Thought Distortions I
claim that the Sophists used thought distortions as a way of getting on in the
world, while Socrates (the philosopher), used critical thinking. I
consider this book to be a kind of philosophical diary on how I, during my
spiritual crisis, used critical thinking (elenchos, the art of refutation) to
distinguish base magic (New Age), which leaves everything to chance, and may
lead its practitioners to consort with falsity and evil daemons, and higher
magic or theurgy.
Labels:
Algis Uzdavinys,
Ancient logos,
Critical thinking,
Dialectic,
Egyptian wisdom,
Elenchos,
Eleusinian mysteries,
Hellenic philosophy,
Kundalini,
Logos,
Magic,
Socrates,
Sophists,
Theurgy
Wednesday, March 13, 2019
“Everything is New” – Morning Meditation
Alley Of The Dream, by Leonid Afremov
Every morning you are born out
of Hara.
You come from Omphalos, the
Navel of the World. You come from the metaphysical time, the enchanted time.
Tuesday, March 12, 2019
Primordial Meditation
Remedios Varo—Solar Music
Our language, all our
fictional productions, are reflections of the universal images in the great
vision of the creation. They are signs from the metaphysical time, from the
enchanted time.
Friday, March 8, 2019
Peter Kingsley – Another Story Waiting to Pierce You (a critique)
Peter Kingsley is an English scholar who work with the assumption that philosophy is a spiritual practice with a spiritual purpose. This is a quite central aspect of my own view of philosophy. But it is not new. Pierre Hadot is another scholar who have
emphasized this, and who is a central philosopher for the new movement of
philosophical counseling. You could also mention Algis Uždavinys. Uždavinys (1962–2010)
was a prolific Lithuanian philosopher and scholar. His work pioneered
the hermeneutical comparative study of Egyptian and Greek religions,
especially their esoteric relations to Semitic religions, and in particular
the inner aspect of Islam (Sufism). Upon graduation he came in
contact with the writings and authors of the Traditionalist or Perennialist school,
and this influenced his comparative exegesis, notably his studies on Sufism,
the Ancient Egyptian religion, and his assertion of the substantial
continuity of Greek philosophical tradition from Pythagoras down to
the latest Neoplatonic authors. In this last claim he was
expressly indebted to Pierre Hadot.
Saturday, February 2, 2019
The Eckhart Tolle Show - a Critique
Who is Eckhart Tolle?
Wikipedia says:
Eckhart
Tolle, born Ulrich Leonard Tölle, is a spiritual teacher. He is a
German-born resident of Canada best known as the author of The Power of
Now and A New Earth: Awakening to Your Life's Purpose. In 2008, The
New York Times called Tolle "the most popular spiritual author in the
United States". In 2011, he was listed by Watkins Review as the
most spiritually influential person in the world. Tolle is not identified with
any particular religion, but he has been influenced by a wide range of
spiritual works.
Sunday, January 20, 2019
Final Secret of the Illuminati (A Critique of Robert Anton Wilson)
”Perhaps the final
secret of the Illuminati is that you don´t know you´re a member until it´s
too late to get out.” Robert Anton Wilson, in Cosmic Trigger I – Final Secret of the
Illuminati (page 88)
Cosmic Trigger I is the first
book in the Cosmic Trigger series, first published in 1977 and the
first of a three-volume autobiographical and philosophical work. It has a
foreword by Timothy Leary, which he wrote in the summer of 1977. The first volume was published without numbering, as
the second volume did not appear for nearly 15 years.
Wilson is one of many
psychologists who want to be philosophers instead of the philosophers. The book
deals with Wilson's experiences during a time in which he put himself through a
process of "self-induced brain change" as well as vignettes of his
earlier life. The main discovery of this process—which, he tells us, is known
in certain traditions as Chapel perilous—is that
"reality" is mutable and subjective to the observer.
Saturday, January 19, 2019
The Psychopath's Bible (a critical book review)
The Psychopath's Bible: For the
Extreme Individual, is a book by Christopher Hyatt. Christopher Hyatt was an American
psychologist and psychotherapist who wanted to be a philosopher instead of the
philosophers. The description of this book goes:
In the most of the world, psychopaths
have gotten a bad rap. That, of course, is quite understandable since almost
all of the world's religious and social philosophies have little use for the
individual except as a tool to be placed in service to their notion of
something else: 'God,' or the 'collective,' or the 'higher good' or some other
equally undefinable term. Only rarely, such as in Zen; in Ayn Rand's philosophy
of Objectivism; in some aspects of Tibetan Buddhism and Hinduism; and in some
schools of Existentialism, is the individual considered primal. Here, finally,
is a book which celebrates, encourages and educates the best part of ourselves
--- The Psychopath.
Wednesday, January 16, 2019
Aleister Crowley – The Eye in the Triangle
The Eye in the Triangle: An
Interpretation of Aleister Crowley, is a book by Israel
Regardie. The book description sounds like this:
“Aleister
Crowley, the greatest Magus of the twentieth century, redefined the very basis
of the Western Esoteric Tradition. His incalculably vast influence reaches through
all modern occultism. Whether acknowledged or not, he is the father of the
modern arts of ceremonial magick, Western Tantra, Tarot and Wicca. His devotees
ascribe even greater significance to his life, regarding him as the prophet of
the modern age.”
Thursday, January 10, 2019
Timothy Leary – a Psychedelic Shaman Playing a Fascistic Game
Timothy
Leary is called a ”high priest of LSD” and a ”psychedelic shaman”. He
believed that LSD showed potential for therapeutic use in psychiatry. He
used LSD himself and developed a philosophy of mind expansion and personal
truth through LSD. After leaving Harvard, he continued to publicly promote the
use of psychedelic drugs and became a well-known figure of
the counterculture of the 1960s, and therefore also in New Age. He
popularized catchphrases that promoted his philosophy, such as
"turn on, tune in, drop out", "set and setting", and
"think for yourself and question authority". He also wrote and spoke
frequently about transhumanist concepts involving space migration,
intelligence increase, and life extension (SMI²LE). Below you can
download his book:
Tuesday, January 8, 2019
New Age Magazine: “Donald Trump – a Gift”
In January 2018 the Danish New
Age magazine Nyt Aspekt, brought an
article called Donald Trump – a Gift.
The article is written by Serge Beddington-Behrens, a “transpersonal
psychotherapist and shaman, who are teaching all over the world”. The article
is reproduced from the English New Age magazine Kindred Spirit. I couldn´t find
the English version and the following is based on the Danish version, as well
as my translation of this into English. Eventual grammatical errors are
therefore due to me.
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