True Will... How do you put it to use in daily life?
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@h2h said
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@Jim Eshelman said
"It depends on what you mean by that. I think one of the deeper truths inherent in the twin aspect of Horus is that peace is power and power is peace - they are an identity. (Or: Real strength is silent, not noisy.)"The peace = power is a great thought. Can you elaborate further on the twin aspect of Horus that suggests this?"
Sorry, I failed to itemize this. I forget that not everyone has the basics.
Heru-Ra-Ha is a transcendent expression of two polarized aspects: Ra-Hoor-Khuit who is active, outpouring, representative of strength, power, etc.; and Hoor-Paar-Kraat (Harpocrates), who is passive-receptive and introverting, and expresses silence, peace, etc.
They correspond (for example) to the twin Neophyte Signs of the Golden Dawn, "The Sign of the Enterer" and "The Sign of Silence."
These are not opposites except in the sense that they are two sides of a single coin, two expressions of a single, deeper idea.
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93,
Like Martin Luther King said,
"What is needed is a realization that power without love is reckless and abusive, and love without power is sentimental and anemic."
Love=Law
- C
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@ThatNarrowFellow said
"Like Martin Luther King said,
"What is needed is a realization that power without love is reckless and abusive, and love without power is sentimental and anemic."
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Wow! I hadn't ever seen this King quote before. How closely it parallels Liber Librae:
"Remember that unbalanced force is evil; that unbalanced severity is but cruelty and oppression; but that also unbalanced mercy is but weakness which would allow and abet Evil. Act passionately; think rationally; be Thyself."
(which Crowley mainly adapted from various Golden Dawn papers... which is a propos of nothing, except that it traces the chain of this particular idea even further back...)
Steve
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93
I love all the great responses to my post!
Thank you..This helps me very much...and I would love to keep this discussion going a bit longer...I recently read: “The Law Is For All” Written by Aleister Crowley and Edited by Isreal Regardie. most of my notes were taken from this book...I think I missed marking some of the quotes though...sorry
This seemed to me, to be a good place to begin my study; since it seems to be the major tenant of the Thelemic belief system.
I sifted through this work and have taken some notes, and added some of my own thoughts about the topic: True Will.Reference pg. 97-98 “Do what thou wilt” is not a literal license to do whatever you want..
As in all law, there are limits that we must operate under.
The phrase, “Love is the law, Love under will” set these limits.Vs. 41 Liber AL “The word of sin is restriction”
Anything that hinders, binds or diverts us from doing our Will, is sin. So also, to interfere with the will of another is “The Great Sin”I think this statement says that any action we take.. out of malice, to hinder or harm another, not only diverts them from their natural coarse but ultimately diverts us also. And does nothing, but cause pain and sorrow for all concerned.
This law, “Do what thou wilt” simply stated means that we must follow our own coarse, and our own inherent nature.
Reference pg. 102 When our thoughts and actions are in harmony, we are then, “Doing what thou wilt.”
**Vs.43 Liber AL “Do that and no other shall say nay”**The power of our will is so great, that by asserting our rights as free people with purpose, and acting according to our own individual coarse, our own nature, that Will, would not go challenged for long.
I am not sure I agree with the above statement fully. We are all faced with challenge each day, to choose between our own nature and the many diversities of this universe. Hopefully, we learn from these daily challenges and press on despite them.
By asserting our will, our right, we appeal to The Law.
**vs. 44 Liber AL “For pure will unassuaged of purpose delivered from the lust of result is in every way perfect.”**These two verses, define pure will as the true expression of our own nature.The comment on this word (unassuaged) says something like…not to be dulled or blunted.
I take this to mean.. as I have read elsewhere, That our thoughts and **actions **must be one pointed and with the same purpose.
This is not to say that the journey will always be easy or care free. We are always challenged with diversity and the strong opinions of others. We are all entitled to our own thoughts, and opinions and actions; but ultimately we must decide or discover for our selves what is for the best good; what is our Will; and Act accordingly.
Reference: Sylvia Brown's If You Could See What I See....tenent vii ...Know that each life is a path winding toward perfection. It is the step after step that is hard, not the whole of the journey.
Reference pg. 103 People who are ready to defend their right, to do and be what they Will, are respected and left alone.
While on the contrary, the slave spirit invites oppression.And oppression comes easy when our thoughts and actions are in conflict.
For instance; when you know good and well what is right, and then do the contrary; you invite conflict.
When our thoughts are divided between duty and our own nature, we have not found balance, and this is the beginning of conflict.
For instance; when you have loved ones who depend on you; You must balance between responsibility to them and the things that separate you from them.
The pure student is not concerned with lust of result. He is concerned with the task at hand; his own journey of self awareness, self expression, and discovering the universe around him. His purpose is one pointed.
Each of us must follow our own coarse.To seek to swerve our coarse is to interfere with another.
Reference Pg. 167 Sorrow appears as the result of any unsuccessful, ill judged struggle.
(Such as the purposeful interference with another or not being prepared)Acquiescence in the order of nature is the ultimate wisdom.
We must live according to our own nature or suffer.Reference Pg.176 The sole test of one’s Lordship is to know what our **True Will **is, and to do it.
Beauty and strength, come from doing one’s Will.Reference Pg.198-215 We must become aware of our true selves.
If we give up our own authority as absolute individuals, we are liable to submit to the laws of others, and feel ourselves as puppets and suffer the agonies of impotence.
Vs. 42 Liber AL “Let it be that state of manyhood bound and loathing. So with thy all; thou hast no right but to do thy will.”
The process of self analysis involves certain risks.
vs. 46 Liber AL “Dost thou fail? Art thou sorry? Is fear in thine heart?”
Reference pg 214 When you have the right understanding of the universe, and know yourself free, immortal, boundless, infinite force and fire; then may you Will and dare.
For fear, sorrow and failure will be but shadows.
You must chase away the shadows with lightening and fire.
Fire is, “Do what thou wilt!”To summarize, as I understand it;
The premise of “** Do what thou wilt”** is to do and act. It does not mean to sit still waiting for the universe to come around and be what we think it should be.
If we desire a certain outcome we must act in a way that will produce the outcome we desire.We all, weather we recognize it or not are connected, and so, our thoughts and actions have an effect on everything, and every one.
We can easily visualize the ripple effect of tossing a pebble into a pool water. The most obvious changes occur near where the pebble made it’s splash down. The ripple effect continues to move outward effecting the movement of the water farther and farther out.
And so it goes in life, that same ripple effect our** actions** have on the people around us and in the universe as a whole, reaching farther and farther outward.
**"So with thy all; thou hast no right but to do thy will.” **
and "For pure will unassuaged of purpose delivered from the lust of result is in every way perfect.”I take these phrases to mean, that if we are following our Will, we are doing what comes naturally to us. We have passion about the doing and are driven by this passion. We may not ever see the result of our actions in this life time, but we can have a certain confidence that these **passionate efforts **have had a rippling effect that continues to move outward, no matter how small the pebble...
Martin Luther King, for an example, was passionate about what he believed. And although he did not live to see the result of his efforts fully recognized, he has non the less had a profound effect on the world today.
We must act in order of our own nature, for the best good. **“Love under will” **
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Hi frzzlmom,
I'm not sure of TOT's position, but Thelemites generally do not discuss the Book of the Law because of the Tunis Comment:
The Tunis Comment
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
The study of this Book is forbidden. It is wise to destroy this copy after the first reading.
Whosoever disregards this does so at his own risk and peril. These are most dire.
Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence.
All questions of the Law are to be decided only by appeal to my writings, each for himself.
There is no law beyond Do what thou wilt.
Love is the law, love under will.
The priest of the princes,
Ankh-f-n-khonsuHmmmmm I am curious about that "single, deeper idea"...but if I'm correct in my hunch, even AC refused to discuss it openly.
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@h2h said
"Hi frzzlmom,
I'm not sure of TOT's position, but Thelemites generally do not discuss the Book of the Law because of the Tunis Comment:"
It depends on your definition of Thelemite... But anywho, this topic was discussed here quite lengthely before, myself being involved in it. here
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Well It is my thinking that since Crowley and It seems others puplished these writings over and over and commented on the texts that is it meant for discussion and study.
I am paraphraising but,,,does the Book of the Law also say some thing to the effect that fear is not of us?
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@h2h said
"Those who discuss the contents of this Book are to be shunned by all, as centres of pestilence."
@V.V.V.V.V. said
"Ye shall journey far into a land of pestilence and evil; ye shall encamp in the river of a foolish city forgotten; there shall ye meet with Me. - Liber LXV IV:62"
616
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It’s curious how ppl interpret the Tunis Comment.
Jim, for example, sees it as an “emotional outburst” whereas I am of the opinion AC could barely keep a straight face as he penned those lines. Consider: the reader is presented with Liber Legis, the central law of which is “Do What Thou Wilt” and utterances such as “the word of sin is restriction” that ends with a Comment full of prohibitions and restrictions.
Is this AC’s intelligence test for the reader? Maybe.
The only point I can see in the Tunis Comment is either 1) the Cairo Working and Liber Legis is a hoax and AC is attempting to ensure the game continues as long as possible or 2) the Tunis Comment “seals off” of further commentary on Liber Legis since it is the final word on the New Aeon.
But considering it is “Aiwaz” who allegedly authored Liber Legis, how do we understand the comment “All questions of the Law are to be decided only by appeal to my writings”. Whose writings? Ankh-f-n-khonsu? Aiwaz?? AC???
Certainly the motifs in Liber Legis echo in AC’s other books, but then this would throw into question the authorship of Aiwaz and support the view that Liber Legis was an elaborate hoax and crowning achievement on the part of AC.
Perhaps the Tunis Comment was written to prevent discussions like this from arising…
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@h2h said
"It’s curious how ppl interpret the Tunis Comment.
Jim, for example, sees it as an “emotional outburst”"
BTW that's because of the circumstances of its writing. That is, it was written during an intense bout of grief overwhelm. That's what I meant by the characterization.
"whereas I am of the opinion AC could barely keep a straight face as he penned those lines."
Those weren't the circumstances of the writing.
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93,
I don't want to get too far off topic, but, if Frzzlmom doesn't mind, what were the circumstances of the writing of the Tunis comment?
Love=Law
- C
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@ThatNarrowFellow said
"I don't want to get too far off topic, but, if Frzzlmom doesn't mind, what were the circumstances of the writing of the Tunis comment?"
One of Crowley's disciples, a man he saw as having enormous potential in spreading the Law, committed suicide after going whacko after studying Liber L. obsessively.
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@Jim Eshelman said
"One of Crowley's disciples, a man he saw as having enormous potential in spreading the Law, committed suicide after going whacko after studying Liber L. obsessively."
Do I parse the above correctly that you're saying the suicide was the trigger? From that I've found, Norman Mudd committed suicide in 1934, 9 years after the Tunis Comment was written. Do you mean someone other than Mudd?
I thought that the impetus came more from Mudd's personal (idiosyncratic?) interpretations of the Book of the Law that AC didn't like so much. The most famous one of these, I think, was Mudd's interpretation of the word "adulterous" in III:34 -- i.e., only if Leah was married to someone else (like Mudd!) could her relationship with AC truly be called adulterous!
Steve
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Frzzlmom - I apologize for taking your thread off-topic, but kindly bear with a few more questions.
Jim - your story about the circumstances surrounding the Tunis Comment is a first for me (but I have not read any biographies on AC). Would you please cite sources so I can check the information myself?
My questions:
What was the name of the disciple? Was this story about the disciple’s suicide from reading Liber Legis told by AC himself or confirmed by others? What were the grounds for believing a causal relation existed between reading Liber Legis and the subsequent suicide? Did he leave a suicide note saying something to that effect?If the Tunis Comment was indeed influenced by such circumstances and meant to be taken seriously, it would reinforce the interpretation of AC’s profound ambivalence toward Liber Legis and give more credibility to the Cairo Working, perhaps explaining why it took him years to accept the book.
On the other hand, I am highly suspicious of AC's anecdotes, be it the Cairo Working, the story about his conversation with Reuss regarding the "supreme secret of the OTO" etc. I regard this skepticism as the proper attitude of Scientific Illuminism, that one should never take anything on faith.
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@h2h said
"Jim - your story about the circumstances surrounding the Tunis Comment is a first for me (but I have not read any biographies on AC). Would you please cite sources so I can check the information myself?"
My notes and references are buried somewhere - probably can't easily get to them. Not remembering off hand whether this was published or in some of Jane Wolfe's correspondence or diaries.
"If the Tunis Comment was indeed influenced by such circumstances and meant to be taken seriously"
I simply don't think it should be taken seriously at all - other than, perhaps, as a good idea. Other than that, I don't think it's worth the paper he wrote it on. I disavow it entirely.
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@h2h said
"What was the name of the disciple? Was this story about the disciple’s suicide from reading Liber Legis told by AC himself or confirmed by others?"
I can't answer for Jim, but see my post above about Norman Mudd. I googled a bit for the anecdote that I remembered about the word "adulterous" in III:34, but I couldn't find it. I wonder if a search of Kenneth Grant's early books might find more about it. (Grant must have had access to many of the Crowley-Mudd letters, since many quotes from them are peppered in...)
"On the other hand, I am highly suspicious of AC's anecdotes, be it the Cairo Working, the story about his conversation with Reuss regarding the "supreme secret of the OTO" etc. I regard this skepticism as the proper attitude of Scientific Illuminism, that one should never take anything on faith."
Agreed. The Cairo Working mega-thread over at lashtal.com (which both h2h and I contributed to a bit) had surprisingly more skepticism and variety of opinion than I thought it would. A good sign for Thelema, I'd say!
Steve
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@ThatNarrowFellow said
"93,
I don't want to get too far off topic, but, if Frzzlmom doesn't mind, what were the circumstances of the writing of the Tunis comment?
Love=Law
- C"
No problem..I think you have a valid guestion...since some of the people who repond to this topic seem quite fearful of this line of study..
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Thanks frzzlmom.
@Jim Eshelman said
"My notes and references are buried somewhere - probably can't easily get to them."
Just the name of the disciple would be enough
@Jim Eshelman said
"other than, perhaps, as a good idea."
Why might it be a "good idea"?
Steve,
Mudd could not be the disciple referred to if he committed suicide 9 years after the Tunis Comment. Btw I was also surprised at the skepticism and variety of opinion on the Cairo Working mega-thread and agree that this is a good sign for Thelema. That Lashtal thread deserves a little explanation, but I will start a new thread for that.