Magical formula of the sexes
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"Men: Lingam, projection & penetration Archetype: Chaos the undirected force of energy (Will) he is perpetually going. He penetrates the heart of matter implanting himself therein making her the vehicle of his will. "
hello and 93!
is it me or this it sounds as if women were some kind of zombies doing the will of men? -
"The Kundrie is a woman that seeks to control, change or direct the actions of the man in such a way that he is imprisoned by her. This is easily remedied by any man who can realize what is happening and bring it to bay. If he does not he's more to blame than she! "
this you describe is what jung called the anima. these are qualities that are in the man and projected into a woman. they are two aspects to the anima, the negative (described by you) and the positive. but the important thing to remember is that these aspects are inside the masculine psyche not the feminine.
"Another point of confusion for man is over indulgence in the dominating aspect. The mans natural center being in tipharet (the ego center) he can easily become a overbearing person if he 'projects' himself too much in one direction."
i want to make the observation that humanity and not the masculine is centered in tipharet. tipharet is not on the masculine pillar (mercy) nor on the feminine pillar (severity).
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"is it me or this it sounds as if women were some kind of zombies doing the will of men? "
Personally I have a hard time distinguishing the wheat from the chaff when it comes to AC and Thelema, and this statement strikes a major reoccuring chord in my Wagnerian battle.
To generalize my dilema:
- AC is a man.
- He seems to deify the sexual instinct as God, and furthermore the Sperm as the physical manifestation of that Power.
this makes sense to me when I consider Thelema in the context of a Male Cult... AC is a man, why would he make the powers-that-be female, and remove himself from that role...
Regarding his writings, there are numerous cases of blatant sexism. I've just reread parts of "The Diary of a Drug Fiend" and in the final analysis, it seems like the character of Lou's True Will is to server her man and do whatever he needs to fulfill his own TW (ie. to be the zombie to his necromancer).
I guess what I'm getting at, is, can we discuss Thelema, as Crowley wrote about it, without a male oriented/dominating POV? If we wish to follow a more gender-equal perspective, how much of Crowley's Thelema do we need to change?
Miss Ruby I noticed you began a post with the 93 greeting... which I assume (Ass-U-Me... I know) means you follow Thelema somewhat closely... have you found you need to reinterpret some of what Crowley says in order to find a more common ground?
Thanks for any help from a female perspective on this.
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93 All,
"Quote Miss Ruby: I want to make the observation that humanity and not the masculine is centered in Tiphareth. Tiphareth is not on the masculine pillar (mercy) nor on the feminine pillar (severity)."
Agreed: If I may interject one small point, we (females & males) contain both polarities. That is we can be both receptive & projective.
"Quote Miss Ruby: is it me or this it sounds as if women were some kind of zombies doing the will of men?"
I am really not the most qualified person to rewrite anything but… since there has been a number of treads on this forum that have just been immature in regards toward women…I just gotta try and put this in perspective. It helped me to reword Liber Oz to clear up my thinking. Maybe it will help others?
Just my 2.cents
There is no God but Woman.
- Women has the right to live by her own law--
To live in the way that she wills to do:
To work as she will:
To play as she will:
To rest as she will:
To die when and how she will. - Woman has the right to eat what she will:
To drink what she will:
To dwell where she will:
To move as she will on the face of the earth. - Woman has the right to think what she will:
To speak what she will:
To write what she will:
To draw, paint, carve, etch, mould, build as she will:
To dress as she will. - Woman has the right to love as she will:--
"take your fill and will of love as ye will,
when, where, and with whom ye will." --AL. I. 51 - Woman has the right to kill those who would thwart these rights.
"the slaves shall serve." --AL. II. 58
"Love is the law, love under will." --AL. I. 57
- Women has the right to live by her own law--
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Most seem to be missing this part.
"These two formula are inherent in every one of us to some degree and the denial or ignorance of them are a main cause of strife in the lives of people today. It is the Law of Nature to be who and what we are. To go against this is to go against the inertia of the Universe and if we do that we cannot be doing our True Will"
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Phoenix93, 93.
"Most seem to be missing this part.
Quote:
These two formula are inherent in every one of us to some degree and the denial or ignorance of them are a main cause of strife in the lives of people today. It is the Law of Nature to be who and what we are. To go against this is to go against the inertia of the Universe and if we do that we cannot be doing our True Will"
Agreed -
Can we seperate AC's views on the "formula" of woman from his views on actual "women?"
I know many of the attributions of Binah, and Women, were in place before AC, but attributing the moon to women and the sun to men has some psychological implications on your view of the females of the species, regardless if you say that we, each of us, have aspects of both in us.
I guess I've known too many feminists to take it for granted that on the TOL, Chokmah, is above Binah. It's a structure with some sense of hierarchy...
From Confessions of Aleister Crowley:
""... morally and mentally, women were for me beneath contempt. They had no true moral ideals. They were bound up with their necessary preoccupation, with the function of reproduction. Their apparent aspirations were camouflage. Intellectually, of course, they did not exist. Even the few whose minds were not completely blank had them furnished with Wardour Street Chippendale. Their attainments were those of the ape and the parrot. These facts did not deter me. On the contrary, it was highly convenient that one's sexual relations should be with an animal with no consciousness beyond sex."
Sounds like the receptivity that we've identified as being the forumla of women.
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93 scarecrow,
@Scarecrow said
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Personally I have a hard time distinguishing the wheat from the chaff when it comes to AC and Thelema, and this statement strikes a major reoccuring chord in my Wagnerian battle.To generalize my dilema:
- AC is a man. "
...and he is also the prophet. two different things.
sometimes generalizations help, but we have to be able to distinguish the man from the prophet if we want to make progress overall.@Scarecrow said
"
- He seems to deify the sexual instinct as God, and furthermore the Sperm as the physical manifestation of that Power.
"
two points here... "only" sperm as the physical manifestation of that power? power corresponds to geburah and the severity pillar. the tarot card the charriot has the secret of the holy graal. it unites geburah and binah. in other words, the point doesn't exist without the circle, and viceversa. i find it fascinating that the sigil for the sun is a dot and a circle.
second:
thelema is a solar-phalic religion/philosopy/movement/belief system (whatever you want to call it). it is a mistake to think that only males posses this energy. that is the most literal and shortsighted view of thelema. we humans exist in different planes and we both posses this energy even if our genitals express different aspects of the same energy on the physical plane. this is very important to understand.@Scarecrow said
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this makes sense to me when I consider Thelema in the context of a Male Cult... "this is only true if you want to create a cult around a man and not follow thelema.
in other words, you can be a thelemite and don't pay attention to crowley as a man.@Scarecrow said
"
Regarding his writings, there are numerous cases of blatant sexism. I've just reread parts of "The Diary of a Drug Fiend" and in the final analysis, it seems like the character of Lou's True Will is to server her man and do whatever he needs to fulfill his own TW (ie. to be the zombie to his necromancer).
"if i tell you that victor neuburg's true will was to pursue crowley sexually, am i saying that all men have to do the same?
every human being has to decide what is her or his true will and you can't generalize based on one example.@Scarecrow said
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I guess what I'm getting at, is, can we discuss Thelema, as Crowley wrote about it, without a male oriented/dominating POV? If we wish to follow a more gender-equal perspective, how much of Crowley's Thelema do we need to change?"my personal belief is that thelema has always been gender-equal, and only the imperfections in crowley's personality obscured some aspect of it. that's why i am so adamant in making clear that this constant mistake is removed from our comprehension of thelema.
@Scarecrow said
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Miss Ruby I noticed you began a post with the 93 greeting... which I assume ({@$$}-U-Me... I know) means you follow Thelema somewhat closely... have you found you need to reinterpret some of what Crowley says in order to find a more common ground?"see above...
93s
miss ruby -
93 again scarecrow
@Scarecrow said
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I guess I've known too many feminists to take it for granted that on the TOL, Chokmah, is above Binah. It's a structure with some sense of hierarchy..."mmm i don't think i understand this. can you elaborate a bit more?
@Scarecrow said
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From Confessions of Aleister Crowley:""... morally and mentally, women were for me beneath contempt. They had no true moral ideals. They were bound up with their necessary preoccupation, with the function of reproduction. Their apparent aspirations were camouflage. Intellectually, of course, they did not exist. Even the few whose minds were not completely blank had them furnished with Wardour Street Chippendale. Their attainments were those of the ape and the parrot. These facts did not deter me. On the contrary, it was highly convenient that one's sexual relations should be with an animal with no consciousness beyond sex."
Sounds like the receptivity that we've identified as being the forumla of women."
please see my post above. this is statement is not thelema even with crowley's signature...
this is thelema:
"every man and every woman is a star"if he was criticizing women, it was women that had not started their development and that are only operating from a primitive stand point (sadly common situation in the victorian era). just to balance this attack on women, men can be stupid and primitive as well. but my intent is not to start a war of the sexes, just to understand that:
a) crowley was a man and bound to make stupid remarks once in a while.
b) thelema is not crowley. crowley was a fascinating man that helped us grasp the concept, but we should not go astray by his mistakes.93s
miss ruby