T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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503.1 | How do you pick one, or does it pick you? | NEXUS::MORGAN | Welcome to the Age of Flowers | Sun Sep 27 1987 17:54 | 2 |
| And in what ways could one pick a magical name? Do you have a favorite
or especially effective technique for picking a magical name?
|
503.2 | 1 VOTE | NEXUS::MORGAN | Welcome to the Age of Flowers | Sun Sep 27 1987 18:57 | 24 |
| Reply to .0,
I'll offer, or attempt to offer, an answer to this question, which in
fact, I'm presently contemplating.
Magical names seem useful and quite possibly important for magical work
or relationships. Without getting into what magical work is it would
seem to me that before performing such work one needs to be in an
appropriate frame of mind.
An appropriate frame of mind could determine the outcome of the
working. Ie., an inappropriate frame of mind could hamper the working.
Psychologically, if one can separate oneself from the mundane energies
of the day before doing such work an appropriate frame of mind could be
achieved and be beneficial.
A magical name could be useful in this example as leverage into an
appropriate state of mind.
If one were to chose their magical name carefully and use it properly
a pshchological framework could be created that was supportive of
physical action. Perhaps this comes under the heading of empowering or
perhaps self-empowering.
|
503.3 | the Old Way | ESP::CONNELLY | I think he broke the President, man! | Sun Sep 27 1987 19:33 | 21 |
| re: .1
> And in what ways could one pick a magical name?
Isn't the picking of a magical name often the object of the
"vision quest" puberty ritual (using fasting, exposure, or
drugs to enhance one's receptivity to the vision). In this
case the name may be tied to some particular protective
spirit or totemic animal that is seen.
Also, the name might be given (either as part of such a
ritual or at the end of an apprenticeship) by one's
"sponsor" into adult society: the parent of the same sex,
or another relative, or a mentor with already recognized
magical prestige or expertise (e.g., a shaman).
Who knows what harm we may have suffered because we were
left to grow into adulthood with no magical name? (But
then who knows what other injuries we may have sustained
because of our society's tendency to recognize puberty
as belatedly and as resentfully as it possibly can.)
Pc.
|
503.4 | On magical names... | THE780::WOODWARD | My Karma hit my Dogma... | Mon Sep 28 1987 00:19 | 15 |
| Magical names are not just to isolate the temple experience from
the mundane, but also to emphasize that, with Initiation, you are
born again.
A magical name should be picked according to your own personal
goals. It could be in English, French, Latin, Hebrew... but
it should feel "right" for you. When you feel that you have
"fulfilled" your name, it is time to pick a new one.
Within the Golden Dawn, members picked a new name for every
grade. At one time Crowley chose Perdurabo "I shall endure"
because he wished his message to survive.
-- Mike
|
503.5 | The name changes... | NEXUS::MORGAN | Welcome to the Age of Flowers | Mon Sep 28 1987 00:42 | 12 |
| Reply to .4; Woodward,
Thanx for that. I've noticed that I have a secret name that I tell
no one. That name seems to want to change at times, but I'm not
through it yet.
At the next FM I'll be initiated so I chose a name today. I confirmed
that name numerologicly. It has the same value or is very close to the
numerlogical value of my everday name.
Now would you tell anyone outside your close circle of friends what
that name is?
|
503.6 | I wouldn't tell... | THE780::WOODWARD | IADNAH-ATH-OLORAH! | Mon Sep 28 1987 04:58 | 14 |
|
RE: .5
> Now would you tell anyone outside your close circle of friends what
> that name is?
Personally, I wouldn't. Though there are no strict rules in
the groups that I have been in contact with, your name is
supposed to be a "calling card" for your higher self... that
"bornless" part of yourself. If someone meant you harm, it
could be used against you.
-- Mike
|
503.7 | Wow! | NATASH::BUTCHART | | Mon Sep 28 1987 09:25 | 18 |
| This is fascinating!
I have a name that I fastened on instinctively during an astrology/
mythology class and thought it'd be to use it one day as a
professional monicker. Except that I have had an extreme reluctance
to do so, without knowing why. I've never told anyone this name,
not even my spouse.
Numerologically, it happens that this name, when reduced, is the
same as the number made from my full birthdate (one of the most
important, I understand, since it can't be changed).
Marcia
PS. I also got a grin out of reading that the new name meant that
one was symbolically born again. If that's so, then my feeling
for the assumption of that name is happening true to my own
cycle of personal rebirth--s-l-o-w-l-y. :-)
|
503.8 | Neither would I | GLORY::WETHERINGTON | | Mon Sep 28 1987 10:23 | 17 |
| I was told once by one of my "teachers" that one might, on the course
of one's journey on the path, learn the true name of higher beings
in the positive heirarchy. He said that he was told by his guide
that the repeating of this name was a "mortal breaking of laws"...and
when he asked what was meant by mortal, "it will cause the immediate
death of anyone who does this".
It would seem to follow that it would not be prudent or wise to
repeat or make known your own true name, if this is what you mean
by magical name. .6's reasons for not doing this sound correct
to me.
Does anyone have a copy of the poem by Lewis Carroll about cats and
their several names? It might be interesting to add within a
reply...put it in if you have a copy of it, it's a neat poem.
DW
|
503.9 | well... | ERASER::KALLIS | Raise Hallowe'en awareness. | Mon Sep 28 1987 11:07 | 24 |
| Re .8:
>Does anyone have a copy of the poem by Lewis Carroll about cats and
>their several names? It might be interesting to add within a
>reply...put it in if you have a copy of it, it's a neat poem.
It was by T. S. Eliot, and it _is_ a neat poem.
The idea of one's "true name" is something that isn't limited to
the magical. A literary example: in _The Odyssey_, Odyessus tells
Polyphemus, the cyclops, that he's named "Noman" [or "Nobody" or
"Noone," depending upon translation] -- to fool the dimwitted cyclops
so that when Odysseus blinds him, he cries out to his fellows that
"Nobody" is bothering/hurting/attacking him; whereupon the others
leave him rather than aiding him. However, as Odysseus is pulling
away from the island, he reveals his real identity to the blinded
Polyphemus, which enables him to pray for the intercession of his
father Poseidon, causing Odysseus to lose his men by shipwreck.
The moral: if someone knows who you _really_ are, he or she has
power over you. [An anologous case can be found in the legends
of Osiris and Isis, where Isis learns the True Name of Re, but people
are more likely to know the Homeric story.]
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
503.10 | | BEES::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Mon Sep 28 1987 11:27 | 1 |
| I would'nt Mikie.
|
503.11 | | SSDEVO::YOUNGER | This statement is false | Mon Sep 28 1987 12:21 | 14 |
| A magical name is, as has been previously stated, a way of showing
that you've entered a new stage of life. As an addition here, you
also get a new astrological chart with each initiation.
As for telling someone outside your circle, I would reccommend against
it, unless you *really* trust the person involved, and want to allow
them to contact you on a magical level.
As for choosing a name, choose something that calls to you, feels
right to you, is given to you by your mentor/teacher/shaman/guide.
If it is wrong or becomes wrong, you will know when to change it
to what.
Elizabeth
|
503.12 | | GLORY::WETHERINGTON | | Tue Sep 29 1987 14:52 | 3 |
| Anybody have a copy of the poem? (About cats names, by T.S. Elliot?)
DW
|
503.13 | pointer -- I'm at work | ERASER::KALLIS | See the ghost? That's the spirit! | Tue Sep 29 1987 15:13 | 7 |
| Re .12:
It appears in a number of "cat book" anthologies; more important,
it appears in Eliot's _Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats_, which
was the mother lode for the Broadway stage musical, _Cats_.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
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503.14 | in the beginning was the Word | ESP::CONNELLY | I think he broke the President, man! | Thu Oct 01 1987 01:34 | 22 |
|
In contrast to the "dynamic naming" viewpoint that (i think) we've
been discussing, there is also another view that someone better versed
than i in classical philosophy might be able to come up with a label
for (e.g., Platonist, Aristotelian, neo-Platonist, etc.).
This is the view that names are keys to the essence of the thing
described, and that every thing has a _true name_ which preexists
instantiations of the thing itself. Knowledge of this true name gives
one magical control over the thing. Thus, learning the name of the
demon one raises is key to giving a black magician control over that
demon (**do not construe this statement as in any way condoning the
raising of demons or black magic**). In this model, also, the name
that one receives from a parent or mentor in a puberty rite is not
"just" a name which that person has decided (with whatever appropriate
spirit guidance) is right for you, rather it is THE name which has
been waiting for you since the beginning of time.
(The most famous surviving prose work assuming this viewpoint is the
beginning of the Gospel attributed to St. John, by the way. But the
concept has shown up in numerous other places too.)
paul c.
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503.15 | Soul Language Names? | NEXUS::MORGAN | Welcome to the Age of Flowers | Thu Oct 01 1987 19:29 | 23 |
| Reply to .14; Connelly,
Years ago, as a Christian, I was given the gift of speaking in tongues.
After making the turn around the spiritual corner I found that I
didn't loose that gift.
Speaking in tongues has been at times defined as a prayer language and
at other times babble. I still think that it's a soul language or
possibly a past life language. I use it at times (singing) to calm
myself and have in the past entered into altered states of
consciosness.
Well to get on with the story, I was meditating recently and wondered
if I have a soul language name for my cat. The name came to me. I won't
tell anyone for the sake of the cat (just in case it's correct B^).
The sound of the name fits the cat, but means nothing in English, or
perhaps anyother human language. I wonder if soul language could be one
step toward a universal spiritual language we have all forgotten?
Perhaps this is one way of dynamicly finding the name of an entity.
P.S. Anybody got a "Soul Language to English Dictionary"?? B^)
|
503.16 | Frames of references | FDCV13::PAINTER | | Tue Oct 06 1987 12:48 | 18 |
|
This topic on 'magical names' is something I've never heard of before.
Interesting!
Along these lines, in the past I have thought of myself in 3 different
frames of references (past self, present self and future self).
Now that I realize there is something called 'spiritual growth' (Thanks
Scott Peck), I try to assimilate the information received in 'present
self', try to relate it to 'past self' if possible - otherwise create
a new frame of reference for it and go from there - with the end
goal of not being stuck in prior ruts as a result of not learning
from 'present self' and always drawing solely on experiences in
the 'past self' frame(s) of reference(s).
Shirley MacLaine says this quite well when she writes, "I accept
things on *their own* terms - not on *my* terms".
Cindy
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503.17 | Question! | POBOX::HEIN | | Wed Aug 02 1989 17:19 | 11 |
| I feel really stupid, but even after reading this note and its replies,
I still don't understand the purpose of magical names. Could someone
try to explain their meaning to me?
Also, is the origin of magical names from the ancient Egyptians?
I remember learning that there is one true name of God, and if someone
were to learn this name, they would gain the knowledge of the universe.
Do these magical names basically follow that same belief?
Thanks in advance!
Jennifer
|