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Keith Badger's avatar

Charlotte, taking long walks for visceral encounters with mud, rain, white fingers, thorns and more: bravo. Your posts always find ways of connecting me with issues disturbing my mind in that moment. As a former accountant who can so well relate to Mark’s attention to the admin of life, I know the ledger of my own would make Ebenezer Scrooge proud. As I stuff drawers with browning tickets and receipts, all documented to emulate the Sumer amulets, I feel the weight I’m carrying, could it be Marley’s chains perhaps, and want to live more consciously paying witness to the real world of life and sharing its joys. I want to write more but excuse myself day after day that the routine of a well administered life must be preserved before all else. Time to upend this view and seek the currents that run beneath my feet.

Thank you for your writing. Keep going through the darkness of your winter and know your light shines brightly far below your feet showing the way forward to others.

Best wishes as ever……..Keith

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Randall Jason Green's avatar

As usual there’s a lot in here that speaks to me. The Sumatran ledger part of the essay brings to mind a song titled “Universal Applicant” by Bill Callahan from his album Apocalypse which has an overtly alchemical bent.

“Without work's calving increments

Or love's coltish punch

What would I be?

An animal-less isthmus

Beyond the sea”

And I love that you bring up Ebenezer Scrooge at the end. Dickens has been on my mind a lot lately as I see so many people online selling spells to curse Donald Trump, gain love, or offering other various classes in magick. Charles Dickens cousin just happened to open The Dickens Opera in the small city where I live in Colorado. Dickens father, mother and siblings were notoriously imprisoned in a debtors prison and young Charles put to work in a factory for his father’s debts. This is the mud and thorns he walked and was born to. His work changed the world, poor people who couldn’t read would pay to have his stories read to them as many lower class people had never heard stories that were for them before. Rather than aim spells at the “White CIS hetero Patriarchy” as I have seen Dickens knew that haunting them with what those life could be was more effective. Writing words that engaged the poor and made them want to read was more effective magic. (I do not claim to be a Dickens historian if any of this rings untrue to you.)

I’m not opposed to magick or spells but there’s a tendency for such folks to see themselves as magicians and bigger and more important than they really are. Dickens doesn’t have to look or act like a magician in any way but was a much more powerful and effective “wizard” than anyone I see selling spells for profit online. Words and stories can truly change our world.

Lastly thank you for this…. “What we need to know is that a large part of ourselves, that part that seeks out the comfortable places, doesn’t really want to find one. Because instinctively we know it will entail what the modern seer Gurdjieff once called ‘conscious suffering’. No one signs up for suffering willingly. It’s not the kind of suffering you can offload on friends and therapists either, because it’s happening in a realm that civilisation has no terminology for, even though we all feel it. The constriction of invisible bars around us, held in place by terror.”

I know myself well enough at this point to know I’m going to poke more than a few hornets nests and I am indeed afraid of the consequences to come and more-so am afraid of the suffering I will bring to my partner and whether we can withstand it as a couple…yet I’m fairly certain this is where I must go.

Thank you for sharing so much of your journey with Mark. It is truly inspirational.

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