ancestral spirits easier, by enabling them to
show themselves in visible form.
Smoke and perfumes served as vehicles for the
temporary embodiment of demons
which had been summoned up to visible appearance
in the ceremonial magic of the
Middle Ages_
An early Jewish treatise on magic [the
Pneumatica Kabbalistica] alludes to `Dwellers
of the Lowest Air', as
-Spirits
Proud and Wrathful. Authors of Arrogance and
Fury,
and the Seducers of Men" These demons are said
to require thicker and coarser
odours and damp obnoxious vapours to make bodies
in which the magician can see
them
An
Egyptian myth is the basis of a more profound
doctrine about air. The Egyptians believed that
from the marriage of Chaos [
matter
before it was brought to life] and
the Wind [the
life-breath] came forth Mut or Mat in the form
of an egg. Mat or Maat
was the
Egyptian word for both "mother" and "matter",
and was the name of the
goddess of
truth and justice.
The original egg-mother and matter, the womb in
which the chick is hatched
-
later became the o or nought
which the first card in the Tarot pack. In the
early French
packs this
card is actually called Le Mat, the Fool.
The
Fool is the first of the cards, the Origin from
which all the others proceed. It
stands for
the Nothing before anything existed. which
contained in itself the potential
existence of everything; the ultimate Truth (the goddess Maat) behind
all the surface phenomena of the
universe. It is associated with air in the sense
of a vacuum, an emptiness, and is identified
with God as Pure Nothingness- having no
identifiable characteristics but containing all
things.
The Sleeping Serpent
Breath or air as the creative spirit is also
linked with the mind, the creator of ideas.
In Hinduism, mind and breath (prana) are
considered to be identical. Many forms of
yoga involve pranayama (control of breathing)
although far more is involved than the
inhalation, retention and expiration of breath.
The theory behind it is when the
process of
breathing ceases to agitate the body and
subsides, the mind attains absolute
tranquillity.
freedom from thought, and the ultimate identity
of itself with the object of meditation'
The flow of breath having been controlled to the
point of where it
ceases
altogether, conception of mental images also
ceases, and the mind becomes
empty.
merging into a formless radiance which is the
nature of pure bliss.
This
doctrine was developed in its final and most
perfect form in certain Hindu and
Buddhist manuals, in which the whole of creation is regarded as
illusory. Prana, the breath or life -
current, is primarily used to compel the upward surge of kundalini,
the
great magical shakti or power residing in every
individual. She is visualized as a
sleeping serpent coiled at the base of the
spine. She is activated by a concentration of
citta (mind -substance) set in motion by
controlled breathing. The breath is thus a
compulsive
energy used to awaken the dormant cosmic power.
This power is also
likened to fire, fanned into activity by pranayama.
Magic powers accrue to the adept who stays the
kundalini at any one of the six lotuses
(chakras) situated at intervals along the spinal
column. In the real adept, the true
yogi, the
fire is not arrested at any of these centres but
is exalted to the highest lotus; the thousand-petalled
lotus (sahasrara) in the region of the brain,
where the goddess Kundalini unites with
her lord, Shiva (pure consciousness). Samadhi
(literally
'together with the lord') is the result.
When Samadhi is stabilized and rendered
pemianent, it is known as liberation
(mukti)
;
it causes the yogi to become aware of his
natural state. Liberation is not a |