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Psychic Self-Defence by Dion
Fortune
METHODS OF DEFENCE AGAINST PSYCHIC ATTACK
PHYSICAL ASPECT OF PSYCHIC ATTACK AND
DEFENCE
WE
have distinguished the various types of psychic attack, we have
described the methods that can be employed in carrying them out, and we
have also noted the various forms of delusion, fraud and auto-suggestion that may complicate the issue. We are now in a position
to discuss the question of diagnosis. Let us consider the whole matter from the
practical point of view. Supposing a stranger comes with a story of a psychic attack, what should be our
procedure?
We must first of all bear in mind that there is great need of caution in
presuming that a psychic attack is
being made. Psychic attacks are comparatively rare things. We must not
assume we are dealing with
one until we have excluded all the other things it can possibly be. Not
so long ago I came across a case of alleged obsession which turned out
to be neglected constipation, and which was effectually exorcised
with castor oil. If there are any physical symptoms at all, even if they
are no more than a bad colour
or a
bad breath, a diagnosis ought to be made by a qualified medical
practitioner, for even if the trouble have a predominating psychic element, its origin may be physical. Septic
foci are really centres of decomposition, and as such they open the door to low forms
of elemental life whose function is to assist in the return of dust to
dust. Impurities in the blood-stream may poison the brain. New growths
or abscesses may derange its functions. These things can only be
recognised by the man who understands the body; other things being
equal, the trained man is the better man, and the man with the best
training is the best man, and the only place where an adequate training
in diagnosis can be obtained is a general hospital. Moreover, should
things turn out badly, the only person who can pull the chestnuts out of
the fire is the person whose signature the authorities will accept on a
certificate. Supposing the patient turns out to be a lunatic, what is the unqualified practitioner
going to do with him? A very large proportion
of the cases of alleged psychic attack turn out to be lunatics and
hysterics. Incipient lunacy is a very hard thing to detect; hysteria is
very cunning and plausible; a doctor who is handling human nature in
bulk every day of his life will detect either of these two conditions
much quicker than the layman who has never met them before.
It may be objected that it is a very difficult thing to find a doctor
who will have a sympathetic attitude towards occultism. To argue thus is
to misunderstand the position. The doctor is not being asked to co-operate with any occult operation, but to examine for
physical disease, and if he finds it, to treat it. He is no more concerned in the
occult measures that are taken for the benefit of his patient than he is
in the church his patient attends.
If the doctor finds no evidence of organic disease, or some complaint
such as varicose veins which can obviously have no bearing on the mental
condition, the case may be held to have passed the first test, and we may feel that it is worth while to proceed to the
psychic investigation. If the case is a bad one, or
the trouble is of long standing, the doctor will probably find that the
patient is debilitated,
even if there is nothing definitely amiss, and will proceed to treat the
condition accordingly. This is all to the good, for the better the
physical condition of the patient the more mental control and stamina he
will have.
Sleeping-draughts, however, should be avoided if possible, and if they
have to be administered,
then the
patient should be watched while he sleeps by someone who knows how to
keep an occult guard, and the
room in which he sleeps should be purified and sealed. In the ordinary
way, if a person who is out on the astral meets with an occult attack, he bolts back to his body like a
rabbit to its burrow and wakes up as if from a nightmare; but if the sleep is made
unnaturally deep by a sleeping- draught, he cannot wake up, and is
locked out on the astral, as it were, which is the last thing one wants
in the case of a psychic attack. If a sleeping-draught is considered
essential, for it is impossible to go without sleep indefinitely, the
person who is watching beside the sleeper should observe carefully any
signs that the sleep is being disturbed by dreams, and if he observes
muttering or twitching, should immediately perform the necessary
banishings and whisper into the ear of the sleeper soothing and
reassuring suggestions such as
Coue recommends should be done in the case of young children. One of the
most distressing features
of a psychic attack is that the victim fears to sleep because he feels
that in sleep he is defenceless. Those who have read Kipling's terrible
story, "The End of the Passage," may remember that the victim of the
occult attack therein described always went to bed wearing spurs in
order that he might rowel himself
and so wake up if he were struggling with his invisible enemy during
sleep.
There is a great deal that can be done upon the physical plane to help
the person who is suffering from an occult attack, and we may as well
consider these physical methods while we are upon the subject of the part that can be played by a doctor in dealing with
the case. Sunlight is exceedingly valuable because
it strengthens the aura and makes it much more resistant. People are
often advised to go away into the country on this account, but for the
victim of an occult attack to go into the depths of the country may not
be the wisest thing, because elemental forces are much more potent away
from towns, and if he is threatened by an uprush of atavistic forces, he
had better cling to the haunts of men. The sea, too, is an elemental
force that is best avoided, for water is an element intimately
associated with psychism. Large bodies of water and high mountains
should be avoided in choosing a health resort for a person suffering
from psychic trouble. The best place is an inland spa. Games, physical
training, massage, anything that improves the bodily condition, are invaluable, but long solitary walks
should be avoided because there is often a risk of suicide. The person who is the victim of
an occult attack should at all costs avoid solitude.
There is another very simple measure which gives immense relief in cases
of psychic interference. It is obvious that the attack is made through
the psychic centres, therefore any thing which closes those centres will
render the victim comparatively immune. It is well known how the stolid,
materialistic type of person can live with impunity in haunted houses
that drive the sensitive to madness and suicide. It is also well known
that psychic work cannot be performed if there is food in the stomach;
the best results are always obtained when fasting. The obvious corollary
of these facts is that if we want to keep the psychic centres closed, we
should not allow the stomach to become empty. The person who is facing a
psychic attack should not go more than two hours without food.
Certain important psychic centres are in the head. One of the simplest
ways of checking their activity is by drawing the blood down from the
head. This can be done effectually by a hot bath or putting the feet in
hot mustard and water. Another important centre is the solar plexus;
during a psychic attack this is
often felt to be tense and distressing. A large hot-water bottle,well
filled so that it is heavy
as well as hot, laid upon the solar plexus, which is the hand-breadth
between the pit of the stomach and the ribs, will effectually relieve
tension in that spot. Indeed, pressure without heat will give relief,
and I have known cases where a firm pad held in
place by a belt or corsets gave much comfort.
Above all things, the bowels should be kept freely open while facing a
psychic attack, because there is nothing that puts one at so great a
disadvantage as the accumulation of effete matter within the body.
All these simple physical remedies are readily available. They will not
afford a cure for psychic pathologies, nor a complete defence from
psychic attack, but they can give great relief from distress; they
enable the victim to put up a much more effectual resistance, and by
relieving the strain, they
increase his endurance. In many cases of psychic attack, he who endures
longest wins; psychic attacks
by
human beings are not things which can be maintained indefinitely because
they use up too much
energy.
There is an old adage, "Never use a big spade if a little spade will
do." Physical methods of defence involve much less outlay of energy than
psychic ones, therefore it is psychically economical to make as much use of them as possible. Why trouble to exorcise the
earth elementals with a ritual if you can do it with a pill?
The question of diet also requires to be considered in this connection.
The widespread propaganda
of the
Theosophical Society has caused vegetarianism to be regarded as a
sine qua non
of occult training. This, however, is not the case. The Western Esoteric
Tradition does not make vegetarianism any part of its system, but teaches that a man should partake sparingly
and temperately of the food of the land in which he finds himself. Personally
I am inclined to think that occultism and vegetarianism are apt to be an
injudicious mixture for a European, the result being a
hyper-sensitiveness that makes life very
difficult in our hard-driving civilisation.
Vegetarianism has to be thoroughly understood and exceedingly well done
if it is to be successful, and
even so, there is a goodly proportion of people who are incapable of
digesting vegetable proteins,
which
are not nearly so easily dealt with as animal substances. Nothing but
experience and experimentation
can show whether a vegetarian diet suits a given person. Indigestion is
not the only indication that all is not
well. Loss of appetite, loss of energy, loss of weight, or a flabby
stoutness are all danger signals which if disregarded will cause chronic ill-health. Vegetarianism may agree
with a person well enough at first, but after a considerable period,
possibly years, they may find that they are becoming subject to
neuritis,
neuralgia, sciatica, or one or another of the nerve pains. This is a
sure indication that a vegetarian
diet is affording insufficient nourishment, not because it does not
contain the necessary food units, but because the digestion is unable to
assimilate them and they are passing out of the body unchanged. Wherever
there is a history of neuralgic pains complicating a case of psychic
disturbance, I should be inclined to suspect chronic malnutrition as the
cause of a hypertrophied psychism. In such cases it will probably be
found that a gradual return to a nourishing mixed diet will bring about
a reduction of the hyper-sensitiveness, the undesirable contacts that have
been formed will fade, and the condition return to normal. The change of diet, however, should
always be made gradually lest the digestion be upset.
Anyone who is having trouble with psychic disturbance should immediately
discontinue all occult
practices and should exchange his habitual meditations for the prayers
of his childhood, or New
Thought
methods. It is no time to open up the psychic centres when there is
astral trouble. The thing to
do in such cases is to get back on to the physical plane and stop there
resolutely. There was a picture in an old number of
Punch
which to my way of thinking exactly expresses the correct
attitude for the person afflicted by psychic trouble. In front of an
old-fashioned four-poster bedstead stands a ferocious female armed with
a rolling-pin, and from under the valance protrudes the head of her
spouse, who says, "Ye
may whack me, and ye may thwack me, but ye canna break my manly spirit,
for I'll no cam' oot."
If the victim of an occult attack concentrates on mundane things he is a
heart-breaking proposition for any sorcerer. What is the sorcerer to do if, at the time when he is
operating the Black Art, his victim is at
the local cinema roaring at the antics of Charley Chaplin? There is an old
saying that one nail drives out another. If in fear of in visible dangers,
take up a sport with an element of risk in it. |
DIAGNOSIS OF THE NATURE OF AN ATTACK |