METHODS OF DEFENCE PART III
PSYCHIC
trouble not infrequently arises owing to the formation of an undesirable
rapport. In order to
understand the nature of this problem we must consider the whole subject
of rapport.
We have already considered in some detail the question of telepathic
suggestion. Rapport might be considered as the passive aspect of that of
which telepathic suggestion is the active aspect. It forms, in fact, the basic condition necessary for telepathic
suggestion to take place. Two people who are in rapport might be described as astral Siamese twins.
Although the physical bodies are independent units, the astral bodies
are linked in such a manner that there is free circulation of astral
force between them, just as the circulatory system of the mother is
connected through the umbilical cord with the unborn child, and the same blood circulating freely through both.
This fact explains many important occult phenomena. It is the real key
to marriage, and explains many
facts in the relationship of parent and child. It also accounts for some
important aspects of the relation
of pupil and teacher.
But not only is it possible for a rapport to be established between two
individuals, but between an individual and a group. This fact plays an
important part in all fraternity work. It is also possible to establish
rapport between a human being and other kingdoms of nature; with
discarnate entities, superhuman beings, and, in fact, with any form of
life with which an individual can form a sympathetic understanding.
There must be some ground of sympathy as the basis for the formation of
a rapport, but once formed, it can be developed almost indefinitely. It
is a curious fact that if a rapport is long continued, the persons thus united gradually come to
resemble each other. We all know the "horsey" type
of man; also the son of the soil of whom it was expressively remarked,
"Father's in the pig-stye. You'll know him by his hat."
When two human beings are in rapport, the less positive of the two tends
to lose his own individuality and becomes the pale reflection of the
other. It is for this reason that the Western occultist, who values
individuality highly, does not
take personal pupils in the same way as does the Eastern guru, but
prefers
to work through ritual with a group because this method is more
impersonal. But even so, the individual
members of a group will undergo certain changes whereby they are tuned
in to the group-tone, so that
there will be a certain common denominator which they all possess. Who
cannot recognise the sign-manual of the Christian Scientist, the
Theosophist, the Quaker? Any system which has group meditation rapidly puts its mark on its members.
In this fact, of course, lies much of the value of association with a
worthy group. In it, equally, lies the detriment of association with an
unworthy group. Let us consider what happens when a person of ordinary
good character becomes associated with a group of degenerate moral tone.
He will either find himself in such sharp antagonism to the group-mind
that he will have no option but to withdraw, or he
will rapidly but unconsciously be tuned to the keynote of his new
associates. Without his being
aware of the fact, his moral sense will have become blunted and he will
accept as a matter of course what he would originally have turned from
in disgust.
Rapport once established, other things beside the general feeling-tone
can be shared. Actual
ideas can be
transferred from one mind to another as in telepathy; and in the same
way, vital force can be transmitted. It is this fact which is the explanation of certain types of spiritual
healing. When etheric vitality is being transmitted, it is necessary that the persons
concerned should be within the immediate magnetic field of each other;
but when astral force is in question, this is not necessary.
Transmission is independent of space.
We are not now considering the legitimate use of this force for healing,
or for teaching and developing neophytes, so we will not, therefore,
consider its modus operandi in detail. Enough has been said to
show in what way it works. Let us now proceed to the consideration of
the practical methods of breaking such a rapport if for any reason it is desired to discontinue its use.
To astral vision the telepathic link appears as a ray of light, a
shining cord, or some similar thought-form, because it is in this form
that it is usually formulated by the person who is making the magnetic link. It sometimes happens, however, if the
operator has a high grade of initiation, that instead of connecting the ray direct to the person
with whom he desires to be in touch, he will formulate an astral animal
at the end of it to which he transfers a modicum of his own
consciousness. This animal-form is called a Watcher; it does not act on
its own initiative unless attacked, when it defends itself according to
the nature of the species in whose likeness it is made. The use of a
Watcher is to obtain a record of what is transpiring without the
necessity of focussing consciousness thereon. When
the psychic substance of the Watcher is reabsorbed by the adept, he
becomes aware of the content
of the Watcher's consciousness. The disadvantage of this method lies in
the vulnerableness of the Watcher to psychic attack, and the fact that
its projector is affected if it is injured or disintegrated.
In dealing with a thought-form, always bear in mind that it is the
product of the imagination,
and is in no sense self- existent. What the imagination has made the
imagination can unmake. If the maker of a
thought-form has thought it into existence by picturing it
imaginatively, you can equally well think
it out of existence by picturing it clearly and imagining it bursting
into a thousand fragments, or going up in flames, or dissolving into
water and being absorbed by the soil. That which is thought into
existence by
the imagination can be thought out of existence by the imagination.
If what was taken for a thought-form resists destruction by this method,
it is probably an artificial elemental. Now there are two such
elementals, one kind being ensouled by the invocation of elemental
essence into a thought-form, and the other by the projection of
something of the magician's own nature into it. If it is ensouled by
elemental essence, the use of the Pentagram will serve to banish it; but
if it is of the kind that is ensouled by the magician's own force,
another method must be used, known as absorption.
Now absorption is a very high-grade method, and its successful use
depends upon the state of
consciousness of the user. Each individual has to decide for himself
whether in any given case
at a given
moment he is in a fit state to attempt it. Unless he can completely
steady his own vibrations and arrive at a state of perfect serenity and freedom from all sense of effort, he
should not make the attempt.
We will, however, describe the method for the benefit of those who care
to try it.
Harmonising himself by mediation upon the Christ, the adept, as soon as
he is satisfied that his own vibrations are steady, proceeds to call up
before his astral vision the image of the form he intends to destroy. He sees it clearly in all its details and seeks
to divine its nature, whether it is a vehicle for malice or lust, or vampiric
action: these are the three most common, and it can almost certainly be
assigned to one or other of these classes. Having discerned the type of
the force with which he has to deal, he then proceeds to meditate upon
its opposite, concentrating upon purity and selflessness if the force be
lust; compassion and love, if it be malice; and upon God as the creator
and sustainer of all life if it be vampiric.
He continues this meditation until he feels himself suffused with the
quality upon which he is meditating; until he feels himself so imbued
with purity and selflessness that lust causes him to feel nothing but pity, malice causes him to feel nothing but
compassion, and in regard to vampirism, he is so assured that his life is hid
with Christ in God that he would willingly let the vampire finish its
meal in peace if he could thereby help it. In fact, the adept who
proposes to perform a magical absorption has to reach the point where he
has clearly realised the nothingness of the evil he proposes to absorb,
and no
longer has any feeling towards it but pity for an ignorance that thinks
it can gain any good thing for
itself in this way. He desires to uplift and educate and free the
misguided soul from its bondage. Until he has arrived at the point when he has no other feeling than this towards his
persecutor, it is not safe for him to attempt an absorption.
Having satisfied himself that he is ready for the attempt, he proceeds
to draw the thought-form towards
him by pulling in the silver cord that connects it with his solar plexus
if it be a vampiric thought-form, or
by opening his aura to it and enfolding it if it be one of the other two
types. He literally sucks it in. This process should be done slowly and gradually, taking some minutes
in the doing. If it be done suddenly, the adept may not find it possible
to keep his own vibrations steady, and then he will indeed be in an
unpleasant situation.
As the thought-form is absorbed, the adept will feel a reaction in his
own nature corresponding to the
type of the thought-form. If it is a lust-force, he will feel desire
rise within him; if it is a malicious force, he will feel anger; and if it is a vampire, he will feel
blood-lust. He must immediately overcome this feeling and revert to his
mediation upon the opposite quality, maintaining it until his vibrations
are once
more fully harmonised. He will then know that the evil force has been
neutralised and there is that
much
less evil in the world. He will immediately feel a great access of
vigour and a sense of spiritual power,
as
if he could say to a mountain, "Be ye cast into the sea," and it would
be done. It is this sense of spiritual exaltation and power which tells him that the work has been successfully
accomplished. It is, however, advisable to repeat the meditation at
intervals for two or three days in case another thought-form is
formulated and sent after the first.
As for the sender of the thought-form, when the absorption takes place
he will feel that "virtue
has gone out of him," and may even be reduced temporarily to a state of
semi- collapse. He will soon revive, however, but with his power for evil of this particular
type considerably reduced for some time to come;
and if he have the possibility of reform in his nature, it may even be
that he himself will be permanently freed from this type of evil.
The great advantage of this method is that it actually destroys the
evil, root and branch; whereas the
mere
destruction of a thought-form is like cutting off the top of a weed. On
the other hand, it can only be
done by an advanced occultist keyed up to the highest pitch. If one is
disturbed or harassed or has in any degree lost his nerve, one dare not
attempt it.
If the rapport is perceived as a line of light, a cord, or any similar
form, attached to the
solar plexus, the
forehead, or any other part of the body, the best way of severing the
rapport is to forge a magical weapon
and cut it. In fact, if a rapport is felt, the first thing to do is to
visualise the cord and try to see where it attaches; the solar plexus is the commonest place.
Next formulate the cross-handled sword as already described, and invoke
God's blessing upon it. Then visualise a flaming torch, and invoke the
power of the Holy Ghost, whose symbol it is. Now with the sword hack
through the cord or ray until every shred is severed. Then sear the
stump with the consecrated fire of the torch until it shrivels up and
falls off from its point of attachment to your body.
After such a severing one must, of course, take the ordinary human
precautions to prevent the link
being re-formed. Refuse to meet the person responsible for its
formulation, or to either read or answer letters
from him. In fact, cut off physical communications as thoroughly and
resolutely as one has cut
off astral ones for a period of some months at least.
There are occasions, however, when a person is so completely
overshadowed and dominated that he cannot perform this operation for
himself. The magical operation of Substitution can then be performed,
if he can find a friend ready to undertake the task.
In order to perform this operation, the two friends agree that it shall
be done, but the one who is to become the substitute does not tell the
original victim when he proposes to undertake the operation lest that
latter should be so completely in the hands of the dominator that he
should give the game away involuntarily.
Choosing a time at which he is sure his friend is asleep, the substitute
concentrates upon him and
imagines himself to be standing beside him, and visualises the cord or
ray of the rapport stretching
from his friend out into space. If he can visualise its other point of
attachment in the dominator, so much the better.
He then formulates the sword and the torch as above described, and with
these in his hands he imagines
himself stepping right through the line of rapport, so as to break it
with his body. He must not use
either sword or torch for this process, but break it with his own flesh,
as it were. Having thus severed it from his friend, he should then go for it with sword and torch
with all his strength as it tries to enwrap him, as it assuredly will do, for
it resembles nothing so much as the tentacle of an octopus. He should go
for it
hammer and tongs, making up in zeal what he lacks in knowledge, until it
has had enough, and begins to
curl up and withdraw. The combat, of course, takes place in the
imagination, but if a clear and vivid image is produced it will be
effectual.
In illustration of this method I may mention a case I once handled by
its means. I was asked if I could
help a woman who had been a lifelong invalid, but whose case the many
doctors she had consulted were neither able to diagnose satisfactorily, nor to help. They all agreed
that there was nothing organic the
matter with her, and after trying in vain to get her better, they
generally united in saying that it was pure hysteria. She suffered from a chronic condition of
exhaustion, indigestion, attacks of vomiting, blinding headache and palpitation
of the heart. She was, however, not in the least of a neurotic
disposition, but a
quiet, sensible, intellectual woman, bearing her sufferings with
fortitude.
I
made a psychic diagnosis and came to the following conclusion. That for
many past lives
she had been upon the Path, and that in her last life, a male
incarnation, in order to speed up her progress she had travelled in the
East, and eventually took initiation into one of the Thibetan Orders,
which unfortunately turned out to be upon the Left-hand Path. Here she
learnt the Hatha Yoga which gives control over the functions of the
body.
In her present life, she retained the powers her training had given her,
but not the memory of its
technique. Consequently her emotional states affected those automatic
systems of nervous control
whose functions are normally not under the direction of the mind.
Whenever, therefore, she was emotionally disturbed, her subconscious
mentation overflowed into the automatic mind and threw certain of the
functional systems of the body out of gear. It is my belief that this
explanation affords a key to a good many cases of functional disorder.
Many people in the course of occult meditative practices obtain
control of the automatic mind which controls the functioning of the
bodily organs. It may be recalled that the famous scientist, Sir Francis Galton, the founder of the science of
eugenics, experimented with mental control of respiration, and having
obtained it, found that the automatic function had fallen into abeyance,
and he had to spend three anxious days breathing by will power and
voluntary attention until the automatic function was re-established.
In this particular case, however, there was more than disturbance of
function, there was this peculiar
and very marked chronic exhaustion. I formed the opinion that a rapport
still existed between her and the Thibetan Order of which she had been an initiate in her previous life. As
is well known to occultists, one returns life after life to the Order of which one is
an initiate, the rapport being a very strong one. This is one of the
reasons why the great Mystery Schools have no need to make themselves
known by
advertising, they know their own, and pick them up on the astral plane.
But while it is an invaluable thing to be under the aegis of a reputable
Order, it is an exceedingly unpleasant thing to stand in a similar
relationship to a disreputable Order. In this particular case it was my
opinion that the Order to which this lady had belonged in her previous
life had sunk to a very low ebb indeed, and its leaders were
deliberately drawing upon the vitality of its members.
Acting upon this hypothesis, I projected myself astrally in the way I
have already described, and visited
this lady at night. I perceived that from her solar plexus as she lay
asleep there stretched a black, elastic, stringy-looking substance that resembled nothing so much as a
stick of Spanish liquorice that has been well chewed by a small boy. This went off into space. Upon
trying to see its further end I had a brief and
far-off vision of a monastery with a Chinese type of roof perched on a
crag among vast mountains.
I
tackled the situation by the simple expedient of passing in my astral
body athwart the line of black
substance, thus breaking it. It immediately transferred itself to my
solar plexus, and for a moment I
felt a surge of tempting thoughts urging me to get this woman under my
thumb and exploit her to her full financial capacity. I cast these out,
and "went for" the rope of astral liquorice in the manner I have described, casting it off and
searing the stump, and had the satisfaction of seeing it curl up
and disappear
into the darkness. I then fell into what I considered a well-earned
sleep.
I
had told this lady nothing of my ideas because I wanted to see whether I
could clear up the case by
working solely on the occult hypothesis without any admixture of
suggestion. Next morning I visited her to
see how she was getting on, and found her sitting up in bed eating a
hearty breakfast and looking an entirely different woman to the
grey-faced, exhausted creature I had seen the day before.
Without waiting for any enquiry from me, she said, "I don't know what has
been done, but I feel as if something has been broken and I am free."
After breakfast she got up, went for a stroll, and met the doctor who was
attending her in the street. So
great was the change in her appearance that he failed to recognise her
until she spoke to him.
I told her that in my opinion she ought to have nothing
whatever to do with occult studies lest she re-form the magnetic link with
her old Order, and also taught her how to prevent her subconscious mind
from giving disruptive suggestions to her bodily systems of functional
control. For some years she remained in good health, but later,
unfortunately, took up the study of occultism again and relapsed into a
condition approximating to her previous one, having presumably re-forged
the contacts with the
Thibetan Brotherhood which had proved so disastrous to her.