Xylem and Phloem Part Four: Attracting the Flow of the Waters

I’ve focussed a lot on the process of improving one’s fitness for containing or channelling the flow of waters; and on the delicate balance between ego and dissolution that this seems to imply.

Now I’d like to turn to the other end of the continuum (though I reiterate that the continuum is circular, not linear) and consider ways to increase our ability to attract flows of water from the well.

As with the other posts in this theme, I cannot claim to be an expert in this area. If anything I am drawing on prototypical past experiences and speculatively developing a sketch for possible themes to develop. The comments made here are neither exhaustive nor absolute.

As previously discussed, the art of attracting the flow of the waters requires a certain kind of receptivity; if we act from our conscious will power we’ll get nowhere. However this receptivity needs to be distinguished from simple stagnation or passivity, too. We have to present ourselves to wyrd in opportune ways in order to garner its favours.

In this sense I draw a certain amount of parallel between heathen cosmology and Taoism. In Taoism the trick seems to be the art of being able to place yourself in positions sensitive to the Tao. While it takes a fit vessel to get to that sweet spot, once there the individual’s actions become free, easy, and powerfully amplified by the tide of the Tao.

I am not a surfer, but surfing makes a great analogy. When a surfer catches a wave their ability to move through the water is increased massively, and that power comes from the wave, not from the surfer.

Yet in order to catch that wave the surfer needs to be a strong enough swimmer; needs to know how to judge the waves as they come in; and needs a little luck too. Similarly, once on the wave it is the surfer’s individual skill at managing the flow of tidal force so that they are not dumped by the crashing waves.

In catching the wave, which is analogous to attracting the flow of waters, the surfer has to be receptive in the sense of putting themselves into a position where the wave will come at the right point in its development and let that wave collect them. However this receptivity requires strength and action – if they just floated inactive in the water surfers would get very bored.

Broadly speaking there seem to be two approaches to attracting the flow of waters. The first is broadly psychological; the second is more physical.

This first approach amounts to doing things that sharpen one’s imagination, perception and desire to act. I have found, for example, that rune readings and other forms of divination have often been catalysts for all kinds of change and new developments in my life. Somehow simply reading the patterns can better situate us within the sweet spots of the unfolding weave.

This might be analogous (though not identical) with the quantum physics discovery that by observing a process we change it – that is, observer and observed are interconnected and affect one another.

I say analogous but not identical because I do not want to indulge in the pseudo-scientific silliness that spiritual people get into sometimes when they confuse science as a source of inspiration with their own (usually much cruder) notions. There are similarities in the quantum physics portrait of reality and the heathen one, but let’s not make foolish claims about either.

Perhaps another aspect of why divination can help us get into a good position for attracting the flow of the waters is that it puts before us the horizon of time’s uncertainty; and similarly it thrusts us potentially into the possibility of the new.

Of course there are many ways to achieve encounters with uncertainty and possibility. A trivial example: I recently subscribed to National Geographic magazine for just this purpose.

Because it documents a wide range of subjects from all over the world I think that this subscription will help me keep perspective on the immediate bounds of my life and also give me some inspiration – because it’s a marvellous world out there!

Reading in general can serve this purpose – when I think about how much more energetic and empowered I became after reading Seidways I want to laugh! Brilliant works like that can permanently open you up to more flow. In fact, that’s another book I need to reread.

Nietzsche has the same effect on me; so did Nelson Mandela’s autobiography, which got to me so thoroughly that I read it in one sitting (no mean feat, it is some 800 pages).

Related, but more physical, methods for attracting the flow include meeting new people, entering new social circles, and adopting the old chaos magic technique of transgressing against one’s characteristic patterns (that Crowley quote from my last post gives a good example of this technique).

We might feel some fear and resistance to expanding our horizons, yet usually once we’ve taken the risk we never look back.

Something about the thrill of the new can draw in plenty of watery nourishment and dissolve blockages. However I should mention that this is not enough on its own – if we are constantly dependent on novelty then we are unlikely to commit to anything long enough to bring it to fruition.

Hence there is the gamut of more stable spiritual practices – performing ritual; chanting; using music as a mood-altering device; communicating in various ways with ideas, archetypes, gods, ancestors and spirits. Even just getting out of the house more!

I find that when I acknowledge divine beings on a regular basis my life starts to build momentum. If I fall off that bandwagon then things tend to get more confused, lost and bewildered. There are plenty of powerful entities out there that are more than happy to lend you their support in exchange for a bit of love and attention, but you’ve got to make the effort.

Which leads to a general principle – related to the rune Gebo – that seems to govern the art of attracting the flow of the waters. Namely that this is a receptivity in which you need to get the flow started yourself by giving something – perhaps something of your ego attachments, or it might be time, or money, or support to friends or family, or anything really.

Nothing comes from nothing. This might be part of why ancestral heathens emphasised the importance of generosity so much: a leader who spreads the wealth around encourages a richer, healthier, more vibrant community and perhaps attracts more positive megin (power) and flows from the wells. It might be that the return on the investment far outweighs the initial cost.

Similarly, I have decided recently in my practice that I need to find a better space to work from. Where I am just isn’t up to scratch, and it demoralises me sufficiently that I almost don’t want to do any work at all!

I chose it because it was cheap, but that has actually ended up costing me time, motivation, money and optimism. I need to expend a bit of energy so that I am situated more fully in the path of the flow of the waters of life throughout the world tree.

It should be evident that much of what I have described here is pretty everyday, trivial sort of stuff. But I think spirituality is just as much about manifest reality, or just as much about our deeds in Midgard, as it is anything lofty or subterranean. As above, so below makes just as much sense if we invert it.

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4 thoughts on “Xylem and Phloem Part Four: Attracting the Flow of the Waters

  1. 93,

    I am not familiar with the specific concept of the ‘waters of life’ in this context, but I have encountered similar ideas in Hermetism and Buddhism, and think I may have something to add.

    In my personal system I would call this process ‘harmonising with Universal (or Divine) Will’, but as you have already pointed out, it is achieved through the quality of our actions, and the quality of our thoughts. The only way I’ve found to really make progress in this process is to open the Heart. I believe the key to the ‘flow of the Waters’ is Love. And I do not mean any simple affection or lust, I mean Pure Love, free from desire, indeed free from intelect. Agape/’93’. I’ll try to explain why.

    Lon Milo Duquette once asked Israel Regardie (Golden Dawn member, former personal secretary to Crowley) why there was so much corruption in modern mysticism, specifically mystical organisations. He replied,(paraphrase) ‘Because they opened their ‘third eye’ before opening their ‘heart’. In other words, they lacked the emotional Wisdom to integrate the experience of Transcendence, for Love is the force behind Dissolution and Unification. Every so called ‘mystical experience’ I have had in the past has been overshadowed by (and often followed by, for days or even weeks after) a more or less constant realisation of the startling ‘immediacy’ of the Beauty inherent in all things.

    You mentioned the Quantum ‘observer/observed’ paradox, in this context I would compare it to the Zen Koan; ‘Who is the Great Master who makes the grass green?’. Of course, YOU are. It takes someone to observe the grass to make it green, the process of focused attention on something not yet understood, becomes a symbiotic process that is the cause of Love. It is the process of different parts of the universe studying eachother in order to connect somehow, to unify.. which is essentially Life. And when you add in the Buddhist idea of ‘no-self’, that all we really ‘are’ (when seperate from Godhead) is a collection of processes, then the idea of the ‘observer’ is false, there is only the ‘act of observation’, therefore there is only Love.

    The Book of the Law sums this idea up quite well, as it does most things.
    “For I am divided for Love’s sake, for the chance of Union. This is the creation of the world, that the pain of division is as nothing, and the joy of dissolution all.”

    But of course this is a lofty idea that has little immediate relevance to modern man. Thats where Hermetism comes in.
    It is not uncommon for a man (or a woman, of course) to be all his life drawn towards one field, whether it be creative, intellectual, physical, etc. in nature. Most of the time it is simply what he/she enjoys most in life, finds most interesting, and is willing to put the most amount of focussed attention into. some people could call this their ‘calling’. Those who are able to answer their calling professionally are naturally blessed to be able to perform their duties with Love, respect and care, benefiting everyone around them. To paraphrase Paul Foster Case, “No matter what your position in life, whether you be a file clerk or a successful businessman, if you perform your daily duties with Love and diligence, you are aiding the flow of the ‘life force energy’ (Levi’s ‘Great Magical Agent’, and I believe synonymous with your ‘Waters of Life’) to act throughout the world.”

    So it seems the ‘everyday, trivial sort of stuff’ becomes less trivial, indeed it becomes integral to the flow of the Waters. But the main key seems to be Love, the emotional act of Love, the realisation of the immediacy of the beauty of all things. And from my own experience, I am fairly sure that this is the case.

    93 93/93

    Stewart

  2. Hi Stu,

    Thanks. I have a lot to say in response because so much of this is right down my alley that it hurts.

    But since its late (for me) and I need to sleep I’ll just say thanks right now.

    H

  3. This is really good stuff, Stu, and it has some personal relevance for me. None of the below is original – Spinoza in particular expresses it wonderfully – but I thought it was worth reiterating here nonetheless.

    I’ve always been a hard-headed, rationalist atheist, and would still – and probably will always – describe myself this way.

    But via recent reflections upon, shall we say, experiences of direct interface (with reality? meta-reality?), I have come to recognise certain interconnections between what I previously recognised as discrete phenomena. These connections are noumenal, rather than merely phenomenal – intrinsic flows between them. Between everything.

    To continue the watery theme; who is to say where rivers end and the ocean begins? It is all the same body of water, ultimately. So the recognition of these relationships makes everything, in an extremely visceral, immediate and true way, One.

  4. I just stumbled across this quote and thought it was quite fitting, and considering the source, quite profound.

    “Wherefore do ye toil; is it not that he may live and be happy? And if ye toil only that ye may toil more, when shall happiness find you? Ye toil to live, but is not life made of beauty and song? … Toil without song is like a weary journey without an end. Were not death more pleasing?”

    -H.P.Lovecraft

    93 93/93

    Stu

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