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			by John Lash 
			from
			
			MetaHistory Website
 
			The eleven books of 
			Carlos Castaneda record his apprenticeship with a Yaqui Indian,
			Don Juan Matus, who plays Socratic mentor to Castaneda’s 
			skeptical anthropologist. Over more than twenty years, Castaneda 
			learned the theory and practice of a new discipline proposed by his 
			mischievous and demanding teacher. The art of the “new seers” 
			involves revising ancient secrets of Toltec sorcery transmitted to 
			Don Juan through a late lineage dating from the 18th 
			century. 
 “Sorcery” in this case means a path of experience that 
			stands apart from the experiential habits of humanity (French 
			sortir, “to leave, depart”).
 
 Through a long process of trial and error, Castaneda manages 
			to alter the parameters of perception and explore other worlds. In 
			the process of his adventures, he encounters certain alien inorganic 
			beings who present an obstacle or test for the shaman. In Magical 
			Passes, Castaneda wrote:
 
				
				“Human beings are on 
				a journey of awareness, which has momentarily been interrupted 
				by extraneous forces.”
 
			Mud Shadows
 In Castaneda’s final book,
			
			The Active Side of Infinity (1998), Don Juan 
			challenges Castaneda to reconcile man’s intelligence, 
			demonstrated in so many achievements, with “the stupidity of his 
			systems of beliefs... the stupidity of his contradictory behaviour.” 
			Don Juan relates this blatant contradiction in human intelligence to 
			what he calls “the topic of topics,” “the most serious topic 
			in sorcery.” This topic is predation. To the horrified 
			astonishment of his apprentice, the elder sorcerer explains how the
			human mind has been infiltrated by an alien intelligence:
 
				
				We have a 
				predator that came from the depths of the cosmos and took 
				over the rule of our lives. Human beings are its prisoners. The 
				predator is our lord and master. It has rendered us docile, 
				helpless. If we want to protest, it suppresses our protest. If 
				we want to act independently, it demands that we don’t do so...
				   
				Sorcerers 
				believe that the predators have given us our systems of 
				beliefs, our ideas of good and evil, our social mores. They are 
				the ones who set up our hopes and expectations and dreams of 
				success or failure. They have given us covetousness, greed and 
				cowardice. It is the predators who make us complacent, 
				routinary and egomaniacal.  
			According to Don Juan, 
			the sorcerers of ancient Mexico called the predator the 
			flyer “because it leaps through the air... It is a big shadow, 
			impenetrably black, a black shadow that jumps through the air.” This 
			description matches thousands of accounts of the bizarre jumping 
			movements, sometimes sideways, executed by alien Greys who 
			accost people at random. Fleeting black shadows are less 
			often reported, but they play the major role in the long and 
			detailed report of alien activity by John Keel,
			
			The Mothman Prophecies. 
 Gnostic writings contain descriptions of alien predators 
			called Archons, Arkontai in Greek. The 
			
			texts from  
			Nag Hammadi describe them as heavy, elusive, shadowy creatures. 
			The most common name for them is “beings of the likeness, 
			shadow-creatures.” Could the Archons be compared to the “mud 
			shadows” described by Don Juan? This question raises the 
			general issue of parallels between Don Juan’s Central American 
			Toltec shamanism and the shamanism of the Mystery Schools of 
			ancient Europe. Let’s consider some of these parallels.
 
 First, there is the matter of the influence of the predators 
			or flyers on humanity. In
			
			The Active Side of Infinity, Don Juan tells Castaneda 
			that “the predators give us their mind, which becomes our mind.” 
			This alarming statement suggests an immediate parallel to Gnostic 
			teachings. Gnostics, who directed the Mystery Schools 
			of the Near East in antiquity, taught that the true mind of 
			human beings, nous authenticos, is part of the cosmic 
			intelligence that pervades nature, but due to the intrusion of the
			Archons, this “native mind” or "native genius" can be 
			subverted and even occupied by another mind. They warned that the 
			Archons invade the human psyche, they intrude mentally and 
			psychologically, although they may also confront us physically as 
			well. Their main impact, however, is in our mental syntax, in our 
			paradigms and beliefs, exactly as Don Juan says of the flyers.
 
 Don Juan tells Castaneda that the predator’s mind 
			is “a cheap model: economy strength, one size fits all.” This 
			description fits the hive-mentality of the Archons. Sorcerers 
			call this uniform alien mind “the foreign installation, which exists 
			in you and in every other human being.” The foreign installation 
			pulls us out of our syntax. It deranges our indigenous abilities to 
			organize the world according to the language proper to our species. 
			The role of correct syntax in the sorcerer’s mastery of intent is 
			one of the central factors in the later teachings of Don Juan. The 
			sorcerer’s concern for deviation of syntax, and consequent derouting 
			of intent, parallels the importance of language and correct 
			definition emphasized in Gnostic teaching.
 
 Don Juan makes a number of statements pertinent to strategies 
			against alien intrusion. He says that the sorcerers of ancient times 
			“found out that if they taxed the flyers’ mind with inner silence, 
			the foreign installation would flee, giving to any one of the 
			practitioners involved in this maneouver the total certainty of the 
			mind’s foreign origin.” In other words, the realization that another 
			mind can operate in our minds only becomes fully clear and certain 
			when the foreign mind has been exposed and expelled.
 
			  
			Only then do we 
			understand how “the real mind that belongs to us, the sum total of 
			our experience, after a lifetime of domination has been rendered 
			shy, insecure and shifty.” The “real mind” of Castaneda can 
			be equated to the nous authenticos of the Gnostics. 
			The main effect of the flyers upon our mind is seen in mental 
			conditioning, brainwashing. This is also the main effect of 
			Archontic intrusion. 
 
 Psychic Self-Defence
 
 Gnostic texts describe direct, physical confrontations with
			Archons of two kinds, an embryonic or foetal type—hence, 
			the Greys of modern UFO lore—and a reptilian type. The 
			usual tactic of the Greys is first to stun and then 
			infiltrate the mind of the human subject. In the First Apocalypse 
			of James, the Gnostic master instructs a student in how to 
			confront the Archons. These predatory entities are said to 
			“abduct souls by night,” a precise description of modern ET 
			abductions. The adept in the Mysteries learns to repel the Archons 
			with magical formulas (mantras) and magical passes or 
			gestures of power (mudras). In some texts, the encounter with 
			the Archons is structured according to the system of 
			“planetary spheres.”
 
			  
			The adept who practices
			astral projection, lucid dreaming or “manipulations 
			of the double” (as in Castaneda) is said to face the 
			Archons in a kind of computer-game maze of seven levels, 
			corresponding to the seven planets. At each level, the adept is 
			unable to continue unless he confronts the “gatekeepers,” 
			using magical passes and words. 
 For more on confronting Archons, see
			
			A Gnostic Catechism.
 
 The archetypal format of the “journey through the planetary 
			spheres” was well-known in antiquity, particularly in schools of 
			Hermetics and Kaballa. In Tantra Vidya, O. M. Hinze 
			compares the Gnostic ascent through the seven spheres with the 
			raising of kundalini through the seven chakras in Indian yogic 
			traditions. Don Juan does not use the seven-level scheme, but 
			his description of the flyers can be fitted into that scheme. The 
			correlation works especially well if we equate the “serpent worship” 
			of certain Gnostic cults with Kundalini yoga practice, 
			which may in turn be equated with "the fire from within” and the 
			Plumed Serpent in several Castaneda books.
 
			  
			In short, the Toltec 
			sorcerers would also have been adepts of Kundalini yoga, 
			cultivating “the fire from within.” Their encounters with the 
			flyers might not have been formalized into a seven-level 
			test-game, but the same experiences are indicated in all three 
			instances: Toltec, yogic, and Gnostic.  
			Gnostics believed that the force of Kundalini, or the ambient 
			field generated by that force, served as protection from the 
			Archons.
 
 On the use of Kundalini to repel alien intrusion, see
			
			Kundalini and the Alien Force.
 
 The human character-traits attributed by Don Juan to 
			deviation by the foreign installation are identical to those 
			ascribed to the Archons in Gnostic writings: envy (covetousness) and 
			arrogance (egomania) are said to be their primary features, while 
			their behaviour demonstrates that they are mindless drones (routinary), 
			greedy for power over us and too cowardly to come out in the open 
			and reveal themselves.
 
 It would be misleading to make Don Juan’s revelations comply in a 
			strict and literal way with Gnostic teachings, but these initial 
			parallels are striking, and there is much more. Here is an 
			outstanding instance where indigenous wisdom from the Americas 
			tallies with the esoteric teachings of a long-lost spiritual 
			tradition in the Near East. The Toltec-Gnostic parallel may 
			seem remote and improbable at first sight. But if we assume that 
			shamanic experience is consistent and empirical (i.e., it can be 
			tested by experience), it would not be surprising to find consistent 
			reports in widely separate traditions.
 
 
 The Foreign 
			Installation
 
 The idea of a foreign installation is extremely instructive. It 
			immediately recalls metallic or crystalline implants said to be used 
			by the Greys (and their human accomplices) to track human subjects. 
			In another, less technological sense, it suggests an ideological 
			virus implanted in our minds by non-human entities. According to the 
			Gnostic critique of Christianity, salvationist ideology in its 
			Judeo-Christian form (i.e., belief in a divine redeemer and a 
			final 
			apocalypse) is just such a virus. It is something implanted in the 
			human mind by alien forces.
 
			  
			The Gnostic emphasis on 
			Judeo-Christianity (which can now be extended to Islam) gives a 
			strategic advantage in the detection of alien influences, because 
			the patriarchal/Salvationist religions have dominated the historical 
			narrative on our planet. This dominance is symptomatic of Archontic 
			deviance, Gnostics said. 
 The alien mind penetrates into our story-telling activity, the 
			narrative power so crucial for humanity to make its way in the 
			cosmos. This is one of the ways, or the most effective way, that we 
			are deviated from our proper course of evolution. For the human 
			species, the capacity to achieve intent depends on developing plots, 
			stories, narratives that can guide us from initial conception to 
			final goal.
 
 Human purpose is manifold, and so the manner in which we are being 
			deviated is likely to be multifarious. In the immense complexity of 
			intrusion, clarity and concentration are indispensable assets. In a 
			startling remark, Don Juan asserts that “the flyers’ mind has no 
			concentration whatsoever.” This remark recalls the Gnostic assertion 
			that the Archons have no ennoia, no will of their own, no 
			intentionality. Concentration might be defined as the coordination 
			of attention and intention. To concentrate is to bring a certain 
			depth of attention (Bythos) to intent (Ennoia).
 
			  
			In Gnostic teachings, 
			Bythos and Ennoia are cosmic deities or principles of the 
			Pleroma, 
			the Wholeness, and they are also attributes of the human mind. They 
			are symbolized as two spheres. To concentrate is to bring the two 
			spheres together at a single, unifying point, a common center. We do 
			this constantly when we focus our attention upon a certain intention 
			or goal, but the Archons are incapable of anything like this because 
			they have “no concentration whatsoever.”  
			  
			They have no 
			concentrating power, no innate faculty that would unite intention 
			with attention. Human resistance to their intrusion depends on inner 
			composure and mental discipline, the sobriety of the warrior. Don 
			Juan’s counsels on the warrior’s tests with the flyers seem to 
			present a Toltec version of Gnostic strategies for resisting the 
			Archons. 
 
 Common Points
 
 Upon close examination, the teachings of Don Juan, developed in nine 
			books by Carlos Castaneda from 1968 to 1998, contain numerous 
			distinct parallels with Gnostic instruction. The new sorcery 
			introduced by Castaneda is an extension and make-over of traditional 
			knowledge of the “old seers” of the Toltec tradition of ancient 
			Mexico. It differs from the old sorcery largely in its lack of 
			concern for intricate power-games, feuds, sinister pacts with 
			non-human powers, and control over others. Its aim is freedom for 
			the spiritual warrior, rather than control over anyone or anything.
 
			  
			Both in Toltec and 
			Gnostic terms, the ultimate liberation for humanity may come through 
			facing the alien predators. They are not here to advance or assist 
			us, but in confronting and overcoming them we may gain a vital boost 
			toward another level of consciousness. Some points of commonality 
			between Gnosticism and the Toltec-derived neo-shamanism of Castaneda 
			are:  
				
				1, the Toltec 
				exposure of an alien mind or foreign installation that makes us 
				less and other than we humanly are: comparable to the Gnostic 
				idea of a dehumanizing ideological virus implanted in our minds 
				by the Alien/Archons.
 2, the importance for the sorcerer of mastering intent: 
				comparable to Gnostic emphasis on ennoia, intentionality, which 
				aligns us with the Gods and elevates us above the Archons.
 
 3, Castaneda’s emphasis on syntax (correct attributions, and the 
				use of mental command signals for directing intent): comparable 
				to Gnostic teaching on ennoia, mental clarity, and 
				correct 
				attribution (right use of definitions).
 
 4, the Toltec assertion that predation is “the topic of topics”: 
				comparable to the Gnostic emphasis on the intrusion of the 
				Archons. Facing intrusion is essential, because if we cannot see 
				how we are deviated, we cannot find our true path in the cosmos.
 
 5, the work with lucid dreaming, astral travel, 
				projection of 
				the double, in Gnostic circles and the Mystery Schools: 
				comparable to many episodes in Castaneda.
 
 6, the Toltec model of great bands of emanations that pervade 
				the universe: comparable to the emanations or streamings from 
				the Pleroma described in Mystery School revelation texts.
 
 7, the Toltec distinction between organic and inorganic beings: 
				comparable to the distinction between humans and Archons in 
				Gnostic cosmology.
 
 8, the Toltec exploration of other worlds and dimensions through 
				the practice of non-ordinary awareness: comparable to age-old 
				shamanic practices of the Mystery Schools.
 
 9, Don Juan’s description of the “luminous egg”: comparable to 
				the oval of clear light in Gnostic revelation texts and the augoeides or "auric egg" of the Mysteries.
 
 10, the Toltec figure of the Eagle, a primary metaphor in 
				Castaneda: comparable to the same figure in the 
				
				Nag Hammadi 
				Codices where the instructing voice of sacred mind, perhaps 
				equivalent to Castaneda’s “voice of seeing,” states: “I appeared 
				in the form of an Eagle on the Tree of Knowledge, the primal 
				knowing that arises in the pure light, that I might teach them 
				and awaken them out of the depth of sleep” (The Apocryphon of 
				John, 23.25-30).
 
 11, the organization of the sorcerer’s party into eight pairs of 
				male and female sorcerers: comparable to the organization of the 
				Mystery cells into sixteen members, eight of each sex. (Artifactual 
				evidence: Orphic Serpent bowl, and Pietroasa bowl. See A Sheaf 
				of Cut Wheat)
 
 12, the cultivation of the fire from within, Kundalini, or the 
				Plumed Serpent of the Toltecs: comparable to the Winged Serpent 
				and divine Instructor of the Gnostics.
 
 13, the mechanism of the assemblage point.
 
			It would take an entire 
			book to develop these parallels at length. Three factors out of the 
			ten are of particular importance. These factors are the luminous 
			egg, the great bands of emanations, and the role of certain 
			inorganic beings as allies. 
 
 The Assemblage 
			Point
 
 Among the many strange features in the teachings of Don Juan, the 
			matter of the assemblage point is certainly one of the most 
			baffling. In several books we are told that the luminous egg 
			surrounding a human being is attached to the physical body by an odd 
			mechanism called the assemblage point. The location of the point is 
			high behind the right shoulder. Apparently, at that point in the 
			body, the luminous egg exerts a kind of pressure, forming a dimple 
			or depression. As long as the force of the egg stays in the dimple, 
			the assemblage point is stable and the human being perceives reality 
			in a predetermined way. By shifting the assemblage point, sorcerers 
			are able to change their perception of reality, or actually 
			deconstruct and reconstruct reality at will.
 
 Don Juan’s instructions regarding the assemblage point are as 
			baffling as they are fascinating, and far from clear. The dynamics 
			of sliding or shifting the mechanism are difficult to understand, 
			and even harder to visualize. Moreover, it seems that the assemblage 
			point is a weird item, not comparable to anything found in any other 
			sources.
 
 There is, however, a rare piece of testimony from the Mysteries that 
			describes the assemblage point in exactly the manner found in 
			Castaneda.
 
 In The Subtle Body in Western Tradition, Gnostic scholar G. R. S. 
			Mead cites the lost writings of Isadorus, the husband of 
			Hypatia and 
			one of the last Gnostics who taught at the Mystery School (the 
			Museum) in Alexandria. Isadorus’ original work is lost, but it was 
			paraphrased by another writer, Damascius, so a few faint indications 
			of his teachings can be surmised. Isadorus is said to have described 
			the augoeides, “golden aura,” comparable to the luminous egg of Castandea.
 
			  
			The nature and operation 
			of the augoiedes, also called the auric egg, was one of the deepest 
			secrets of the Mysteries. Apparently, a lost treatise of Isadorus 
			stated that the augoeides surrounds the human being like an oval 
			membrane, in such a way that the physical body floats in the oval. 
			This is precisely how Castaneda describes the luminous egg. The 
			Gnostic teacher also said that the luminous oval is connected or 
			locked into the physical body at a point in the back, high up on the 
			right shoulder blade. 
 Thus, one of the weirdest details in Castaneda’s writings is 
			confirmed by a teacher of the Mysteries who lived in Alexandria the 
			5th century CE.
 
 
			A Cosmic Test
 
 In the classical scheme of the planetary system, there are seven 
			planets, not including the Earth: Sun, Moon, Mercury, Venus, Mars, 
			Jupiter, Saturn. (The sun is not of course a planet, but a star, the 
			central body of the planetary system, and the moon is a satellite of 
			the earth. In some ancient systems, these two bodies are excluded 
			from the seven and replaced by the lunar nodes.) This situation 
			recalls Castaneda’s description of the organic and inorganic 
			structure of the "great bands of emanation” that compose the 
			universe.
 
			  
			If we set the earth 
			apart from the other planets, the “seven inorganic bands” could well 
			be correlated to the “seven planets,” known to be realms that do not 
			support organic life as the Earth does. Gnostics taught that the 
			earth does not belong to the planetary system, but is merely 
			captured in it. They called the planetary system apart from earth 
			the Hebdomad , the Sevenfold. This terminology may be compared to 
			the Gnostic description of the realm of the Archons, who are 
			inorganic beings. The “seven inorganic bands” in Castaneda’s scheme 
			may be different language for the same model. 
 Gnostic seers located the habitat of the predatory Archons in the 
			planetary system, exclusive of the Earth. The Archontic realm would 
			then be assembled from the seven inorganic bands. Within the domain 
			so assembled, the Archons would be on their own “turf.” Their 
			presence in the world assembled around us, the biosphere ruled by 
			the laws of organic chemistry, would be an intrusion. Nowhere does 
			Castaneda indicate that the predatory entities come from these seven 
			bands, but the conclusion is obvious. He does say explicitly that 
			the flyers are inorganic beings, so the conclusion is not only 
			obvious but consistent with his syntax, his system of description.
 
 Don Juan specifies that sorcerers can and usually do initiate 
			contact with inorganic beings. They do this by shifting the 
			assemblage point and crossing into the unknown territory of other 
			bands, or sliding into unknown regions of our own band. A great deal 
			of the activity described in Castaneda’s work consists of forays 
			into the other worlds contingent to ours. “Once the barrier is 
			broken, inorganic beings change and become what seers call allies.” 
			These allies can be deviating or even deadly, but mastering them is 
			one of the primary tasks of the new sorcery. There are numerous 
			allies in the cosmos at large. According to many indigenous 
			traditions, earth is visited by many kinds of other-dimensional 
			beings who serve as allies and guides to humanity. The dark, shadowy 
			predator would seem to be a unique category of inorganic beings who 
			is perhaps not an ally at all, or else a particularly difficult ally 
			to master.
 
 Don Juan stressed the need to confront this inorganic being to 
			experience “the total certainty of the mind’s foreign origin.” The 
			“predator that came from the depths of the cosmos and took over the 
			rule of our lives” may certainly be equated to the Archons of 
			Gnostic teachings. Don Juan describes Alien intrusion and its main 
			consequence, behavioural modification, in a most vivid manner. The 
			old sorcerer also makes a striking comment on what might be gained 
			from our encounter with these entities.
 
				
				“The flyers are an essential 
			part of the universe… and they must be taken as what they really are 
			— awesome, monstrous. They are the means by which the universe tests 
			us.”  
			The parallels between Gnostic materials and the 
			new Toltec sorcery 
			of Carlos Castaneda are striking and present sobering insights on 
			the human condition, if nothing else. What can we do about the topic 
			of topics, predation?  
				
				“All we can do is discipline ourselves to the 
			point where they will not touch us,” Don Juan advises.  
			Significantly, he says will not, not can not. He also says that the 
			alien predators are the way the universe tests us, as just noted. It 
			follows that the intent to arrange our minds and lives so that the 
			flyers/Archons are not willing to intrude on us is the capital 
			exercise, the primary test in progress for humanity.
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