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			At various 
      times I've attempted to name my knowledge for your benefit. I've said that 
      the most appropriate name is nagualism, but that that term is 
      too obscure. Calling it simply "knowledge" makes it too vague, and to call 
      it "witchcraft" is debasing. "The mastery of intent " is too 
      abstract, and "the search for total freedom" too long and metaphorical. 
      Finally, because I've been unable to find a more appropriate name, I've 
      called it "sorcery," although I admit it is not really accurate. 
			I've given you different definitions of sorcery, but I have 
      always maintained that definitions change as knowledge increases. Now you 
      are in a position to appreciate a clearer definition.
 
			From where the average man stands, sorcery is 
      nonsense or an ominous mystery beyond his reach. And he is right--not 
      because this is an absolute fact, but because the average man lacks the 
      energy to deal with sorcery.
 
			Human beings are born 
      with a finite amount of energy, an energy that is systematically deployed, 
      beginning at the moment of birth, in order that it may be used most 
      advantageously by the modality of the time.
 
			The 
      modality of the time is the precise bundle of energy fields being 
      perceived. I believe man's perception has changed through the ages. The 
      actual time decides the mode; the time decides which precise bundle of 
      energy fields, out of an incalculable number, are to be used. And handling 
      the modality of the time--those few, selected energy fields--takes all our 
      available energy, leaving us nothing that would help us use any of the 
      other energy fields.
 
			The average man, if he uses 
      only the energy he has, can't perceive the worlds sorcerers do. To 
      perceive them, sorcerers need to use a cluster of energy fields not 
      ordinarily used. Naturally, if the average man is to perceive those worlds 
      and understand sorcerers' perception he must use the same cluster they 
      have used. And this is just not possible, because all his energy is 
      already deployed.
 
			Think of it this way. It isn't 
      that as time goes by you're learning sorcery; rather, what you're learning 
      is to save energy. And this energy will enable you to handle some of the 
      energy fields which are inaccessible to you now. And that is sorcery: the 
      ability to use energy fields that are not employed in perceiving the 
      ordinary world we know. Sorcery is a state of awareness. Sorcery is the 
      ability to perceive something which ordinary perception cannot.
 
			Everything a teacher puts his apprentice through, each of 
      the things he shows him is only a device to convince him that there's more 
      to us than meets the eye.
 
			We don't need anyone to 
      teach us sorcery, because there is really nothing to learn. What we need 
      is a teacher to convince us that there is incalculable power at our 
      fingertips. What a strange paradox! Every warrior on the path of knowledge 
      thinks, at one time or another, that he's learning sorcery, but all he's 
      doing is allowing himself to be convinced of the power hidden in his 
      being, and that he can reach it.
 
			I'm trying to 
      convince you that you can reach that power. I went through the same thing. 
      And I was as hard to convince as you are. Once we have reached it, it 
      will, by itself, make use of energy fields which are available to us but 
      inaccessible. And that, as I have said, is sorcery. We begin then to 
      see --that is, to perceive--something else; not as 
      imagination, but as real and concrete. And then we begin to know without 
      having to use words. And what any of us does with that increased 
      perception, with that silent knowledge, depends on our own 
      temperament.
 
			Now, I'm going to give you a 
      different and more precise definition of sorcery.
 
			In the universe there is an unmeasurable, indescribable force which 
      sorcerers call intent. Absolutely everything that exists in 
      the entire cosmos is attached to intent by a connecting link. 
      Sorcerers, warriors, are concerned with discussing, understanding, and 
      employing that connecting link. They are especially concerned with 
      cleaning it of the numbing effects brought about by the ordinary concerns 
      of their everyday lives. Sorcery at this level could be defined as the 
      procedure of cleaning one's connecting link to 
      intent.
 
			The task of sorcery is to 
      take this seemingly incomprehensible knowledge and make it understandable 
      by the standards of awareness of everyday life.
 
			The guide in the lives of sorcerers is called "the nagual." The nagual is 
      a man or a woman with extraordinary energy, a teacher who has sobriety, 
      endurance, stability; someone seers see as a luminous sphere 
      having four compartments, as if four luminous balls have been compressed 
      together. Naguals are responsible for supplying what sorcerers call "the 
      minimal chance": the awareness of one's connection with 
      intent .
 
			Naguals school their 
      apprentices toward three areas of expertise: the mastery of 
      awareness , the art of stalking , 
      and the mastery of intent . These three areas of expertise 
      are the three riddles sorcerers encounter in their search for 
      knowledge.
 
			The mastery of awareness is the riddle 
      of the mind; the perplexity sorcerers experience when they recognize the 
      astounding mystery and scope of awareness and perception.
 
			The art of  stalking is the riddle of the heart; the 
      puzzlement sorcerers feel upon becoming aware of two things: first that 
      the world appears to us to be unalterably objective and factual, because 
      of peculiarities of our awareness and perception; second, that if 
      different peculiarities of perception come into play, the very things 
      about the world that seem so unalterably objective and factual 
      change.
 
			The mastery of intent is the 
      riddle of the spirit, or the paradox of the abstract--sorcerers' thoughts 
      and actions projected beyond our human condition.
 
			The art of  stalking and the mastery of intent 
      depend upon instruction on the mastery of awareness, which consists of the 
      following basic premises:
 
		
		
		
		The universe is an infinite agglomeration of energy fields, 
        resembling threads of light.
		
		These energy fields, called the Eagle's, or the 
		Indescribable 
        Force 's emanations, radiate from a source of inconceivable 
        proportions metaphorically called the Eagle--the Indescribable 
        Force .
		
		Human beings are also composed of an incalculable number of the same 
        threadlike energy fields. These Indescribable Force 's 
        emanations form an encased agglomeration that manifests itself as a ball 
        of light the size of the person's body with the arms extended laterally, 
        like a giant luminous egg.
		
		Only a very small group of the energy fields inside this luminous 
        ball are lit up by a point of intense brilliance located on the ball's 
        surface.
		
		Perception occurs when the energy fields in that small group 
        immediately surrounding the point of brilliance extent their light to 
        illuminate identical energy fields outside the ball. Since the only 
        energy fields perceivable are those lit by the point of brilliance, that 
        point is named "the point where perception is assembled" or simply "the 
        assemblage point."
		
		The assemblage point can be moved from its usual position on the 
        surface of the luminous ball to another position on the surface, or into 
        the interior. Since the brilliance of the assemblage point can light up 
        whatever energy field it comes in contact with, when it moves to a new 
        position it immediately brightens up new energy fields, making them 
        perceivable. This perception is known as seeing .
		
		When the assemblage point shifts, it makes possible the perception 
        of an entirely different world--as objective and factual as the one we 
        normally perceive. Sorcerers go into that other world to get energy, 
        power, solutions to general and particular problems, or to face the 
        unimaginable.
		
		Intent is the pervasive force that causes us to 
        perceive. We do not become aware because we perceive; rather, we 
        perceive as a result of the pressure and intrusion of 
        intent .
		
		
		The aim of sorcerers is to reach a state of total awareness in order 
        to experience all the possibilities of perception available to man. This 
        state of awareness even implies an alternative way of dying. 
		   
		
		A level of practical 
        knowledge is included as part of teaching the mastery of awareness. On 
        this practical level are taught the procedures necessary to move the 
        assemblage point. The two great systems devised by the sorcerer seers of 
        ancient times to accomplish this are dreaming , the control 
        and utilization of dreams; and 
		 stalking , the control of 
        behavior. 
		
		Moving one's assemblage point is an 
        essential maneuver that every sorcerer has to learn.
 
 
		Sorcerers consult their past in order to obtain a point of reference. 
      Establishing a point of reference means getting a chance to examine 
      intent and nothing can give sorcerers a better view of 
      intent than examining stories of other sorcerers battling to 
      understand the same force. 
		In sorcery there are 
      abstract cores, and then, based on those abstract cores, there are scores 
      of sorcery stories about the naguals of our lineage battling to understand 
      the spirit.
 
		  
		 
		The only 
      way to know intent is to know it directly through a living 
      connection that exists between intent and all sentient 
      beings. Sorcerers call intent the indescribable, the spirit, 
      the abstract.
 
		  
		 
		Every 
      act performed by sorcerers, especially by the naguals, is either performed 
      as a way to strengthen their link with intent or as a 
      response triggered by the link itself. Sorcerers, and specifically the 
      naguals, therefore have to be actively and permanently on the lookout for 
      manifestations of the spirit. Such manifestations are called gestures of 
      the spirit or, more simply, indications or omens.
 
		When a sorcerer interprets an omen he knows its exact meaning without 
      having any notion of how he knows it. This is one of the bewildering 
      effects of the connecting link with intent . Sorcerers have a 
      sense of knowing things directly. How sure they are depends on the 
      strength and clarity of their connecting link.
 
		The 
      feeling everyone knows as "intuition" is the activation of our link with 
      intent . And since sorcerers deliberately pursue the 
      understanding and strengthening of that link, it could be said the they 
      intuit everything unerringly and accurately. Reading omens is commonplace 
      for sorcerers--mistakes happen only when personal feelings intervene and 
      cloud the sorcerers' connecting link with intent . Otherwise 
      their direct knowledge is totally accurate and functional.
 
		The spirit manifests itself to a sorcery, especially to a 
      nagual, at every turn. However, this is not the entire truth. The entire 
      truth is that the spirit reveals itself to everyone with the same 
      intensity and consistency, but only sorcerers, and naguals in particular, 
      are attuned to such revelations.
 
		Naguals make 
      decisions. With no regard for the consequences they take action or choose 
      not to. Imposters ponder and become paralyzed.
 
		  
		 
		Sorcerers speak of sorcery as a magical, 
      mysterious bird which has paused in its flight for a moment in order to 
      give man hope and purpose. Sorcerers live under the wing of that bird, 
      which they call the bird of wisdom, the bird of freedom. They nourish it 
      with their dedication and impeccability.
 
		The bird 
      of freedom can do only two things, take sorcerers along, or leave them 
      behind. Don't forget, even for an instant, that the bird of freedom has 
      very little patience with indecision, and when it flies away, it never 
      returns.
 
 When you have 
      been afraid or upset, don't lie down to sleep, sleep sitting up on a soft 
      chair. To give your body healing rest take long naps, lying on your 
      stomach with your face turned to the left and your feet over the foot of 
      the bed. In order to avoid being cold, put a soft pillow over your 
      shoulders, away from your neck, and wear heavy socks, or just leave your 
      shoes on. Follow my suggestions to the letter without bothering to believe 
      or disbelieve me.
 
		  
		 
		Intent creates edifices before us and invites us to enter 
      them. This is the way sorcerers understand what is happening around 
      them.
 
		I want you to understand the underlying 
      order of what I teach you. It means two things: both the edifice that 
      intent manufactures in the blink of an eye and places in 
      front of us to enter, and the signs it gives us so we won't get lost once 
      we are inside.
 
		  
		 
		At a 
      certain stage, an apprentice enters into heightened awareness all by 
      himself. Heightened awareness is a mystery only for our reason. In 
      practice, it's very simple. As with everything else, we complicate matters 
      by trying to make the immensity that surrounds us reasonable.
 
		  
		 
		The Manifestations of the 
      Spirit is the name for the first abstract core in the sorcery stories. 
      Sorcerers know this as the edifice of intent , or the silent 
      voice of the spirit, or the ulterior arrangement of the 
      abstract.
 
		Ulterior means knowledge without words, 
      outside our immediate comprehension, not beyond our ultimate possibilities 
      for understanding. The ulterior arrangement of the abstract is knowledge 
      without words or the edifice of intent . The ulterior 
      arrangement of the abstract is to know the abstract directly, without the 
      intervention of language. The abstract is the element without which there 
      could be no warrior's path, nor any warriors in search of 
      knowledge.
 
		  
		 
		Warriors 
      are incapable of feeling compassion because they no longer feel sorry for 
      themselves. Without the driving force of self-pity, compassion is 
      meaningless.
 
		For a warrior everything begins and 
      ends with himself. However, his contact with the abstract causes him to 
      overcome his feeling of self-importance. Then the self becomes abstract 
      and impersonal.
 
		  
		 
		Dreaming is a sorcerer's jet plane. They can create and 
      project what sorcerers know as the dreaming body 
      , or the Other, and be in two distant places at the same time.
 
		The spirit makes adjustments in our capacity for awareness. 
      That's a statement of fact. You can say that it's an incomprehensible fact 
      for the moment, but the moment will change.
 
		While 
      we dream the assemblage point moves very gently and naturally. Mental 
      balance is nothing but the fixing of the assemblage point on one spot 
      we're accustomed to. Dreams make that point move, and 
      dreaming is used to control that natural movement.
 
		There are two different issues. One, the need to understand 
      indirectly what the spirit is, and the other, to understand the spirit 
      directly.
 
		Once you understand what the spirit is, 
      the second issue will be resolved automatically, and vice versa. If the 
      spirit speaks to you, using its silent words, you will certainly know 
      immediately what the spirit is.
 
		The difficulty is 
      our reluctance to accept the idea that knowledge can exist without words 
      to explain it. Accepting this proposition is not as easy as saying you 
      accept it. The whole of humanity has moved away from the abstract. It 
      takes years for an apprentice to be able to go back to the abstract, that 
      is, to know that knowledge and language can exist independent of each 
      other.
 
		The crux of our difficulty in going back to 
      the abstract is our refusal to accept that we can know without words or 
      even without thoughts. Knowledge and language are separate.
 
		I told you there is no way to talk about the spirit because 
      the spirit can only be experienced. Sorcerers try to explain this 
      condition when they say that the spirit is nothing you can see or feel. 
      But it's there looming over us always. Sometimes it comes to some of us. 
      Most of the time it seems indifferent.
 
		The spirit 
      in many ways is a sort of wild animal. It keeps its distance from us until 
      a moment when something entices it forward. It is then that the spirit 
      manifests itself.
 
		For a sorcerer an abstract is 
      something with no parallel in the human condition. For a sorcerer, the 
      spirit is an abstract simply because he knows it without words or even 
      thoughts. It's an abstract because he can't conceive what the spirit is. 
      Yet without the slightest chance or desire to understand it, a sorcerer 
      handles the spirit. He recognizes it, beckons it, entices it, becomes 
      familiar with it, and expresses it with his acts.
 
		Think about the proposition that knowledge might be independent of 
      language, without bothering to understand it.
 Consider this. It was not the act of meeting me that mattered to you. The 
      day I met you, you met the abstract. But since you couldn't talk about it, 
      you didn't notice it. Sorcerers meet the abstract without thinking about 
      it or seeing it or touching it or feeling its presence.
 
 The second abstract core of the sorcery 
      stories is called the Knock of the Spirit. The first core, the 
      Manifestations of the Spirit, is the edifice that intent 
      builds and places before a sorcerer, then invites him to enter. It is the 
      edifice of intent seen by a sorcerer. The Knock 
      of the Spirit is the same edifice seen by the beginner who is invited--or 
      rather forced--to enter.
 
		A nagual can be a conduit 
      for the spirit only after the spirit has manifested its willingness to be 
      used--either almost imperceptibly or with outright commands.
 
		After a lifetime of practice, sorcerers, naguals in 
      particular, know if the spirit is inviting them to enter the edifice being 
      flaunted before them. They have learned to discipline their connecting 
      links to intent . So they are always forewarned, always know 
      what the spirit has in store for them.
 
		Progress 
      along the sorcerers' path is, in general, a drastic process the purpose of 
      which is to bring one's connecting link to order. In order to revive that 
      link sorcerers need a rigorous, fierce purpose--a special state of mind 
      called unbending intent .
 
		An 
      apprentice is someone who is striving to clear and revive his connecting 
      link with the spirit. Once the link is revived, he is no longer an 
      apprentice, but until that time, in order to keep going he needs a fierce 
      purpose which, of course, he doesn't have. So he allows the nagual to 
      provide the purpose and to do that he has to relinquish his individuality. 
      That's the difficult part.
 
		Volunteers are not 
      welcome in the sorcerers' world, because they already have a purpose of 
      their own, which makes it particularly hard for them to relinquish their 
      individuality. If the sorcerers' world demands ideas and actions contrary 
      to the volunteers' purpose, volunteers simply refuse to change.
 
		Reviving an apprentice's link is a nagual's most challenging 
      and intriguing work. And one of his biggest headaches too. Depending, of 
      course, on the apprentice's personality, the designs of the spirit are 
      either sublimely simple or the most complex labyrinths.
 
		  
		 
		The power of man is incalculable. 
      Death exists only because we have intended it since the 
      moment of our birth. The intent of death can be suspended by 
      making the assemblage point change positions.
 
		  
		 
		I have given you different versions of what the 
      sorcery task consists. It would not be presumptuous of me to disclose 
      that, from the spirit's point of view, the task consists of clearing our 
      connecting link with it. The edifice that intent flaunts 
      before us is, then, a clearinghouse, within which we find not so much the 
      procedures to clear our connecting link as the silent knowledge that 
      allows the clearing process to take place. Without that silent knowledge 
      no process could work, and all we would have would be an indefinite sense 
      of needing something.
 
		The events unleashed by 
      sorcerers as a result of silent knowledge are so simple and yet so 
      abstract that sorcerers decided long ago to speak of those events only in 
      symbolic terms. The manifestations and the knock of the spirit are 
      examples.
 
		For instance, a description of what 
      takes place during the initial meeting between a nagual and a prospective 
      apprentice from the sorcerers' point of view, would be absolutely 
      incomprehensible. It would be nonsense to explain that the nagual, by 
      virtue of his lifelong experience, is focusing something we couldn't 
      imagine, his second attention--the increased awareness gained through 
      sorcery training--on his invisible connection with some indefinable 
      abstract. He is doing this to emphasize and clarify someone else's 
      invisible connection with that indefinable abstract.
 
		Each of us is barred from silent knowledge by natural barriers, 
      specific to each individual. The most impregnable of my barriers was the 
      drive to disguise my complacency as independence.
 
		We as average men do not know, nor will we ever know, that it is something 
      utterly real and functional--our connecting link with intent 
      --which gives us our hereditary preoccupation with fate. During our active 
      lives we never have the chance to go beyond the level of mere 
      preoccupation, because since time immemorial the lull of daily affairs has 
      made us drowsy. It is only when our lives are nearly over that our 
      hereditary preoccupation with fate begins to take on a different 
      character. It begins to make us see through the fog of daily affairs. 
      Unfortunately, this awakening always comes hand in hand with loss of 
      energy caused by aging, when we have no more strength left to turn our 
      preoccupation into a pragmatic and positive discovery. At this point, all 
      there is left is an amorphous, piercing anguish, a longing for something 
      indescribable, and simple anger at having missed out.
 
 The third abstract core is called the 
      trickery of the spirit, or the trickery of the abstract, or  
      stalking oneself, or dusting the link.
 
		  
		 
		Perception is the hinge for 
      everything man is or does, and perception is ruled by the location of the 
      assemblage point. Therefore, if that point changes positions, man's 
      perception of the world changes accordingly. The sorcerer who knows 
      exactly where to place his assemblage point can become anything he 
      wants.
 
		  
		 
		The art of 
      stalking is learning all the quirks of your disguise. To 
      learn them so well no one will know you are disguised. For that you need 
      to be ruthless, cunning, patient, and sweet.
 
		Stalking is an art applicable to everything. There are four 
      steps to learning it: ruthlessness, cunning, patience, and sweetness. 
      Ruthlessness should not be harshness, cunning should not be cruelty, 
      patience should not be negligence, and sweetness should not be 
      foolishness. These four steps have to be practiced and perfected until 
      they are so smooth they are unnoticeable.
 
 Knowing what intent is means that 
      one can, at any time, explain that knowledge or use it. A nagual by the 
      force of his position is obliged to command his knowledge in this 
      manner.
 
		  
		 
		A warrior 
      needs focus. Heightened awareness is like a springboard. From it one can 
      jump into infinity. When the assemblage point is dislodged, it either 
      becomes lodged again at a position very near its customary one or 
      continues moving on into infinity.
 
		People have no 
      idea of the strange power we carry within ourselves. At this moment, for 
      instance, you have the means to reach infinity.
 
		  
		 
		Egomania is a real tyrant. We must work 
      ceaselessly to dethrone it. You can learn to be ruthless, cunning, 
      patient, and sweet. Ruthlessness, cunning, patience, and sweetness are the 
      essence of  stalking . They are the basics that with all their 
      ramifications have to be taught in careful, meticulous steps.
 
		  
		 
		Sorcerers' behavior is always 
      impeccable. Sorcerers, though, have an ulterior purpose for their acts, 
      which has nothing to do with personal gain. The fact that they enjoy their 
      acts does not count as gain. Rather, it is a condition of their character. 
      The average man acts only if there is the chance for profit. Warriors say 
      they act not for profit but for the spirit. We have no thought of personal 
      gain. Our acts are dictated by impeccability--we can't be angry or 
      disillusioned.
 The two masteries:  
      stalking and intent , are the crowning glory of 
      sorcerers old and new.  Stalking is the beginning. Before 
      anything can be attempted on the warrior's path, warriors must learn to 
      stalk ; next they must learn to intend , and 
      only then can they move their assemblage point at will.
 
		  
		 
		Words are tremendously powerful and 
      important and are the magical property of whoever has them. Sorcerers have 
      a rule of thumb: they say that the deeper the assemblage point moves, the 
      greater the feeling that one has knowledge and no words to explain it. 
      Sometimes the assemblage point of average persons can move without a known 
      cause and without their being aware of it, except that they become 
      tongue-tied, confused, and evasive.
 
		  
		 
		The very first principle of
		 
      stalking is that a warrior stalks himself. He 
      stalks himself ruthlessly, cunningly, patiently, and 
      sweetly.
 
		Stalking is the art of using 
      behavior in novel ways for specific purposes. Normal human behavior in the 
      world of everyday life is routine. Any behavior that brakes from routine 
      causes an unusual effect on our total being. That unusual effect is what 
      sorcerers seek, because it is cumulative.
 
		The 
      sorcerer seers of ancient times, through their seeing , first 
      noticed that unusual behavior produced a tremor in the assemblage point. 
      They soon discovered that if unusual behavior was practiced systematically 
      and directed wisely, it eventually forced the assemblage point to 
      move.
 
		The real challenge for those sorcerer seers, 
      was finding a system of behavior that was neither petty nor capricious, 
      but that combined the morality and the sense of beauty which 
      differentiates sorcerer seers from plain witches.
 
		Anyone who succeeds in moving his assemblage point to a new position is a 
      sorcerer. And from that new position, he can do all kinds of good and bad 
      things to his fellow men. Being a sorcerer, therefore, can be like being a 
      cobbler or a baker. The quest of sorcerer seers is to go beyond that 
      stand. And to do that, they need morality and beauty.
 
		For sorcerers,  stalking is the foundation on which 
      everything else they do is built. It is the art of controlled 
      folly.
 
		  
		 
		Sorcerers say 
      that heightened awareness is the portal of intent . And they 
      use it as such. Think about it.
 
		You must reach the 
      point where you understand what intent is. And, above all, 
      you must understand that that knowledge cannot be turned into words. That 
      knowledge is there for everyone. It is there to be felt, to be used, but 
      not to be explained. One can come into it by changing levels of awareness, 
      therefore, heightened awareness is an entrance. But even the entrance 
      cannot be explained. One can only make use of it.
 
		The natural knowledge of intent is available to anyone, but 
      the command of it belongs to those who probe it.
 
 Sorcerers believe that until the very moment of 
      the spirit's descent, any of us could walk away from the spirit; but not 
      afterwards.
 
		The fourth abstract core is called the 
      descent of the spirit or being moved by intent . It is the 
      full brunt of the spirit's descent. The fourth abstract core is an act of 
      revelation. The spirit reveals itself to us. Sorcerers describe it as the 
      spirit lying in ambush and then descending on us, its prey. Sorcerers say 
      that the spirit's descent is always shrouded. It happens and yet it seems 
      not to have happened at all.
 
		There is a threshold 
      that once crossed permits no retreat. Every sorcerer should have a clear 
      memory of crossing that threshold so he can remind himself of the new 
      state of his perceptual potential. One does not have to be an apprentice 
      of sorcery to reach this threshold, and the only difference between an 
      average man and a sorcerer, in such cases, is what each emphasizes. A 
      sorcerer emphasizes crossing this threshold and uses the memory of it as a 
      point of reference. An average man does not cross the threshold and does 
      his best to forget all about it.
 
		Sorcerers say 
      that the fourth abstract core happens when the spirit cuts our chains of 
      self-reflection. Cutting our chains is marvelous, but also very 
      undesirable, for nobody wants to be free.
 
		What a 
      strange feeling: to realize that everything we think, everything we say 
      depends on the position of the assemblage point.
 
		The secret of our chains is that they imprison us, but by keeping us 
      pinned down on our comfortable spot of self-reflection, they defend us 
      from the onslaughts of the unknown.
 
		Once our 
      chains are cut, we are no longer bound by the concerns of the daily world. 
      We are still in the daily world, but we don't belong there anymore. In 
      order to belong we must share the concerns of people. And without chains 
      we can't.
 What distinguishes normal people is that 
      we share a metaphorical dagger: the concerns of our self-reflection. With 
      this dagger, we cut ourselves and bleed; and the job of our chains of 
      self-reflection is to give us the feeling that we are bleeding together, 
      that we are sharing something wonderful: our humanity. But if we were to 
      examine it, we would discover that we are bleeding alone; that we are not 
      sharing anything; that all we are doing is toying with our manageable, 
      unreal, man-made reflection.
 
		Sorcerers are no 
      longer in the world of daily affairs because they are no longer prey to 
      their self-reflection.
 
		  
		 
		The universe is made up of energy fields which defy description or 
      scrutiny. They resemble filaments of ordinary light, except that light is 
      lifeless compared to the Indescribable Force 's emanations, 
      which exude awareness.
 
		Normal perception occurs 
      when intent , which is pure energy, lights up a portion of 
      the luminous filaments inside our cocoon, and at the same time brightens a 
      long extension of the same luminous filaments extending into infinity 
      outside our cocoon. Extraordinary perception, seeing , occurs 
      when by the force of intent , a different cluster of energy 
      fields energizes and lights up. When a crucial number of energy fields are 
      lit up inside the luminous cocoon, a sorcerer is able to see 
      the energy fields themselves.
 
		Awareness takes 
      place when the energy fields inside our luminous cocoon are 
      aligned with the same energy fields outside.
 
		Only a very small portion of the total number of luminous filaments 
      inside the cocoon are energized while the rest remain unaltered. The 
      filaments do not need to be aligned to be lit up, because the 
      ones inside our cocoon are the same as those outside. Whatever energizes 
      them is definitely an independent force. We can't call it awareness 
      because awareness is the glow of the energy fields being lit up. The force 
      that lites up the fields is named will .
 
		Will is the force that keeps the Indescribable 
      Force 's emanations separated and is not only responsible for our 
      awareness, but also for everything in the universe. This force has total 
      consciousness and it springs from the very fields of energy that make the 
      universe. Intent is a more appropriate name for it than 
      will . In the long run, however, the name proves disadvantageous, 
      because it does not describe its overwhelming importance nor the living 
      connection it has with everything in the universe.
 
		Our great collective flaw is that we live our lives completely 
      disregarding that connection. The busyness of our lives, our relentless 
      interests, concerns, hopes, frustrations, and fears take precedence, and 
      on a day-to-day basis we are unaware of being linked to everything 
      else.
 
		Being cast out from the Garden of Eden 
      sounds like an allegory for losing our silent knowledge, our knowledge of 
      intent . Sorcery, then, is a going back to the beginning, a 
      return to paradise.
 
		The spirit is the force that 
      sustains the universe. Intent is not something one might use 
      or command or move in any way--nevertheless, one could use it, command it, 
      or move it as one desires. This contradiction is the essence of sorcery. 
      To fail to understand it has brought generations of sorcerers unimaginable 
      pain and sorrow. Modern-day naguals, in an effort to avoid paying this 
      exorbitant price in pain, have developed a code of behavior called the 
      warrior's way, or the impeccable action, which prepares sorcerers by 
      enhancing their sobriety and thoughtfulness.
 
		Sorcerers concern themselves exclusively with the capacity that their 
      individual connecting link with intent has to set them free 
      to light the fire from within.
 
		All modern-day 
      sorcerers have to struggle fiercely to gain soundness of mind. Sorcery is 
      an attempt to reestablish our knowledge of intent and regain 
      use of it without succumbing to it. The abstract cores of the sorcerer 
      stories are shades of realization, degrees of our being aware of 
      intent .
 
		  
		 
		It does not matter what our specific fate is as long as we face it 
      with ultimate abandon.
 
 A 
      warrior is on permanent guard against the roughness of human behavior. A 
      warrior is magical and ruthless, a maverick with the most refined taste 
      and manners, whose worldly task is to sharpen, yet disguise, his cutting 
      edges so that no one would be able to suspect his ruthlessness.
 
		Sorcerers constantly stalk themselves. The 
      sensation of being bottled up is experienced by every human being. It is a 
      reminder of our existing connection with intent . For 
      sorcerers this sensation is even more acute, precisely because their goal 
      is to sensitize their connecting link until they can make it function at 
      will.
 
		When the pressure of their connecting link 
      is too great, sorcerers relieve it by  stalking themselves. 
      	 
      Stalking is a procedure, a very simple one.  
      Stalking is special behavior that follows certain principles. 
      It is secretive, furtive, deceptive behavior designed to deliver a jolt. 
      And, when you stalk yourself you jolt yourself, using your 
      own behavior in a ruthless, cunning way.
 
		When a 
      sorcerer's awareness becomes bogged down with the weight of his perceptual 
      input, the best, or even perhaps the only, remedy is to use the idea of 
      death to deliver that  stalking jolt.
 
		The idea of death therefore is of monumental importance in the life of a 
      sorcerer. I have shown you innumerable things about death to convince you 
      that the knowledge of our impending and unavoidable end is what gives us 
      sobriety. Our most costly mistake as average men is indulging in a sense 
      of immortality. It is as though we believe that if we don't think about 
      death we can protect ourselves from it.
 
		Not 
      thinking about death protects us from worrying about it. But that purpose 
      is an unworthy one for average men and a travesty for sorcerers. Without a 
      clear view of death, there is no order, no sobriety, no beauty. Sorcerers 
      struggle to gain this crucial insight in order to help them realize at the 
      deepest possible level that they have no assurance whatsoever their lives 
      will continue beyond the moment. That realization gives sorcerers the 
      courage to be patient and yet take action, courage to be acquiescent 
      without being stupid.
 
		The idea of death is the 
      only thing that can give sorcerers courage. Strange, isn't it? It gives 
      sorcerers the courage to be cunning without being conceited, and above all 
      it gives them courage to be ruthless without being 
      self-important.
 
		Sorcerers stalk 
      themselves in order to break the power of their obsessions. There are many 
      ways of  stalking oneself. If you don't want to use the idea 
      of your death, you can use poems to stalk yourself.
 
		I stalk myself with them. I deliver a jolt to 
      myself with them. I listen, and shut off my internal dialogue and let my 
      inner silence gain momentum. Then the combination of the poem and the 
      silence delivers the jolt.
 
		See if you can feel 
      what I'm talking about with this poem by José Gorostiza.
 
			
				
					
						
							
							...this incessant stubborn dying,this living death,
 that slays you, oh 
      God,
 in your rigorous handiwork,
 in the roses, in the stones,
 in the 
      indomitable stars
 and in the flesh that burns 
      out,
 like a bonfire lit by a song,
 a dream,
 a hue that hits the 
      eye.
 
 ...and you, 
      yourself,
 perhaps have died eternities of ages out 
      there,
 without us knowing about it,
 we dregs, crumbs, ashes of you;
 you 
      that still are present,
 like a star faked by its 
      very light,
 an empty light without star
 that reaches us,
 hiding
 its infinite catastrophe.
 
		As I hear the words, I feel that that man is 
      seeing the essence of things and I can see with 
      him. I care only about the feeling the poets longing brings me. I borrow 
      his longing, and with it I borrow the beauty. And marvel at the fact that 
      he, like a true warrior, lavishes it on the recipients, the beholders, 
      retaining for himself only his longing. This jolt, this shock of beauty, 
      is  stalking . 
		Death is not an enemy, 
      although it appears to be. Death is not our destroyer, although we think 
      it is.
 
		Sorcerers say death is the only worthy 
      opponent we have. Death is our challenger. We are born to take that 
      challenge, average men or sorcerers. Sorcerers know about it; average men 
      do not.
 
		Life is the process by means of which 
      death challenges us. Death is the active force. Life is the arena. And in 
      that arena there are only two contenders at any time: oneself and 
      death.
 
		We are passive. Think about it. If we move, 
      it's only when we feel the pressure of death. Death sets the pace for our 
      actions and feelings and pushes us relentlessly until it breaks us and 
      wins the bout, or else we rise about all possibilities and defeat 
      death.
 
		Sorcerers defeat death and death 
      acknowledges the defeat by letting the sorcerers go free, never to be 
      challenged again. Death stops challenging them. It means thought has taken 
      a somersault into the inconceivable.
 
		A somersault 
      of thought into the inconceivable is the descent of the spirit; the act of 
      breaking our perceptual barriers. It is the moment in which man's 
      perception reaches its limits.
 
		Sorcerers practice 
      the art of sending scouts, advance runners, to probe our perceptual 
      limits. This is another reason I like poems. I take them as advance 
      runners. But poets don't know as exactly as sorcerers what those advance 
      runners can accomplish.
 
		  
		 
		As the energy that is ordinarily used to maintain the fixed 
      position of the assemblage point becomes liberated, it focuses 
      automatically on that connecting link. There are no techniques or 
      maneuvers for a sorcerer to learn beforehand to move energy from one place 
      to the other. Rather it is a matter of an instantaneous shift taking place 
      once a certain level of proficiency has been attained.
 
		The level of proficiency is pure understanding. In order to attain 
      that instantaneous shift of energy, one needs a clear connection with 
      intent , and to get a clear connection one needs only to 
      intend it through pure understanding.
 
		Pure understanding is a sorcerer's advance runner probing that immensity 
      out there.
 
 The nature of 
      ruthlessness is that it is the opposite of self-pity. All sorcerers are 
      ruthless.
 
		  
		 
		As I have 
      said, the fourth abstract core of the sorcery stories is called the 
      descent of the spirit, or being moved by intent . In order to 
      let the mysteries of sorcery reveal themselves it is necessary for the 
      spirit to descend. The spirit chooses a moment when a man is distracted, 
      unguarded, and, showing no pity, the spirit lets its presence by itself 
      move the man's assemblage point to a specific position. This spot is known 
      to sorcerers as the place of no pity. Ruthlessness becomes, in this way, 
      the first principle of sorcery.
 
		The first 
      principle should not be confused with the first effect of sorcery 
      apprenticeship, which is the shift between normal and heightened 
      awareness.
 
		To all appearances, having the 
      assemblage point shift is the first thing that actually happens to a 
      sorcery apprentice. So, it is only natural for an apprentice to assume 
      that this is the first principle of sorcery. But it is not. Ruthlessness 
      is the first principle of sorcery.
 
		What we need to 
      do to allow magic to get hold of us is to banish doubt from our minds. 
      Once doubts are banished, anything is possible.
 
		  
		 
		Stop thinking by intending the 
      movement of your assemblage point. Intent is beckoned with 
      the eyes.
 
		  
		 
		The place 
      of no pity is the site of ruthlessness. Let's say that ruthlessness, being 
      a specific position of the assemblage point, is shown in the eyes of 
      sorcerers. It's like a shimmering film over the eyes. The eyes of 
      sorcerers are brilliant. The greater the shine, the more ruthless the 
      sorcerer is.
 
		When the assemblage point moves to 
      the place of no pity, the eyes begin to shine. The firmer the grip of the 
      assemblage point on its new position, the more the eyes shine.
 
		A recapitulation of their lives, which sorcerers do, is the 
      key to moving their assemblage points. Sorcerers start their 
      recapitulation by thinking, by remembering the most important acts of 
      their lives. From merely thinking about them they then move on to actually 
      being at the site of the event. When they can do that--be at the site of 
      the event--they have successfully shifted their assemblage point to the 
      precise spot it was when the event took place. Bringing back the total 
      event by means of shifting the assemblage point is known as sorcerers' 
      recollection.
 
		Recollecting is not the same as 
      remembering. Remembering is dictated by the day-to-day type of thinking, 
      while recollecting is dictated by the movement of the assemblage 
      point.
 
		Our assemblage points are constantly 
      shifting; imperceptible shifts. In order to make our assemblage points 
      shift to precise spots we must engage intent . Since there is 
      no way of knowing what intent is, sorcerers let their eyes 
      beckon it.
 
		  
		 
		What you 
      feel and interpret as longing is in fact the sudden movement of your 
      assemblage point.
 
		Ruthlessness makes sorcerers' 
      eyes shine, and that shine beckons intent . Each spot to 
      which their assemblage points move is indicated by a specific shine of 
      their eyes. Since their eyes have their own memory, they can call up the 
      recollection of any spot by calling up the specific shine associated with 
      that spot.
 
		The reason sorcerers put so much 
      emphasis on the shine of their eyes and on their gaze is because the eyes 
      are directly connected to intent . Contradictory as it might 
      sound, the truth is that the eyes are only superficially connected to the 
      world of everyday life. Their deeper connection is to the 
      abstract.
 
		Man's possibilities are so vast and 
      mysterious that sorcerers, rather than thinking about them, have chosen to 
      explore them, with no hope of ever understanding them.
 
		The only advantages sorcerers may have over average men is that 
      they have stored their energy, which means a more precise, clearer 
      connecting link with intent . Naturally, it also means they 
      can recollect at will, using the shine of their eyes to move their 
      assemblage points.
 
		  
		 
		Be a paragon of patience and consistency by fighting for impeccability. 
      Transform yourself daily, restraining yourself with the most excruciating 
      effort.
 
		It is a rare opportunity for a warrior to 
      be given a genuine chance to be impeccable in spite of his basic feelings. 
      The act of giving freely and impeccably rejuvenates you and renews your 
      wonder.
 
		  
		 
		The eyes of 
      all living beings can move someone else's assemblage point, especially if 
      their eyes are focused on intent . Under normal conditions, 
      however, peoples eyes are focused on the world, looking for food... 
      looking for shelter...
 For sorcerers to use the 
      shine of their eyes to move their own or anyone else's assemblage point 
      they have to be ruthless. That is, they have to be familiar with that 
      specific position of the assemblage point called the place of no pity. 
      This is especially true for the naguals.
 
		Each 
      nagual develops a brand of ruthlessness specific to him alone. Naguals 
      mask their ruthlessness automatically, even against their will. I'm not a 
      rational man, I only appear to be because my mask is so effective. What 
      you perceive as reasonableness is my lack of pity, because that's what 
      ruthlessness is: a total lack of pity.
 
		Move your 
      assemblage point to the precise spot where pity disappears. That spot is 
      known as the place of no pity. The problem that sorcerers have to solve is 
      that the place of no pity has to be reached with only minimal 
      help.
 
		Everything sorcerers do is done as a 
      consequence of a movement of their assemblage points, and such movements 
      are ruled by the amount of energy sorcerers have at their 
      command.
 
		Inside every human being is a gigantic, 
      dark lake of silent knowledge which each of us could intuit. Sorcerers are 
      the only beings on earth who deliberately go beyond the intuitive level by 
      training themselves to do two transcendental things: first, to conceive 
      the existence of the assemblage point, and second, to make that assemblage 
      point move.
 
		The most sophisticated knowledge 
      sorcerers possess is of our potential as perceiving beings, and the 
      knowledge that the content of perception depends on the position of the 
      assemblage point.
 
		  
		 
		Enjoy things with no expectation.
 
		  
		 
		When the assemblage point moves and reaches the place of no 
      pity, the position of rationality and common sense becomes weak.
 
		Silent knowledge is something that all of us have, something 
      that has complete mastery, complete knowledge of everything. But it cannot 
      think, therefore, it cannot speak of what is know.
 
		Sorcerers believe that when man became aware that he knew, and wanted to 
      be conscious of what he knew, he lost sight of what he knew. This silent 
      knowledge, which you cannot describe, is, of course, intent 
      --the spirit, the abstract. Man's error was to want to know it directly, 
      the way he knew everyday life. The more he wanted, the more ephemeral it 
      became.
 
		Man gave up silent knowledge for the world 
      of reason. The more he clings to the world of reason, the more ephemeral 
      intent becomes.
 
		  
		 
		The origin of the anxiety that overtakes an apprentice with 
      the speed of wildfire is the sudden movement of his assemblage point. Get 
      used to the idea of recurrent attacks of anxiety, because your assemblage 
      point is going to keep moving.
 
		Any movement of the 
      assemblage point is like dying. Everything in us gets disconnected, then 
      reconnected again to a source of much greater power. That amplification of 
      energy is felt as a killing anxiety. When this happens, just wait. The 
      outburst of energy will pass. What's dangerous in not knowing what is 
      happening to you. Once you know, there is no real danger.
 
		Ancient man knew, in the most direct fashion, what to do and how 
      best to do it. But, because he performed so well, he started to develop a 
      sense of selfness, which gave him the feeling that he could predict and 
      plan the actions he was used to performing. And thus the idea of an 
      individual "self" appeared; an individual self which began to dictate the 
      nature and scope of man's actions.
 
		As the feeling 
      of the individual self became stronger, man lost his natural connection to 
      silent knowledge. Modern man, being heir to that development, therefore 
      finds himself so hopelessly removed from the source of everything that all 
      he can do is express his despair in violent and cynical acts of 
      self-destruction. The reason for man's cynicism and despair is the bit of 
      silent knowledge left in him, which does two things: one, it gives man an 
      inkling of his ancient connection to the source of everything; and two, it 
      makes man feel that without this connection, he has no hope of peace, of 
      satisfaction, of attainment.
 
		War is the natural 
      state for a warrior, and peace is an anomaly. But war, for a warrior, 
      doesn't mean acts of individual or collective stupidity or wanton 
      violence. War, for a warrior, is the total struggle against that 
      individual self that has deprived man of his power.
 
		Ruthlessness is the most basic premise of sorcery. Any movement of 
      the assemblage point means a movement away from the excessive concern with 
      the individual self.
 
		Self-importance is the force 
      generated by man's self-image. It is that force which keeps the assemblage 
      point fixed where it is at present. For this reason, the thrust of the 
      warrior's way is to dethrone self-importance. And everything sorcerers do 
      is toward accomplishing this goal.
 
		Sorcerers have 
      unmasked self-importance and found that it is self-pity masquerading as 
      something else. It doesn't sound possible, but that is what it is. 
      Self-pity is the real enemy and the source of man's misery. Without a 
      degree of pity for himself, man could not afford to be as self-importance 
      as he is. However, once the force of self-importance is engaged, it 
      develops its own momentum. And it is this seemingly independent nature of 
      self-importance which gives it its fake sense of worth.
 
		Sorcerers are absolutely convinced that by moving our assemblage 
      points away from their customary position we achieve a state of being 
      which could only be called ruthlessness. Sorcerers know, by means of their 
      practical actions, that as soon as their assemblage points move, their 
      self-importance crumbles. Without the customary position of their 
      assemblage points, their self-image can no longer be sustained. And 
      without the heavy focus on that self-image, they lose their 
      self-compassion, and with it their self-importance. Sorcerers are right, 
      therefore, in saying that self-importance is merely self-pity in 
      disguise.
 
		  
		 
		A nagual 
      in his role as leader or teacher has to behave in the most efficient, but 
      at the same time most impeccable, way. Since it is not possible for him to 
      plan the course of his actions rationally, the nagual always lets the 
      spirit decide his course.
 
		  
		 
		The position of self-reflection forces the assemblage point to 
      assemble a world of sham compassion, but of very real cruelty and 
      self-centeredness. In that world the only real feelings are those 
      convenient for the one who feelings them.
 For a 
      sorcerer, ruthlessness is not cruelty. Ruthlessness is the opposite of 
      self-pity or self-importance. Ruthlessness is sobriety.
 
 Sorcerers' increased energy, derived from 
      the curtailment of their self-reflection, allows their senses a greater 
      range of perception.
 
		The only worthwhile course of 
      action, whether for sorcerers or average men, is to restrict our 
      involvement with our self-image. What a nagual aims at with his 
      apprentices is the shattering of their mirror of 
      self-reflection.
 
		Each of us has a different degree 
      of attachment to his self-reflection. And that attachment is felt as 
      need.
 
		It is possible for sorcerers, or average 
      men, to need no one, to get peace, harmony, laughter, knowledge, directly 
      from the spirit--to need no intermediaries. For you and for me, its 
      different. I'm your intermediary and my teacher was mine. Intermediaries, 
      besides providing a minimal chance--the awareness of intent 
      --help shatter peoples mirrors of self-reflection.
 
		The only concrete help you ever get from me is that I attack your 
      self-reflection. If it weren't for that, you would be wasting your time. 
      This is the only real help you've gotten from me.
 
		I've taught you all kinds of things in order to trap your attention. 
      You'll swear, though, that that teaching has been the important part. It 
      hasn't. There is very little value in instruction. Sorcerers maintain that 
      moving the assemblage point is all that matters. And that movement depends 
      on increased energy and not on instruction.
 
		Any 
      human being who would follow a specific and simple sequence of actions can 
      learn to move his assemblage point. The sequence of actions I am talking 
      about is one that stems from being aware. The nagual provides a minimal 
      chance, but that minimal chance is not instruction, like the instruction 
      you need to learn to operate a machine. The minimal chance consists of 
      being made aware of the spirit.
 
		The specific 
      sequence I have in mind calls for being aware that self-importance is the 
      force which keeps the assemblage point fixed. When self-importance is 
      curtailed, the energy it requires is no longer expended. That increased 
      energy then serves as the springboard that launches the assemblage point, 
      automatically and without premeditation, into an inconceivable 
      journey.
 
		Once the assemblage point has moved, the 
      movement itself entails moving from self-reflection, and this, in turn, 
      assures a clear connecting link with the spirit. After all, it is 
      self-reflection that has disconnected man from the spirit in the first 
      place.
 
		As I have already said to you, sorcery is a 
      journey of return. We return victorious to the spirit, having descended 
      into hell. And from hell we bring trophies. Understanding is one of our 
      trophies.
 
		Our difficulty with this simple 
      progression is that most of us are unwilling to accept that we need so 
      little to get on with. We are geared to expect instruction, teaching, 
      guides, masters. And when we are told that we need no one, we don't 
      believe it. We become nervous, then distrustful, and finally angry and 
      disappointed. If we need help, it is not in methods, but in emphasis. If 
      someone makes us aware that we need to curtail our self-importance, that 
      help is real.
 
		Sorcerers say we should need no one 
      to convince us that the world is infinitely more complex than our wildest 
      fantasies. So, why are we dependent? Why do we crave someone to guide us 
      when we can do it ourselves? Big question, eh?
 
		The 
      spirit moves the assemblage point. I have insisted to the point of 
      exhaustion that there are no procedures in sorcery. There are no methods, 
      no steps. The only thing that matters is the movement of the assemblage 
      point. And no procedure can cause that. It's an effect that happens all by 
      itself.
 
		The nagual entices the assemblage point 
      into moving by helping to destroy the mirror of self-reflection. But that 
      is all the nagual can do. The actual mover is the spirit, the abstract; 
      something that cannot be seen or felt; something that does not seem to 
      exist, and yet does. For this reason, sorcerers report that the assemblage 
      point moves all by itself.
 
		Because the spirit has 
      no perceivable essence, sorcerers deal rather with the specific instances 
      and ways in which they are able to shatter the mirror of 
      self-reflection.
 
		The world of our self-reflection 
      or of our mind is very flimsy and is held together by a few key ideas that 
      serve as its underlying order. When those ideas fail, the underlying order 
      ceases to function.
 
		Continuity is the key idea. 
      Continuity is the idea that we are a solid block. In our minds, what 
      sustains our world is the certainty that we are unchangeable.
 
		  
		 
		I've described to you in the 
      past the concept of stopping the world and that it is as 
      necessary for sorcerers as reading and writing are for the average man. It 
      consists of introducing a dissonant element into the fabric of everyday 
      behavior for purposes of halting the otherwise smooth flow of ordinary 
      events--events which are catalogued in our minds by our reason.
 
		The dissonant element is called not-doing , or 
      the opposite of doing . Doing is anything that 
      is part of a whole for which we have a cognitive account. 
      Not-doing is an element that does not belong in that charted 
      whole.
 
		Sorcerers, because they are 
      stalkers , understand human behavior to perfection. They 
      understand, for instance, that human beings are creatures of inventory. 
      Knowing the ins and outs of a particular inventory is what makes a man a 
      scholar or an expert in his field.
 
		Sorcerers know 
      that when an average person's inventory fails, the person either enlarges 
      his inventory or his world of self-reflection collapses. The average 
      person is willing to incorporate new items into his inventory if they 
      don't contradict the inventory's underlying order. But if the items 
      contradict that order, the person's mind collapses. The inventory is the 
      mind. Sorcerers count on this when they attempt to break the mirror of 
      self-reflection.
 
		  
		 
		Intent is intended with the eyes. I know that it 
      is so. Yet, just like you, I can't pinpoint what it is I know. Sorcerers 
      resolve this particular difficulty by accepting something extremely 
      obvious: human beings are infinitely more complex and mysterious than our 
      wildest fantasies.
 
		All I can say is that the eyes 
      do it. I don't know how, but they do it. They summon intent 
      with something indefinable that they have, something in their shine. 
      Sorcerers say that intent is experienced with the eyes, not 
      with the reason.
 
		  
		 
		Continuity is so important in our lives that if it breaks it's always 
      instantly repaired. In the case of sorcerers, however, once their 
      assemblage points reach the place of no pity, continuity is never the 
      same.
 
 You are dealing 
      with a new type of continuity. It takes time to get used to it. Warriors 
      spend years in limbo where they are neither average men nor sorcerers. The 
      difficulty is that the mirror of self-reflection is extremely powerful and 
      only lets its victims go after a ferocious struggle.
 
		  
		 
		There is something called a silent 
      protector. It is a lifesaver, a surge of inexplicable energy that comes to 
      a warrior when nothing else works. Sorcerers' options are silent 
      protectors. They are positions of the assemblage point. The infinite 
      number of positions which the assemblage point can reach. In each and 
      every one of those shallow or deep shifts, a sorcerer can strengthen his 
      new continuity.
 
		The effect of those shifts of the 
      assemblage point is cumulative. It weighs on you whether you understand it 
      or not.
 
		  
		 
		Don't wish 
      for death, just wait until it comes. Don't try to imagine what it's like. 
      Just be there to be caught in its flow.
 
		  
		 
		The sorcerers' struggle for assuredness is the 
      most dramatic struggle there is. It's painful and costly. Many, many times 
      it has actually cost sorcerers their lives.
 
		In 
      order for any sorcerer to have complete certainty about his actions, or 
      about his position in the sorcerers' world, or to be capable of utilizing 
      intelligently his new continuity, he must invalidate the continuity of his 
      old life. Only then can his actions have the necessary assuredness to 
      fortify and balance the tenuousness and instability of his new 
      continuity.
 
		The sorcerer seers of modern times 
      call this process of invalidation the ticket to impeccability, or the 
      sorcerers' symbolic but final death.
 
		  
		 
		Sorcerers have a peculiar bent. They live 
      exclusively in the twilight of a feeling best described by the words "and 
      yet..." When everything is crumbling down around them, sorcerers accept 
      that the situation is terrible, and then immediately escape to the 
      twilight of "and yet..."
 
		  
		 
		Warriors do their utmost, and then, without any remorse or regrets, 
      they relax and let the spirit decide the outcome. The decision of the 
      spirit is another basic core. Sorcery stories are built around 
      it.
 
		  
		 
		A sorcerer's 
      ticket to freedom is his death. I myself have paid with my life for that 
      ticket to freedom, as has everyone else in my household. And now we are 
      equals in our condition of being dead.
 
		You too are 
      dead. The sorcerers' grand trick, however, is to be aware that they are 
      dead. Their ticket to impeccability must be wrapped in awareness. In that 
      wrapping, sorcerers say, their ticket is kept in mint condition.
 
 Explanations are never wasted, 
      because they are imprinted in us for immediate or later use or to help 
      prepare our way to reaching silent knowledge.
 
		Silent knowledge is a general position of the assemblage point. Ages ago 
      it was man's normal position, but, for reasons which would be impossible 
      to determine, man's assemblage point moved away from that specific 
      location and adopted a new one called "reason."
 
		The place of no pity, being another position of the assemblage point, is 
      the forerunner of silent knowledge, and yet another position of the 
      assemblage point called "the place of concern," is the forerunner of 
      reason.
 
		  
		 
		Death is 
      painful only when it happens in one's bed, in sickness. In a fight for 
      your life, you feel no pain. If you feel anything, it's 
      exultation.
 
		One of the most dramatic differences 
      between civilized men and sorcerers is the way in which death comes to 
      them. Only with sorcerer-warriors is death kind and sweet. They could be 
      mortally wounded and yet would feel no pain. And what is even more 
      extraordinary is that death holds itself in abeyance for as long as the 
      sorcerers need it to do so. The greatest difference between an average man 
      and a sorcerer is that a sorcerer commands his death with his 
      speed.
 
		In the world of everyday life our word or 
      our decisions can be reversed very easily. The only irrevocable thing in 
      our world is death. In the sorcerers' world, on the other hand, normal 
      death can be countermanded, but not the sorcerers' word. In the sorcerers' 
      world decisions cannot be changed or revised. Once they have been made, 
      they stand forever.
 
		  
		 
		For a seer human beings are either oblong or spherical luminous masses of 
      countless, static, yet vibrant fields of energy, and only sorcerers are 
      capable of injecting movement into those spheres of static luminosity. In 
      a millisecond they can move their assemblage points to any place in their 
      luminous mass. That movement and the speed with which it is performed 
      entails an instantaneous shift into the perception of another totally 
      different universe. Or they can move their assemblage points, without 
      stopping, across their entire fields of luminous energy. The force created 
      by such movement is so intense that it instantly consumes their whole 
      luminous mass.
 
		  
		 
		Possibly every human being under normal living conditions has had at one 
      time or another the opportunity to break away from the bindings of 
      convention. I don't mean social convention, but the conventions binding 
      our perception. A moment of elation would suffice to move our assemblage 
      points and break our conventions. So, too, a moment of fright, ill health, 
      anger, or grief. But ordinarily, whenever we have the chance to move our 
      assemblage points we become frightened. Our religious, academic, social 
      backgrounds come into play. They assure our safe return to the flock; the 
      return of our assemblage points to the prescribed position of normal 
      living.
 
		All the mystics and spiritual teachers you 
      know of have done just that: their assemblage points moved, either through 
      discipline or accident, to a certain point; and then they returned to 
      normalcy carrying a memory that lasted them a lifetime.
 
		The average man, incapable of finding the energy to perceive beyond 
      his daily limits, calls the realm of extraordinary perception sorcery, 
      witchcraft, or the work of the devil, and shies away from it without 
      examining it further.
 
		Turn everything into what it 
      really is: the abstract, the spirit, the nagual . There is no 
      witchcraft, no evil, no devil. There is only perception.
 
		Your assemblage point can move beyond the place of no pity into the 
      place of silent knowledge. To manipulate it yourself means you have enough 
      energy to move between reason and silent knowledge at will. If a sorcerer 
      has enough energy--or even if he does not have sufficient energy but needs 
      to shift because it is a matter of life and death--he can fluctuate 
      between reason and silent knowledge.
 
		At this stage 
      in your development, any movement of your assemblage point will still be a 
      mystery. Your challenge at the beginning of your apprenticeship is 
      maintaining your gains, rather than reasoning them out. At some point 
      everything will make sense to you.
 
		You have to be 
      able to explain knowledge to yourself before you can claim that it makes 
      sense to you. For a movement of your assemblage point to make sense, you 
      will need to have energy to fluctuate from the place of reason to the 
      place of silent knowledge.
 
		Your assemblage point 
      can move by itself. You can intend the movement by 
      manipulating certain feelings and in so doing your assemblage point can 
      reach the position of silent knowledge.
 
		One way to 
      talk about the perception attained in the place of silent knowledge is to 
      call it "here and here."
 
		  
		 
		Intending the movement of the assemblage point is a 
      great accomplishment. But accomplishment is something personal. It's 
      necessary, but it's not the important part. It is not the residue 
      sorcerers look forward to. The idea of the abstract, the spirit, is the 
      only residue that is important. The idea of the personal self has no value 
      whatsoever. Every time I've had the chance, I have made you aware of the 
      need to abstract. You have always believed that I meant to think 
      abstractly. No. To abstract means to make yourself available to the spirit 
      by being aware of it.
 
		One of the most dramatic 
      things about the human condition is the macabre connection between 
      stupidity and self-reflection.
 
		It is stupidity 
      that forces us to discard anything that does not conform with our 
      self-reflective expectations. For example, as average men, we are blind to 
      the most crucial piece of knowledge available to a human being: the 
      existence of the assemblage point and the fact that it can move.
 
		For a rational man it's unthinkable that there should be an 
      invisible point where perception is assembled.
 
		For 
      the rational man to hold steadfastly to his self-image insures his abysmal 
      ignorance. He ignores, for instance, the fact that sorcery is not 
      incantations and hocus-pocus, but the freedom to perceive not only the 
      world taken for granted, but everything else that is humanly 
      possible.
 
		Here is where the average man's 
      stupidity is most dangerous; he is afraid of sorcery. He trembles at the 
      possibility of freedom. And freedom is at his fingertips. It's called the 
      third point. And it can be reached as easily as the assemblage point can 
      be made to move.
 
		This is another of the sorcerers' 
      contradictions: it's very difficult and yet it's the simplest thing in the 
      world. I've told you already that a high fever could move the assemblage 
      point. Hunger or fear or love or hate could do it; mysticism too, and also 
      unbending intent , which is the preferred method of 
      sorcerers.
 
		Unbending intent is a sort 
      of single-mindedness human beings exhibit; an extremely well-defined 
      purpose not countermanded by any conflicting interests or desires; 
      unbending intent is also the force engendered when the 
      assemblage point is maintained fixed in a position which is not the usual 
      one.
 
		The distinction between a movement and a 
      shift of the assemblage point is that a movement is a profound change of 
      position, so extreme that the assemblage point might even reach other 
      bands of energy within our total luminous mass of energy fields. Each band 
      of energy represents a completely different universe to be perceived. A 
      shift, however, is a small movement within the band of energy fields we 
      perceive as the world of everyday life.
 
		Sorcerers 
      see unbending intent as the catalyst to trigger their 
      unchangeable decisions, or as the converse: their unchangeable decisions 
      are the catalyst that propels their assemblage points to new positions, 
      positions which in turn generate unbending intent .
 
		Trying to reason out the sorcerers' metaphorical 
      descriptions is as useless as trying to reason out silent 
      knowledge.
 The world of daily life consists of two 
      points of reference. We have for example, here and there, in and out, up 
      and down, good and evil, and so on and so forth. So, properly speaking, 
      our perception of our lives is two-dimensional. None of what we perceive 
      ourselves doing has depth.
 
		A sorcerer perceives 
      his actions with depth. His actions are tridimensional for him. They have 
      a third point of reference.
 Our points of 
      reference are obtained primarily from our sense perception. Our senses 
      perceive and differentiate what is immediate to us from what is not. Using 
      that basic distinction we derive the rest.
 
		In 
      order to reach the third point of reference one must perceive two places 
      at once.
 
		Normal perception has an axis. "Here and 
      there" are the perimeters of that axis, and we are partial to the clarity 
      of "here." In normal perception, only "here" is perceived completely, 
      instantaneously, and directly. Its twin referent, "there," lacks 
      immediacy. It is inferred, deduced, expected, even assumed, but it is not 
      apprehended directly with all the senses. When we perceive two places at 
      once, total clarity is lost, but the immediate perception of "there" is 
      gained.
 
		  
		 
		A sorcerer, 
      because he has a connecting link with intent , sees an oddity 
      as a vehicle to perceiving--not an oddity, but a source of awe.
 
		  
		 
		Only sorcerers can turn their 
      feelings into intent . Intent is the spirit, so 
      it is the spirit which moves their assemblage points.
 
		The misleading part of all this is that I am saying only sorcerers 
      know about the spirit, that intent is the exclusive domain of 
      sorcerers. This is not true at all, but it is the situation in the realm 
      of practicality. The real condition is that sorcerers are more aware of 
      their connection with the spirit than the average man and strive to 
      manipulate it. That's all. I've already told you, the connecting link with 
      intent is the universal feature shared by everything there 
      is.
 
		Being in two places at once is a milestone 
      sorcerers use to mark the moment the assemblage point reaches the place of 
      silent knowledge. Split perception, if accomplished by one's own means, is 
      called the free movement of the assemblage point.
 
		Every apprentice must consistently do everything within his power to 
      encourage the free movement of his assemblage point. This all-out effort 
      is cryptically called "reaching out for the third point."
 
		The third point of reference is freedom of perception; it is 
      intent ; it is the spirit; the somersault of thought into the 
      miraculous; the act of reaching beyond our boundaries and touching the 
      inconceivable.
 
 To 
      discover the possibility of being in two places at once is very exciting 
      to the mind. Since our minds are our rationality, and our rationality is 
      our self-reflection, anything beyond our self-reflection either appalls us 
      or attracts us, depending on what kind of persons we are.
 
		In terms of his connection with intent , a warrior 
      goes through four stages. The first is when he has a rusty, untrustworthy 
      link with intent . The second is when he succeeds in cleaning 
      it. The third is when he learns to manipulate it. And the fourth is when 
      he learns to accept the designs of the abstract.
 
		Your disadvantage in the sorcerers' world is your lack of familiarity with 
      it. In that world you have to relate yourself to everything in a new way, 
      which is infinitely more difficult, because it has very little to do with 
      your everyday life continuity.
 
		The specific 
      problem of sorcerers is two-fold. One is the impossibility of restoring a 
      shattered continuity; the other is the impossibility of using the 
      continuity dictated by the new position of their assemblage points. That 
      new continuity is always too tenuous, too unstable, and does not offer 
      sorcerers the assuredness they need to function as if they were in the 
      world of everyday life.
 
		Sorcerers don't resolve 
      this problem. The spirit either resolves it for us or it doesn't. If it 
      does, a sorcerer finds himself acting in the sorcerers' world, but without 
      knowing how. This is the reason why I have insisted from the day I found 
      you that impeccability is all that counts. A sorcerer lives an impeccable 
      life, and that seems to beckon the solution. Why? No one knows.
 
		Impeccability, as I have told you so many times, is not morality, it 
		only resembles morality. Impeccability is simply the best use of our 
		energy level. Naturally, it calls for frugality, thoughtfulness, 
		simplicity, innocence; and above all, it calls for lack of 
		self-reflection. All this makes it sound like a manual for monastic 
		life, but it isn't.
 
		Sorcerers say that in order to 
      command the spirit, and by that they mean to command the movement of the 
      assemblage point, one needs energy. The only thing that stores energy for 
      us is our impeccability.
 
		We do not have to be 
      students of sorcery to move our assemblage point. Sometimes, due to 
      natural although dramatic circumstances, such as war, deprivation, stress, 
      fatigue, sorrow, helplessness, men's assemblage points undergo profound 
      movements. If the men who find themselves in such circumstances are able 
      to adopt a sorcerer's ideology, they would be able to maximize that 
      natural movement with no trouble. And they would seek and find 
      extraordinary things instead of doing what men do in such circumstances: 
      crave the return to normalcy.
 
		When a movement of 
      the assemblage point is maximized, both the average man or the apprentice 
      in sorcery becomes a sorcerer, because by maximizing that movement, 
      continuity is shattered beyond repair.
 
		You 
      maximize that movement by curtailing self-reflection. Moving the 
      assemblage point or breaking one's continuity is not the real difficulty. 
      The real difficulty is having energy. If one has energy, once the 
      assemblage point moves, inconceivable things are there for the 
      asking.
 
		Man's predicament is that he intuits his 
      hidden resources, but he does not dare use them. This is why sorcerers say 
      that man's plight is the counterpoint between his stupidity and his 
      ignorance. Man needs now, more so than ever, to be taught new ideas that 
      have to do exclusively with his inner world--sorcerers' ideas, not social 
      ideas, ideas pertaining to man facing the unknown, facing his personal 
      death. Now, more than anything else, he needs to be taught the secrets of 
      the assemblage point.
 
		  
		 
		The spirit is indefinable. One cannot even feel it, much less talk 
      about it. One can only beckon it by acknowledging its existence.
 
		  
		 
		The position of silent 
      knowledge is called the third point because in order to get to it one has 
      to pass the second point, the place of no pity.
 
		Every human being has a capacity for that fluidity. For most of us, 
      however, it is stored away and we never use it, except on rare occasions 
      which are brought about by sorcerers, or by dramatic natural 
      circumstances, such as a life-or-death struggle.
 
		Only a human being who is a paragon of reason can move his assemblage 
      point easily and be a paragon of silent knowledge. Only those who are 
      squarely in either position can see the other position clearly. That was 
      the way the age of reason came to being. The position of reason was 
      clearly seen from the position of silent knowledge.
 
		The one-way bridge from silent knowledge to reason is called 
      "concern." That is, the concern that true men of silent knowledge have 
      about the source of what they know. And the other one-way bridge, from 
      reason to silent knowledge, is called "pure understanding." That is, the 
      recognition that tells the man of reason that reason is only one island in 
      an endless sea of islands.
 
		A human being who has 
      both one-way bridges working is a sorcerer in direct contact with the 
      spirit, the vital force that makes both positions possible.
 
		  
		 
		The spirit only listens when 
      the speaker speaks in gestures. And gestures do not mean signs or body 
      movements, but acts of true abandon, acts of largesse, of humor. As a 
      gesture for the spirit, sorcerers bring out the best of themselves and 
      silently offer it to the abstract.
 
 Sorcerers count their lives in hours. In one hour it is 
      possible for a sorcerer to live the equivalent in intensity of a normal 
      life. This intensity is an advantage when it comes to storing information 
      in the movement of the assemblage point.
 
		The 
      assemblage point, with even the most minute shifting, creates totally 
      isolated islands of perception. Information, in the form of experiences in 
      the complexity of awareness can be stored there. But how can information 
      be stored in something so vague? The mind is equally vague, and still you 
      trust it because you are familiar with it. You don't yet have the same 
      familiarity with the movement of the assemblage point, but it is just 
      about the same.
 
		The information is stored in the 
      experience itself. Later, when a sorcerer moves his assemblage point to 
      the exact spot where it was, he relives the total experience. This 
      sorcerers' recollection is the way to get back all the information stored 
      in the movement of the assemblage point.
 
		Intensity 
      is an automatic result of the movement of the assemblage point. Intensity, 
      being an aspect of intent , is connected naturally to the 
      shine of the sorcerers' eyes. In order to recall those isolated islands of 
      perception sorcerers need only intent the particular shine of 
      their eyes associated with whichever spot they want to return 
      to.
 
		Because his intensity rate is greater than 
      normal, in a few hours a sorcerer can live the equivalent of a normal 
      lifetime. His assemblage point, by shifting to an unfamiliar position, 
      takes in more energy than usual. That extra flow of energy is called 
      intensity.
 
		Beware of a reaction which typically 
      afflicts sorcerers--a frustrating desire to explain the sorcery experience 
      in cogent, well-reasoned terms.
 
		The sorcerers' 
      experience is so outlandish that sorcerers consider it an intellectual 
      exercise, and use it to stalk themselves with. Their trump 
      card as stalkers , though, is that they remain keenly aware 
      that we are perceivers and that perception has more possibilities than the 
      mind can conceive.
 
		In order to protect themselves 
      from that immensity, sorcerers learn to maintain a perfect blend of 
      ruthlessness, cunning, patience, and sweetness. These four bases are 
      inextricably bound together. Sorcerers cultivate them by 
      intending them. These bases are, naturally, positions of the 
      assemblage point.
 
		Every act performed by any 
      sorcerer is by definition governed by these four principles. So, properly 
      speaking, every sorcerer's every action is deliberate in thought and 
      realization, and has the specific blend of the four foundations of  
      stalking .
 
		Sorcerers use the four 
      moods of  stalking as guides. These are four different frames 
      of mind, four different brands of intensity that sorcerers can use to 
      induce their assemblage points to move to specific positions.
 
		Our tendency is to ponder, to question, to find out. And 
      there is no way to do that from within the discipline of sorcery. Sorcery 
      is the act of reaching the place of silent knowledge, and silent knowledge 
      can't be reasoned out. It can only be experienced.
 
		Sorcerers, in an effort to protect themselves from the overwhelming effect 
      of silent knowledge, developed the art of  stalking . 
      	 
      Stalking moves the assemblage point minutely but steadily, 
      thus giving sorcerers time and therefore the possibility of buttressing 
      themselves.
 
		Within the art of  
      stalking there is a technique which sorcerers use a great 
      deal: controlled folly. Sorcerers claim that controlled folly is the only 
      way they have of dealing with themselves--in their state of expanded 
      awareness and perception--and with everybody and everything in the world 
      of daily affairs.
 
		Controlled folly is the art of 
      controlled deception or the art of pretending to be thoroughly immersed in 
      the action at hand--pretending so well no one could tell it from the real 
      thing. Controlled folly is not an outright deception but a sophisticated, 
      artistic way of being separated from everything while remaining an 
      integral part of everything.
 
		Controlled folly is 
      an art. A very bothersome art, and a difficult one to learn. Many 
      sorcerers don't have the stomach for it, not because there is anything 
      inherently wrong with the art, but because it takes a lot of energy to 
      exercise it.
 
		By the time we come to sorcery, our 
      personality is already formed and all we can do is practice controlled 
      folly and laugh at ourselves.
 
		  
		 
		Stalkers who practice controlled folly believe 
      that, in matters of personality, the entire human race falls into three 
      categories. Sorcerers long age learned that only our personal 
      self-reflection falls into one of the categories.
 The trouble with us is that we take ourselves seriously. Whichever 
      category our self-image falls into only matters because of our 
      self-importance. If we weren't self-important, it wouldn't matter at all 
      which category we fell into.
 
		  
		 
		The basic cores reveal themselves extremely slowly, 
      erratically advancing and retreating. I can't repeat often enough that 
      every man whose assemblage point moves can move it further. And the only 
      reason we need a teacher is to spur us on mercilessly. Otherwise our 
      natural reaction is to stop to congratulate ourselves for having covered 
      so much ground.
 
		  
		 
		Self-importance is a monster that has three thousand heads. And one can 
      face up to it and destroy it in any of three ways. The first way is to 
      sever each head one at a time; the second is to reach that mysterious 
      state of being called the place of no pity, which destroys self-importance 
      by slowly starving it; and the third is to pay for the instantaneous 
      annihilation of the three-thousand-headed monster with one's symbolic 
      death.
 
		Consider yourself fortunate if you get the 
      chance to choose. For it is the spirit that usually determines which way 
      the sorcerer is to go, and it is the duty of the sorcerer to 
      follow.
 
		  
		 
		The place of 
      no pity is a position of the assemblage point, a position which renders 
      self-pity inoperative.
 
		  
		 
		Appearance is the essence of controlled folly, and 
      stalkers create appearances by intending them. 
      Intending appearances is exclusively an exercise for 
      stalkers .
 
		Stalkers call 
      intent . The indispensable part of the act of calling 
      intent is a total concentration on what is 
      intended .
 
		  
		 
		Man has a dark side. It's called stupidity. In the same measure 
      that ritual forced the average man to construct huge churches that were 
      monuments to self-importance, ritual also forced sorcerers to construct 
      edifices of morbidity and obsession. As a result, it is the duty of every 
      nagual to guide awareness so it will fly toward the abstract, free of 
      liens and mortgages.
 
		Ritual can trap our attention 
      better than anything I can think of. But it also demands a very high 
      price. That high price is morbidity; and morbidity could have the heaviest 
      liens and mortgages on our awareness.
 
		Human 
      awareness is like an immense haunted house. The awareness of everyday life 
      is like being sealed in one room of that immense house for life. We enter 
      the room through a magical opening: birth. And we exit through another 
      such magical opening: death.
 
		Sorcerers, however, 
      are capable of finding still another opening and can leave that sealed 
      room while still alive. A superb attainment. But their astounding 
      accomplishment is that when they escape from that sealed room they choose 
      freedom. They choose to leave that immense, haunted house entirely instead 
      of getting lost in other parts of it.
 
		Morbidity is 
      the antithesis of the surge of energy awareness needs to reach freedom. 
      Morbidity makes sorcerers lose their way and become trapped in the 
      intricate, dark byways of the unknown.
 
		Stalkers who intend appearances are performers 
      who are being coached by the spirit itself. The teacher's reason for 
      training an apprentice as he does is freedom. He wants their freedom from 
      perceptual convention. And he teaches them to be artists. 
       
      Stalking is an art. For a sorcerer, since he's not a patron 
      or a seller of art, the only thing of importance about a work of art is 
      that it can be accomplished.
 
		  
		 
		Think about the basic cores of the sorcery stories. Or 
      rather, don't think about them, but make your assemblage point move toward 
      the place of silent knowledge. Moving the assemblage point is everything, 
      but it means nothing if it's not a sober, controlled movement. So, close 
      the door of self-reflection. Be impeccable and you'll have the energy to 
      reach the place of silent knowledge.
 
		  
		
		
		 
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