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Demonic Channeling and Scrying - A Guide
Demonic Channeling and Scrying - A Guide
and Scrying:
A Guide
by Meredith Sirin
- COPYRIGHT 2016 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Beginning
This work is written to the Satanic witch. The subject is demonic channeling
and scrying.
It is divided into the following sections:
1. Statement on Dark Paths
2. The Nature of Channeling
3. The Black Mirror
4. Required Items
5. Stages of Channeling
6. Stages of Manifestation
7. Stages of Visible Manifestation
8. Stages of Audible Manifestation
9. Using Channeled Information
All magic is the use of paranormal spiritual power to achieve mental and
physical results. Often these results are benefits. Such benefits are numerous
and differ from individual to individual. Insight, power, ecstasythings
such as these are most common objects of desire. And, naturally, there are
also less common desires. Magical rituals are the methods of achieving
desire and this is a book of such means.
The path described herein is demonismbeliefs and practices, that is,
which center around demons. Demonism, as I describe it, is a form of
Satanism. Satanism, properly speaking, is simply an umbrella term for black
magic conveyed in a Western, Judeo-Christian context. It is defined by what
it opposes. This is its aesthetic. The question I seek to answer is how to
contact the demonic and what to do with the contact, once achieved.
This manual began with private notes and was later polished, expanded, and
altered for public consumption. I began my search initially questioning how
it was that ancient spiritual knowledge was received and how humans first
learned of methods of spell-casting, evocation and divination. It occurred to
me that religious traditions commonly portrayed themselves as receiving
their inspiration from a spiritual entity. The spirit usually claimed to be God
or a representation thereof. Knowledge was then bestowed along with
rituals to perform. This is the model of the Bible, the Qur'an, the Zend
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Avesta and many other works. In contrast, the demonic literature of the
world did not always convey its sources.
Why?
The story of John Dee and Edward Kelly gave me my initial clue. From
there, it was a matter of devising methods to achieve similar results. The
Enochian angels made themselves known to Dee through Kelly, giving him
an account of their language, nature and import. They also revealed to him
new grimoiresa sacred book outlining the magic of various spirits.
During the latter part of 2014, my partner and I began a modified replication
of John Dee and Edward Kelly's experiments, having grown dissatisfied
with our decade-long accomplishments in magic. Our initial experiment
centered on the Goetic demon Ose. A black mirror was placed upon Ose's
seal and a communal summoning was performed. Ose revealed the
following instructions to us, verbatim:
"On a black night, the sky overcast, the Moon waning, place burning orchid
petals in a ten sided star drawn from ashes. Let my seal be written in wax
with an iron nail. Gaze into the mirror and I will disclose."
In retrospect, I believe the details given by Ose had no special relevance
beyond their symbolic meaning for my partner and I. The flowers were ones
I had personally grown and admired. The overcast sky was our preferred
weather. The use of a black mirror rather than a crystal ball or other method
was also a clear acknowledgment of our preferences and habits.
On that night, my partner acted as the channel (or medium) while I
performed the ceremony. The seal was written in wet wax and the ashes
were used from paper burnt the prior day. The orchid petals42 in number
were taken from my own garden. Revealed on that night was a method of
connecting the mind to an information stream periodically inhabited by
demons and other entities. This method will be described in the section
entitled "Techniques of Perception". I also include instructions on a more
open and free means of communication. The techniques of stillness and
dissolutiontechniques which ought preface the act of channelingwere
already known previously by my partner and I, with the exception of the one
that evolves calling the shadow-like demons forth to purposefullyalbeit
symbolically and temporarilydevour the witch's consciousness piece by
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piece.
As John Dee learned of "angels" never mentioned before, it is in the power
of each occultist to make contact with the seething multitudes of light and
dark spirits which inhabit reality. This path focuses exclusively upon this
line of direct contact, expanding the inner fields by building promiscuous
rapport with a multiplicity of as-yet-unknown demons. This book is offered
as a way of achieving the same results we achieved and introducing others
to this path. As you will read in this book, I present a method whereby the
demonic witch achieves communion with new demons and takes direction
from them. Though it is written emphatically in many places, I do not insist
this way is the only proper way. If it is to be followed, however, I
recommend following it to the letter. Paths are many but all require direct
action and encounter. This is one such path. Travel it wisely.
Meredith Sirin, 2016
learns and seesshe does not believe. This path is one of continually
subjecting oneself to the experience of the demonic, testing its information
by experiment in the laboratory of experience, widening the horizons of the
soul. Nothing is left to trustall is known or unknown and there is no
"believe."
Taken together, these constitute the ethos of this path, if a witch should
desire to follow it. But, as I said, the techniques here can be used by all. My
espousal of these ideals should not be taken as a critique of others. As you
will see, any path may benefit from them.
the initial two. Anything that is not defined in audible or visible form is
covered in this heading. Commonly it is emotional sensations, though other
things may also be conveyed. These concepts and impressions also must be
spoken aloud for the recording.
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Required Items
Aside from the black mirror, only three other items are required for this
method of Demonic channeling:
An audio recorder
A pad of unlined paper
A pen
The audio recorder easily allows for the witch to state what she has heard
from the demon, as well as document her impressions. Later she will
transcribe them. This is how the text of the grimoires is recorded for later
use, among other things. It is also possible for paranormal sounds to appear
upon the audio recorder which were not heard initially. These rarely have
any importance beyond an indication of paranormal activity, however, and
though they may confirm for the witch the depth of her power or the
presence of the demon, such odd sounds are of mild interest and by no
means central to this method.
The pen and paper are used to etch any images seen in the black mirror,
including the seals of the grimoire. There should be lighting suitable for
drawing, of course, though not so bright as to ruin the ambiance of the
scrying session. The pen and pad are ideally used for no other purpose, the
paper being unlined for aesthetic purposes. Lined paper can be used if it is
all that is available, though I do not recommend it.
Drawing materials are not required if the session is purely audible, of
course.
As you can tell, all such instruments are present for purposes of recording
the demonic communications. Other ritual items are not necessary for this
method.
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Stages of Channeling
My technique of demonic channeling has four stages:
1. Stillness
2. Dissolution
3. Presence
4. Manifestation
Stillness is the process of the body and mind achieving a state of motionless
silence. This is accomplished by sitting in a set and comfortable posture in
darkness for a long period of time. For some, certain music may prove to
reduce the length of the practice. Nothing must be seen, however, for when
images are absent, stillness dawns.
Dissolution is the small death of the ego. When all is still, the sense of self
warps, contorts and fades out. There is no "I" and, therefore, no psychic
censor. A place must be made for the demon to entera barren, blank space
within oneself. The demonic witch, seeing her body and mind growing calm,
then abandons her lower sensory powers and perceives directly through her
higher intuitive faculties. At this point, though, she has only lessened herself,
becoming a void. The void remains as yet unfilled.
Presence is the intuitive apprehension of the demon's proximity. The demon
arrives non-physically, conveying itself to the witch through intuitive
perception. It is not the witch's aptitude for paranormal consciousness
which allows her a sight of the demon's presence, however: it is the demon
itself who overwhelms the witch with its presence. She then sees and
knows. The sense of the common world drifts away and she beholds the
demonic.
Manifestation is the communication of the demon to the channeler. It is the
content or media of what the demon wishes to speak. This occurs audibly,
as I have said, or visually. It can also be communicated to the other senses,
though instructions are chiefly communicated through word and image.
Anything that one can experience may potentially be communicated,
however.
These four stages reach their maximum or final goal in manifestation, though
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13
Techniques of Stillness
Stillness is the silencing or bringing to an end of motion. To properly
channel, the witch must achieve a state of inner stillness. If her
consciousness contains too great a degree of presence and activity, there is
no room for the demon to manifest. Space must be made for it. If not, the
witch will be left to her own voice and the act of channeling will only be
delusive. The witch will know she has reached a place of stillness when her
thoughts are slow to arrive and easily banished.
As stillness is the silencing of motion, there are as many techniques of
achieving stillness as there are motions, but the following three ought to be
sufficient for most purposes:
Breath counting down or up
Barbarous word chant
Pure isolation
In the first, the witch sits in the twilit darkness and counts her inhalations
and exhalations upward to 100 and notes her degree of calm. If more
stillness is required, she counts downward from 100 to 1, repeating the flow
of upward and downward until she arrives at stillness.
The second is the chanting of a barbarous word or "word of power". There
are many of these to choose from and I cannot make any perfect
recommendations. I will say this, however: if ever she receives a barbarous
word from channeling, this word will be the most effective. It is simply
repeated on both the inhalation and exhalation, eyes closed, until the
sufficient degree of stillness dawns.
The third of these is the most extreme but also the most powerful. Here the
witch withdraws into a dark room, where all light is absent, and sits
motionlessly for hours. If she must exit for any reason she is quick to return.
During this time, nothing is doneno chanting of a barbarous word, no
counting of breaths. Her thoughts will race and she may be introduced to
new places of fear and insanity by this practice, but if she can remain steady
and commit to it there will come a point when all motion is swept away,
revealing a place of total stillness in body and mind. The power of intensity
of this practice is also its danger, and it is easy to fall into a unrecoverable
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void if she is not careful. Nonetheless, any who wish to receive it should do
so. The danger, though great, is worth the rewards.
The witch cannot stop at stillness alone, however. She must also learn to
dissolve herself. The self can persist even in states of deep stillness, just as
heat remains in the pyre through smoldering though the flames have all died
down. Upon reaching stillness, the witch must further herself and blot out
the mind entirelya conscious erasure, where awareness remains but the
sense of self has gone out and dissolved. It is true that channeling may be
accurately conducted without such a dissolution, but it is very easy to fall
into delusion if the self has not yet experienced a temporary death. For the
demon to speak truly, all other voices must be silenced.
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Techniques of Dissolution
For some, dissolution may occur spontaneously, though such is
comparatively rare. The more common occurrence is for a witch to
purposefully instigate such a dissolution through effort, and the effort need
not be especially dramatic if stillness has indeed been achieved. A simple
gesture may suffice. The presence of the self is an act of will and its
dissolution is also an act of willthe will, that is, to death. If the witch has
cultivated a sharp sense of deathly aesthetics, she need only apply them to
herself. Then she enters her midnighta place where she neither sees nor
knows.
The simplest way to do this is to observe the sense of self then imagine its
total dissolution. In her palace of stillness, the witch directs her mind's eye
to her ego and identity then wills them to depart. And they do so. A still
heart is a commanding heart and few things within us have the capacity to
disobey when the heart is still. She beholds herself disappearing and stands
in ecstasy, separate and distinct from herself as if she were a detached eye
beholding the empty space of her former self. Then she is free in her
dissolution and prepared for the communications of her demon.
A more complex but occasionally more effective way is to direct a
philosophical criticism against her sense of self, laying it bare before the
eye of insight. Our sense of self is always bound by certain definitions. We
say "this is I" and "this is not I", dividing the mind, body, world and soul
into their respect spheres. Though perhaps necessary for survival, it is by no
means necessary for works of magic. To collapse these divisions, the witch
asks forcefully, "Who am I now?" She looks to her body and sees it as
composed of parts. If the parts are divided, does her body remain? Certainly
not. Therefore the body is not the self. She looks to her mind and sees that
there, too, rests a mere arrangement of parts. There is memory, reason,
emotion, the logical faculties, the imagination and so forth. Each part can be
isolated and divided from the rest. What, then, is left? Nothing. It is all
composition and arrangement. It functions as one but is not a unity. It is not
truly therenot in the way it is supposed. If the witch is sufficiently
concentrated and still, these philosophical criticisms will lead to the self's
dissolution.
There is a more effective way, also. To perform it, the witch must have
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perceived the visible form of certain demons. These are quite common:
those who appear as black shadowstheir forms mimicking humans or
animals. When these are perceived visually, they will appear once called.
No formal rites are necessary. The witch summons them to her circle when
she wishes to see herself dissolve, then bids them to devour her identity
piece by piece. Passively she sits, stands or lays, feeling the boundaries of
her "I am" drift and disperse. In time she finds herself plunged into the
darkening sea, at which point a torrent of magical power will soon rise in
the form of shattering silver light. This final method is only accomplished in
the presence of such demons and according to the methods known to me.
But, nonetheless, it is certain that new techniques will be given to any who
channel effectively. And , once given, these techniques must be followed.
Some Satanists will no doubt balk at the idea that the self ought to be erased
in such a manner, claiming it is a Judeo-Christian concept and quite
damaging. Many forms of Satanism are devoted to the precise opposite:
arrogating the self, rising in pride, encouraging the ego's gratification. To
this I respond that it is foolish to suppose that anything which can be so
abased was ever real. This black universe of ours is constantly annihilating
selves, regardless of how prideful and powerful they might seem in the
moment. This often happens even before the body's decay. Who has not seen
an old woman or man afflicted with alzheimers? Their precious tomes of
Nietzsche, LaVey and Ragnar Redbeard will not help them. On the contrary,
that which we call our "self" or "I"attached, as it is, to mind and bodyis
simply one of power's many gestures and it can be relinquished for the sake
of greater power. That which peers out these eyes is far larger and
monstrous than a petty ego, continually engaged in reinforcing and realizing
itself against its fated tragedies. When the self dies for a little season,
something greater is seen. Passion enters into the demonic, power into the
netherworld and all the harmonizations and artifices of reason become
bright with an infinite blackness, revealing that place within consciousness
where the ghastliness of the cosmos breaks through. This is the area of
magical consciousnessnot the foolish pride of dying meat. Practice and
you will soon see.
Yet even having dissolved, the witch's work is not yet done.
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the demon's presence. If audible alone, she leaves them closed. Once the
demon is present, as in the first approach, the witch is wise to not assert
herself, letting the demon show her what it wishes. This is how she knows
and sees.
There are other approachesmore than it is prudent or needful to write
but let these suffice for now. If the witch finds success by these, she needs
nothing else. Many demons are encountered by few means and this is as it
should be.
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Stages of Manifestation
Visible and audible manifestations are the two primary forms of channeled
or scryed data according to these methods. Both often occur in tandem and
are equally useful. The altered state of consciousness necessary for scrying
the visible paves the way for scrying the audible, and vice versa. The witch
on this path would do well to make use of both. The phenomena associated
with them may arise internally from the witch herself or, alternatively, from
the power of the demon. Arising from the witch herself, such manifestations
are defined as hallucinatory. When arising from the external influence of a
demon, they are defined as paranormal. This distinction should be noted
carefully and always be kept in mind by those who wish to pursue this path.
Visible manifestations are beheld with the eye or with the mind's
imaginative powers. When appearing to the eye they are indistinguishable
from material objects, though their nature is ultimately mental rather than
material. When seen by the imagination, their nature is between that of
thought and image. Audible manifestations are the same way: heard in a
manner that resembles physical sounds or else in the borderland between
sound and thought.
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