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- THAT OLD BLACK MAGIC:
- Getting Specific about Magical Ethics
-
-
- Sometimes a cliche just wears out. It loses meaning or, worse, begins to
- say things we never meant. I think it's time to retire the phrase "black
- magic."
-
- Saying "black" when we mean "evil" is nasty nonsense. In the first place,
- it reinforces the racist stereotypes that corrupt our society. And that's not
- all. Whenever we say "black" instead of "bad," we repeat again the big lie that
- darkness is wrong. It isn't, as people who profess to love Nature should know.
-
- Darkness can mean the inside of the womb, and the seed germinating within
- the Earth, and the chaos that gives rise to all truly new beginnings. In our
- myths, the one who goes down to the underworld returns with the treasure. Even
- death, to the Wiccan understanding, is well-earned rest and comfort, and a
- preparation for new birth. Using "black" to mean "bad" is a blasphemy against
- the Crone.
-
- But even if we no longer speak of magic as "black" or "white," we still
- need to think and speak about the ethics of magic. Although black is not evil,
- some actions are evil. It simply is not true that anything a person is strong
- enough or skilled enough to do is OK, nor should doing what we will ever be the
- whole of the law for us. We need a clear and specific vocabulary that enables
- us to choose wisely what we will do.
-
- We need to replace the word "black," not simply to drop it. Some Pagans
- have tried using "negative" as their substitute, but that turned out to be
- confusing. For some people, "negative" means any spell to diminish or banish
- anything. Some things - tumors, depression, bigotry - are harmful. There's
- nothing wrong with a working to get rid of bad stuff. "Left-handed" is another
- common term for wrongful practice, very traditional, but just as ignorant,
- superstitious and potentially harmful as the phrase "black magic" itself. So in
- Proteus we tried using the word "unethical." That's a lot better - free of
- extraneous and false implications - but still too vague.
-
- Gradually, I began to wonder whether using any one word, "black" or
- "unethical" or whatever, might just be too general and too subjective. Perhaps
- all I really tell a student that way is "Judy doesn't like that."
-
- I won't settle for blind obedience. If ethical principles are going to
- survive the twin tests of time and temptation, people need to understand just
- what to avoid, and why. Even more important, they need a basis for figuring out
- what to do instead. Especially when it comes to projective magic.
-
- Projective magic means active workings, the kind in which we project our
- will out into the world to make some kind of change. This is what most people
- think of when they use the word magic at all. Quite clearly, magic that may
- affect other people is magic that can harm. This is the basis of the proverb "a
- Witch who can't hex can't heal." Either you can raise and direct power, or you
- can't. Your strength and skill can be used for blessing or for bane. The choice
- - and the karma - are yours.
-
- Just as some people feel that strength and skill are their own
- justification, others feel that any projective magic is always wrong - that it
- is a distraction from our one true goal of union with the Divine or a willful
- avoidance of the judgements of Karma. I think these attitudes are equally
- inconsistent with basic Wiccan philosophy.
-
- We are taught that we will find the Lady within ourselves or not at all,
- that the Mother of All has been with us from the beginning. We can't now
- establish a union that was always there. All we can do, all we need to do, is
- become aware. Knowing what it feels like to heal and empower, again and again
- till you can't dismiss it as coincidence, is one of the most powerful methods
- for awakening that awareness. It makes no sense to say that the direct
- experience and exercise of our indwelling divinity distracts from the Great
- Work.
-
- Indeed, it is this intimate connection between our magic and our
- self-realization that our ethics protect. Wrongful use of magic will choke the
- channel. No short term gain could ever compensate for that.
-
- The karmic argument against practical workings seems to me to arise from a
- paranoid and defeatist world view. Even if we assume that the hardships in this
- life were put there by the Gods for a reason, how can we be so sure that the
- reason was punishment? Perhaps instead of penance to be endured, our
- difficulties are challenges to be met. Coping and dealing with our problems,
- learning magical and mundane skills, changing ourselves and our world for the
- better - in short, growing up - is that not what the Gods of joy and freedom
- want from us?
-
- One of the most radically different things about a polytheistic belief
- system is that each one of us has the right, and the need, to choose which
- God/desses will be the focus of our worship. We make these choices knowing
- that whatever energies we invoke most often in ritual will shape our own
- further growth. Spiritual practices are a means of self-programming. So we are
- responsible for what we worship in a way that people who take their One God as
- a given are not.
-
- Think about this: what kind of Power actively wants us to submit and
- suffer, and objects when we develop skills to improve our own lives? Not a
- Being I'd want to invite around too often!
-
- So it will not work for us to rule out projective magic completely; nor
- should we. Total prohibitions are as thoughtless as total permissiveness or
- blind obedience. Ethical and spiritual adults ought to be able to make
- distinctions and well-reasoned choices. I offer here a start toward analysing
- what kinds of magic are not ethical for us.
-
-
- Baneful magic is magic done for the explicit purpose of causing harm to
- another person. Usually the reason for it is revenge, and the rationalization
- is justice. People who defend the practice of baneful magic often ask "but
- wouldn't you join in cursing another Hitler?"
-
- For adults there is no rule without exceptions. If you think you would
- never torture somebody, consider this scenario: in just half an hour the bomb
- will go off, killing everybody in the city, and this terrorist knows where it
- is hidden....
-
- It's a bad mistake to base your ethics on wildly unlikely cases, since
- none of us honestly knows how we would react in that kind of extreme.
- Reasonable ethical statements are statements about the behaviors we expect of
- ourselves under normally predictable circumstances.
-
- We all get really angry on occasion, and sometimes with good cause. Then
- revenge can seem like no more than simple justice. The anger is a normal,
- healthy human reaction, and should not be repressed. But there's no more need
- to act it out in magic than in physical violence. Instead of going for revenge
- - and invoking the karmic consequences of baneful magic - identify what you
- really need. For example, if your anger comes from a feeling that you have
- been attacked or violated, what you need is protection and safe space. Work
- for the positive goal, it's both more effective and safer.
-
- The consequences of baneful magic are simply the logical, natural and
- inevitable psychological effects. Even in that rare and extreme situation when
- you may decide you really do have to use magic to give Hitler a heart attack,
- it means you are choosing by the same choice to accept the act's karma. Magical
- attack hurts the attacker first.
-
- The only way I know how to do magic is by use of my imagination, by
- visualizing or otherwise actively imagining the end I want, and then projecting
- that goal with the energy of emotional/physiological arousal. All the
- techniques I know either help me to imagine more specifically or to project
- more strongly. So the only way I can send out harm is by first experiencing
- that harm within my own imagination. Instant and absolute karma - the natural,
- logical and inevitable outcomes of our own choices.
-
- I would think, also, that somebody dumb enough to do such workings often
- would soon lose the ability to imagine specifically, as their sensitivity
- dulled in sheer self-defense. That callusing effect is the reality behind the
- pious proverb that says "if you abuse it, She'll take it away."
-
- But not every other magician is ethical. Psychic attacks do happen. Should
- we not defend ourselves? Of course we should. Leaving ourselves open to psychic
- attack is no good example of the autonomy and assertiveness our chosen Gods
- expect. But first, how can we be sure what we are experiencing really is
- psychic attack?
-
- The fantasy of psychic attack is often a convenient excuse that allows us
- to avoid looking at our own shortcomings. When lack of rest or improper
- nutrition is the cause of illness, or a project isn't completed on time because
- of distraction, it's a real temptation to put the blame outside ourselves.
- Doing this too easily betrays our autonomy just as badly as meek submission to
- attack does. Then, to compound matters, projected blame becomes an excuse for
- unjust revenge -- and that is baneful magic without excuse.
-
- Once in a rare while, some fool really does try to throw a whammy. It's
- hard to predict when you might be targeted. Passive shields are always a good
- idea. Like a mirror, these are totally inactive until somebody sends unwelcome
- energy. Then a shield will protect you completely and bounce back whatever is
- being thrown. You may not even know consciously when your shield is working,
- but the result is perfect justice.
-
- Perfect justice; elegant and efficient. You won't hurt anybody out of
- paranoia or by mistake. And perfect protection, even though we do not have
- perfect knowledge.
-
- Bindings, according to some, are completely defensive. They do not harm,
- only restrain. But imagine yourself being bound - perhaps by someone who
- believes themselves justified - and notice the feeling of impotence and
- frustration. Binding is bane from the viewpoint of the bound.
-
- Even if restraint were truly not harm, bindings are just plain poor
- protection. They target a particular person or group. What if you suspect the
- wrong person? Somebody harmless is bound and your actual attacker is not bound.
- Shields, which cover you, not your supposed enemy, will cover you against
- any enemy, known or unknown.
-
- So, baneful magic, besides being painful in the short run and crippling in
- the long run, is never necessary. There are better ways of self protection,
- and retribution is the business of the Gods.
-
-
- Coercive magic is magic that targets another person to make them give us
- something we want or need. When most people think of the "Magic Power of
- Witchcraft," this is what they have in mind.
-
- The spell to make the teacher give you a good grade, or the supervisor
- give you a good evaluation, the spell to make the personnel officer or renting
- agent choose you, the spell to attract that cute guy, all are examples of
- coercive magic.
-
- So, what's wrong with high grades, a good job, a raise, a nice apartment
- and a sexy lover? There's nothing at all wrong with those goals. An it harm
- none, do what ye will. As long as nobody is hurt, go for it! But don't strive
- toward good ends by coercive means.
-
- Although there is no deliberate intent to do harm or cause pain in
- coercive workings, other people are treated as pawns. Their autonomy and their
- interests are ignored.
-
- For Pagans, to do this is total hypocrisy. We profess to follow a religion
- of immanence, one that places ultimate meaning and value in this life on this
- Earth, here and now. We claim to see every living thing, humans included, as a
- sacred manifestation. To do honor to this indwelling divinity, we place great
- value on our own personal autonomy. How can we then justify treating other
- people as objects for our use?
-
- Nor is it harmless. Forcing the will, controlling the independent
- judgement of another human being, is harm. Once again, empathy leads to
- understanding. Just imagine you are the person whose will and judgement is
- being externally controlled. How does puppethood feel? From the viewpoint of
- the target, the harm is palpable.
-
- The Pagan and Wiccan community as a whole is also hurt by coercive magic.
- One of the main reasons people fear and hate Witches is our reputation for
- controlling others. This is an old, dirty lie, created by the invading religion
- in an attempt to discredit the indigenous competition. Today, that reputation
- is mostly perpetuated by people who claim to be "our own," who teach unethical
- coercive magic by mail order to strangers whose ethical sensitivity cannot be
- evaluated long distance. May the Gods preserve the Craft!
-
- People who are connected to the situation, but invisible to us, may also
- be seriously hurt: the cute guy's fiancee, the other applicant for that job.
- What you think of as a working designed only to bring good to yourself can
- bring serious harm to innocent third parties, and the karma of their pain will
- be on you.
-
- That isn't the only way an incomplete view of the situation can backfire.
- There's a traditional saying that goes, "be careful about what you ask for,
- because that's exactly what you will get." What if he is gorgeous, but abusive?
- What if the apartment house is structurally unsound? Better to state your
- legitimate needs (love in my life, a nice place to live) and let the Gods deal
- with the details.
-
- Finally, remember this: asking specifically limits us to what we now know
- or what we can now imagine. But I remember a time when I could not have
- imagined being a priestess. What if the cute guy in the office is perfectly OK,
- but your absolutely perfect soul-mate will be in the A+P next Wednesday? The
- more specifically targeted your magic is, the more you limit yourself to a life
- of tautology and missed chances.
-
- And beyond all the scenario spinning lies the instant karma, the natural,
- logical and inevitable consequence of the act. It's more subtle than in the
- case of baneful magic, since you are not trying to imagine and project pain,
- but the damage is still real.
-
- Every time you treat another human being as a thing to be pushed and
- pulled around for your convenience and pleasure, you are reinforcing your own
- alienation. The attitude of being removed from and superior to other people
- takes you out of community. As the attitude strengthens, so will the behavior
- it engenders. The long term result of coercive magic, as with mundane forms of
- coercion, is isolation and loneliness.
-
- Are you beginning to think that magic is useless? Did I just rule out all
- the good stuff: love charms, job magic, spells for good grades? Not at all. It
- is not only ethical but good for you to do lots of magic to improve your own
- life. Whenever it works you will get more than you asked for - because along
- with whatever you asked for comes one more experience of your own
- effectiveness, your power-from-within.
-
- Work on yourself and your own needs and desires without targeting other
- people. Then feel free! Ask for what you want. Visualize it and raise power for
- it and act in accordance on the material plane. "I need a caring and horny
- lover with a good sense of humor." "I want an affordable apartment near where
- my coven meets with a tree outside my window." "I need to be at my best when I
- take that exam next week." Fulfill your dreams, and sometimes let the Gods
- surprise you with gifts beyond your dreams.
-
-
- Manipulative magic is magic that targets another person for what we think
- is "their own good," without regard for their opinions in the matter. In the
- general culture around us, this is normal. As you read this, you may have some
- friend or relative praying for you to be "saved" from your evil Pagan ways and
- returned to the fold of their preference. These people mean you well. By their
- own lights, they are attempting to heal you. We work from a very different
- thealogical base.
-
- As polytheists, we affirm the diversity of the divine and the divinity of
- diversity. If there is no one, true, right and only way in general, do we dare
- to assume that there is one obvious right choice for a person in any given
- situation? If more than one choice may be "right," how can one person presume
- they know what another person would want without asking them first?
-
- No life situation ever looks the same from outside as it does to the
- person who is experiencing it. Are you sure you even have all the facts? Are
- you fully aware of all the emotional entanglements involved? Perhaps that
- illness is the only way they have of getting rest or getting attention. Perhaps
- they stay in that dead end job because it leaves them more energy to
- concentrate on their music. How do you know till you ask?
-
- And, to further complicate the analysis, it's possible that the person you
- are trying to help would agree with you about the most desirable outcome, but
- fears and hates the very idea of magic. They have as much of a right to keep
- magic out of their own life, as you have to make it part of yours!
-
- Our religion teaches that the sacred lives within each person, that we can
- hear the Lady's voice for ourselves if we only learn to listen. "... If that
- which you seek, you find not within yourself, you will never find it without."
- In behavioral terms, when you take another person's opinion about their own
- life seriously, you are reinforcing them in thinking and choosing for
- themselves. The more you do this, the more you encourage them to listen for the
- sacred inner voice.
-
- Conversely, whenever you ignore or override a person's feelings about
- their own life, you are discounting those feelings and discouraging the kind of
- internal attention that can keep the channels to wisdom open. Although
- well-intentioned meddling may actually help somebody in the short run, in the
- longer run it trains them to dependency and indecision. Few intentional banes
- damage as severely. This is especially true because even the untrained and
- unaware will instinctively resist overt ill-will, but in our culture we are
- trained to receive "expert" interference with gratitude.
-
- Check by asking yourself, "who's in charge here?" The answer to that will
- tell you whether you are basically empowering or undermining the person you
- intend to help.
-
- And, as usual, the effects go both ways. The same uninvited intervention
- that fosters passivity in the recipient will foster arrogance in the "rescuer."
- It's control and ego-inflation masked as generosity. It's very seductive.
-
- If you make this a habit, you will come to believe that other people are
- incompetent and powerless. Then what happens when you need help? Your contempt
- will make it impossible for you to see what resources surround you.
- Manipulative magic is ultimately just as alienating as coercive magic - and
- it's a much prettier trap!
-
- The way to avoid the trap is to do no working affecting another person
- without that person's explicit permission. Proteans are pledged to this, and I
- think it's a good idea for anybody.
-
- You don't need to wait passively for the person to ask. It's perfectly all
- right to offer, as long as you are willing to sometimes accept "no" for your
- answer. For the person who believes s/he is unworthy or who is simply too shy,
- offering help is itself a gift. Taking their opinion seriously is an even
- greater gift: respect.
-
- The rule is that whenever it is in any way physically possible to ask, you
- must ask. If it's not important enough to pay long distance charges, it
- certainly isn't important enough to violate a friend's autonomy. If asking is
- literally not possible, then and only then, here are a few exceptions:
-
- Sometimes an illness or injury happens very suddenly, and the person is
- unconscious or in a coma before you could possibly ask them. If you know that
- this person is generally comfortable with magic, you may do workings to keep
- their basic body systems working and allow the normal healing process the time
- it needs. If they are opposed to magic, for whatever reason, back off!
-
- Traditionally, an unconscious person is understood to be temporarily out
- of their body. Maintaining their body in habitable condition is preserving
- their option, not choosing for them. Doing maintenance magic requires a lot of
- sensitivity. At some point, the time may come when you should stop and let the
- person go on. Be sure to use some kind of divination to help you stay aware.
-
- This is a hard road. It may be your lover, your child, lying there
- helpless. Any normal human being would be tempted to drag them back, to force
- them to stay regardless of what is truly best for them, regardless of what they
- want. Don't repress these feelings, they do no harm, even though your actions
- might. It takes great strength and non-possessive love to recognize that your
- loved one knows their own need. You may be calling them back to a crippled
- body, to a life of pain. You may be calling them back from the ecstasy of the
- Goddess. And this is no more your right than it would be to murder them.
-
- If a person is temporarily not reachable, you may charge up a physical
- object, such as an appropriate talisman or some incense. When you present it
- to them, give them a full explanation. It is their choice whether to keep or
- use your gift. By interposing an object between the magic and the target in
- this way, you can work the magic in Circle, with the coven's power to draw on,
- and still get the person's permission before the magic is triggered.
-
- With all these rules about permission, perhaps it would be safer to work
- only on ourselves? Safer, yes, but not nearly as good. If you have permission,
- you may do any working for another person that you might do for yourself.
- Coercive magic is just as unacceptable when somebody else asks for it, and you
- may not do manipulative magic on your friend's mother, even at your friend's
- request. The permission must come from the magic's intended target and from
- nobody else. With proper permission, working magic for others is good for all
- concerned.
-
- Every act of magic has two effects. One is the direct effect, the healing
- or prosperity working or whatever was intended. The other is a minute change in
- the mind and the heart of the person who does the working. Everything we
- experience, and especially everything that we do in a wholehearted and focused
- way - the only way effective magic can be done - changes us. Each experience
- leaves its tiny trace, but the traces are cumulative. They mold the person we
- will become. Our karma is our choice.
-
- Instant karma can also be good karma. Logical, natural and inevitable
- outcomes can be desirable. When you send out good, what you send it with is
- love. Love is the driving force. When you let love flow freely, the channel
- down to love's wellspring stays clear and open. When you send out good, you
- direct it along the web of person-to-person connection, and awareness of that
- web is reinforced. The totality of that web is the basis of community.
-
- When you send out good it feels good. In the same way that sending out
- bane requires imagining pain, sending out blessing requires imagining pleasure,
- strongly and specifically. And, when you send out good, just the same as when
- you call it to yourself, you reinforce your sense of effectiveness in the
- world. Blessings grow in the fertile ground of mutuality, to the benefit of
- all.
-
-
- A pattern is becoming visible. In baneful magic, the magician intends to
- harm the target. In coercive magic, the intent toward the target is neutral. In
- manipulative magic, the magician actually means the target well. But no matter
- how different the intent may be, in all three cases magic is done to affect
- another person without that person's permission. In all three cases, the
- target, the practitioner and ultimately the community are all hurt. And in all
- three cases, there are safer and more effective ways to reach the valid goals
- that we mean to aim for.
-
- So, perhaps there is a descriptive word that covers all wrongful magical
- workings after all. How about "non-consensual" or "invasive" magic?
-
-
- There's one thing left to examine: the paradox of making rules to protect
- personal autonomy.
-
- If we make some of our choices as a community, by discussing things
- together and arriving at a common understanding about what magical behaviors
- are acceptable among us, then we choose and shape the kind of community we
- become.
-
- Or we could give up our right to choose, because we feel we shouldn't tell
- each other what to do. Some people believe that a refusal to set community
- standards promotes personal autonomy. It never has before.
-
- Appeals to individual rights can be real seductive. None of us wants Big
- Brother looking over our shoulders, telling us what to do "for our own good."
- For Witches in particular - members of a religious minority with bad image
- problems - this is a very legitimate fear. But make sure when somebody talks
- about "rights" without specifying something like "religious practice rights" or
- "the right to consensual sex," that you find out just what "rights" they mean.
-
- Rhetoric about "rugged individualism" has been used in recent history to
- fast talk us into letting the rich or strong dominate all our lives. Without
- anything to stop them, they can destroy the forestland, or deny jobs or
- apartments to "cultists." Personal autonomy for most of us is diminished when
- we allow that.
-
- Magic can be used for dominance, just the same as muscle or money. There
- is no difference, ethically, between the magical and the mundane. We are not
- obligated to tolerate power trippers among us. We are not obligated to run our
- own community by the slogans and groundrules of the dominator culture.
-
- Thinking about "rights," or about "laws" for that matter, in the abstract
- leads to "all or nothing" thinking - immature and slogan driven. I don't think
- we should ever "just say" anything. We need a deeper and more mature analysis.
- We need to ask questions like "right to do what?" and "law against what?" We
- need to get away from absolutes and to look in practical terms at the
- advantages or disadvantages of our choices.
-
- Once more, our religion itself shows us the way to steer between the false
- choices. "An it harm none, do what you will." What a person does that affects
- only herself - magical or mundane - is truly nobody's business but her own. For
- example, consensual sexual behavior affects only the participants. But toxic
- waste dumping affects everybody in the watershed.
-
- As long as we look at behavior in terms of private choices or individual
- will, we obscure the distinction that really makes a difference. If we're
- serious about wanting to give each of us the most possible control over our own
- lives, then decisions should be made by all the people affected by the behavior
- - not just by the people acting.
-
- As soon as another person is magically targeted, that other person is
- affected. If we allow such targeting without consent, we are not supporting
- personal autonomy, we are subverting it!
-
- When the behavior begins to affect us all - for example when real estate
- development threatens the salt marshes, and ultimately the air supply - or,
- very specifically, when invasive magic erodes the trust we need to work
- together - then we have a right to protect ourselves as a community. No
- ideology should turn us into passive victims when something we hold precious
- stands to be destroyed.
-
- Invasive magic hurts the target first, and soon the actor, but in the long
- run it hurts all of us. It's been so long since we've been able to meet
- together, share our knowledge, help one another in need. Pagan community is
- very new, and still very fragile. It can only grow in safe space.
-
- The People of this Land forbade skirmishes around the pipestone quarries,
- keeping that sacred source open to all. Otherwise, no sane person would go
- there, and the Old Ways would wither. For much the same reason, we cannot
- tolerate poppets in our council meetings.
-
- An atmosphere of coercion and manipulation and magical duels does not
- nurture community. Eventually, for self protection, the gentle will either
- change or go away. We could lose what we have misguidedly refused to protect.
-
- As within, so without: our karma is our choice.
-
-
- Judy Harrow
-
-