• StudSpud The Starchy
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    3 months ago

    Thank you for the corrections! I read about it ages ago and forgot the pertinent details 😅

    I didn’t want to get into Crowley because he’s gross AF.

    I appreciate this, I have more to look into!!! 💜

    • TheWitchofThornbury
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      3 months ago

      Yep, Crowley was a hagfish - everything he touched turned to slime.

      For early 20th century occultism, try looking up Dion Fortune (pseudonym) who was actually quite positively focused. He/she wrote several novels, of which Psychic Self-Defence is probably the most famous. Gardnerian witchcraft is also tied into all this stuff, more or less positively depending on context. The short stories of Sylvia Townsend-Warner are a thinly disguised contemporary critique of the participants too. And very funny. This stuff is not at all fashionable, but sneaks up and bites where it matters. I recommend it as an antidote to practically all instagram occultism.

      There’s a few clubs that play tarrocco around in the northern suburbs - if you like card evenings they’re quite fun. Only most of the people involved are eldery Italians, so if you are under 60, or just don’t yet use a walking frame, prepare to be flirted with.

      • Seagoon_OP
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        3 months ago

        ooh, someone else who has read Dion Fortune.

        All bunk of course.

        • TheWitchofThornbury
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          3 months ago

          Legacy of the hippie era - the books were re-issued then. Odd, of course, but some of the psychological insights still have value. Particularly the ones relating to credulity.