The Middle Pillar Exercise
By Francis Israel Regardie
It is my
confirmed belief that several weeks at the very least of patient
application to the Lesser Banishing Ritual of the Pentagram should
precede any effort to perform the Middle Pillar. For one thing, it
will have trained the student in several little tricks of routine
and magical technique quite apart from the intrinsic virtues of
the exercise, which is to purify and cleanse the entire sphere of
personality to the end that the higher self may manifest through a
purified body and mind.
It will be realized how necessary analysis is as a preliminary
routine to magic. The student should have arrived at a fair
understanding of himself, his motives, and the mechanism of his
mind, and integrated himself more or less thoroughly so that no
dissociation or serious neurosis exists within the psyche. For the
presence of a powerful complex of associated ideas in the
unconscious, or a marked dissociation splitting off one part of
the psyche from the other, will have the effect of
short-circuiting the flow of energy generated or released by the
Middle Pillar. An explosion in the form of a complete nervous
breakdown, or even of the destruction of mental stability, will be
a likely result. Many instances have been known of unprepared
students contracting fatal physical illnesses through attempting
work of this nature, though this is more true where Eastern
exercises have been unwisely attempted. Some of these
unfortunates, when the dissociation was rendered complete, have
succumbed to chronic melancholia or taken their own lives. These
warnings are not intended to be portentous or terrifying, but only
to impress upon the student the solemnity of these undertakings, a
journey of self-conquest than which nothing could compare in
importance or seriousness.
To my mind, the exercise described as the Middle Pillar is the
groundwork of all actual developmental work. It is a process which
is the basis of magic. That this has been but seldom realized is
obviously at the root of the futile attempts to do ceremonial and
perform ritual, of which the general public hears every now and
again. Even students of magic of many years standing have been
guilty of negligence in this respect, and also in failing to
recommend it to their successors. The name of the exercise is
taken from the position of the central Sephiroth on the
diagrammatic Tree of Life. (See Pic 2 - Below) This exercise
concerns those centers numbered one, six, nine, and ten. It also
includes the shadowy center drawn in dotted lines, placed between
three and four.(1 - See index at bottom of page) ' For various
reasons I cannot go into detailed metaphysical explanations as to
the underlying philosophy of this shadowy Sephirah, though
students who desire more information about it will discover the
elaboration of this theme in my Garden of Pornegranates and My
Rosicrucian Adventure. Suffice to say here that it arises from a
consideration of the process of evolution on the one hand, and the
two pillars previously referred to, on the other. The ancient
philosophers who developed this system believed that as man
evolved, that is to say as he developed sufficient control over
his emotions as to be able to remain poised in a detachment from
the dual pull of the opposites, so there developed within him a
new faculty of discrimination and spiritual discernment.
Psychologically this idea has been verified. For it has been said
that as the over activity of the superficial mind, the flitting
from one thing to another, prevents creativeness, so equally does
inertia, dullness and the unwillingness to move. If fact, any of
the two extremes or opposite modes of behavior or thinking are
characteristic of the unevolved man. As was said by one magician
"The Secret of Wisdom can be discerned only from the place of
balanced power" (2) - that is from between the two temple pillars.
Poise at a third point, which neutralizes to some extent the
violence of the swing of the psychic pendulum from one extreme to
the other, is the result of cultivating equanimity representing an
equal capacity to be either at rest or active, interested or
withdrawn at will, and not from emotional compulsion.
This central point between the two symbolic pillars of the
opposites, the place of balanced power from which the working of
the opposites may correctly be viewed, is the implication of Daath,
which is the name of this shadowy Sephirah. Rightly it is shadowy
and the word is used advisedly for in the majority of us who have
not cultivated the difficult art of avoiding the opposites, the
development of this new principle has proceeded with the utmost
slowness. It is a new factor of adaptation or equilibrium,
especially between the two broad divisions of consciousness - the
ego on the one hand with its desire for adjustment to modem life
with its refined and non-natural conditions, and on the other hand
with the superficial levels of the instinctual life, concerned
with primitive things, of self-assertion and the unbridled
gratification of its every whim and caprice. It is this new factor
of adjustment which comprises the principal impetus to what has
been variously called in the east the Golden Flower, and in
mediaeval Europe the growth of the Red Rose upon the Cross of
Gold. (3) It is the Stone of the Philosophers, the medicine of
metals. (4)
To the four central Sephiroth plus the shadowy Daath as the fifth,
are attributed divine names - which, as in the former exercise,
are to be vibrated powerfully in conjunction with the imaginative
formulation of various images.
Let me expatiate upon these divine names by stating that they may
be considered as the keynote or vibratory rates of various degrees
or grades of consciousness. In their prolonged investigation into
the hidden knowledge and the secret side of man's nature, the
ancients who were as empirical scientists as our psychologists
today, came to associate various sound-values or rates of
vibration with various parts of the body, and also with particular
types of magnetic force and strata of consciousness. No religious
or meta physical theory need attach to the employment of these
names. The system rests entirely upon its own merits. The simplest
way of regarding them is, as explained above, as vibratory rates.
Again, they may be considered as key notes by means of which
access is obtained to the consciousness of the different parts of
our being, the existence of which hitherto we have been kept in
ignorance. (5)
With each of these five centers there is associated a divine name
to be used as a vibratory formula. The attributions as we have
received them, together with the traditional name of the
Sephiroth, are given below with the names of the principles active
in the human psyche. The numberings are those that appear on the
Tree. (6)
Kether - Yechidah
"AHIH" (pronounced "Eh-he-yeh")
Daath - The Link
"YHVH ALHIM" ("Ye-hoh-voh E-loh-heem") (7)
Tiphareth - Ruach
"YHVH ALOAH ve-DAATH" ("Ye-hoh-voh El-oah ye Da-ath" ) (
Yesod - Nephesh
"SHADDAI AL CHAI" ("Shah-dai El Chai") (9)
Malkuth - Body
"ADNI HARTZ" ("Ah-doh-nai ha-Ah-retz")
The divine names and the names of the Sephiroth should naturally
be committed to memory as also the following scheme of their
position or relation to parts of the human frame (See Pic 1 -
Above)
Kether, the first Sephirab, is a center of light, and in the
Qabalistic Cross, it is attributed to a center posited slightly
above the crown of the head. It refers to that higher genius or it
which, not yet fully incarnated within, broods above, a silent
watcher. It is for each of us the source of inspiration and
freedom and enlightenment. It is life itself.
Daath, the shadowy Sephirah, which develops in the course of
evolution as we learn the domination of our mental and emotional
propensities, is situated at the nape of the neck. Its position is
at a point on the spine just below the occiput, about one or two
inches above the larynx, and its diameter may be imagined to be
about four inches in extent. It is conceived to be a symbolic
link, self-induced and self-devised, between the higher genius on
the one hand, and on the other, the ego, the conscious self
referred to that group of characteristics clustered around
Tiphareth.
On the Middle Pillar, Daath connects the higher faculties to the
ego, Kether to Tiphareth. This latter Sephirah is resident in the
neighborhood of the heart, and its sphere extends from the
diaphragm or solar plexus more or less to the spine. Its center
may be imagined to be the lowest point of the sternum or
breast-bone to which the ribs are attached, its diameter being
about six inches.
Below Tiphareth is Yesod, a center which is referred to the region
occupied by the generative organs, and its size should be
visualized as of the same dimensions as Tiphareth. The final
center is Malkuth, referred to the feet, and it will be found by
experience that the ankles comprise the periphery of a visualized
sphere about four inches or so in diameter, the center being the
sole of the foot.
The method of working this practice called the Middle Pillar is to
stand upright, hands to side, eyes closed, breath being inhaled
and expired steadily. Above all the mind should be quiet, calm,
and still. When familiarity with the exercise is obtained, it may
be per formed sitting or lying down. These preliminary conditions
being fulfilled, let the student begin by transferring his
attention to that region immediately above the crown of his head,
where he should endeavor to visualize a sphere of white
brilliance. To accomplish this may take some little while. Several
attempts may be required before any realization of this center
occurs. But when it has been obtained, let it be regarded with a
certain sense of devotion, and contemplated as being the spatial
correlative or correspondence of the vital core of his being. This
devotional attitude should enliven it considerably, and the sense
of light and power, the first avenues of sense by which this
higher phase of consciousness may be grasped, should increase
wholly beyond anticipation. At this juncture let him vibrate three
or four times, slowly the name Eheieh.(10) This is a Hebrew divine
name meaning "I am" (or more accurately "I will be") a statement
which in reality is all that one can truthfully say of the self.
Every other characteristic and quality belongs not to its own
intrinsic nature but to the vehicles and sheaths of consciousness
through which it functions.
Steadfast in the contemplation of this source of power and
enlightenment, he should endeavor to feel that an all-penetrant
beam of brilliance is emitted downwards towards the nape of the
neck. Here it widens, expanding to form a brilliant center similar
to, though smaller in diameter than, that above the head. Applying
the same vibratory technique here, while realizing that this is
not his divinity but its conscious link or point of contact with
his ego, the student should again feel the radiation of power and
vitality. So marked and powerful should this become at this
juncture that even in the palms of his hand will the vibration of
energy be felt as almost of a physical nature, and quite possibly
a prickling sensation will be noticed in the head and neck. A
quite indescribable sense of poise and mental quiescence should
also be experienced - no inconsiderable attainment, no small
acquisition in these days of hurried business life and social
fluttering.
After several vibrations of the appropriate name, again the beam
of light should descend to the heart or region of the solar
plexus, and from there a warmth and a quite different sense of
power will gently radiate as though from an interior sun. Here
too, a name should be slowly vibrated in such a way, which can
only come through practice, as to detonate precisely in the
physical area being contemplated and not in another. It must be
felt to vibrate in the region between the diaphragm and the point
opposite to it on the spinal column.
Pass in contemplation from the heart to the center of the
generative organs. Visualize the sphere of light and vibrate the
name, employing the same technique as before and noting carefully
the reaction in consciousness. Some minutes having been spent
arousing this center and vitalizing in with power, pass downwards
to the feet where the magical center will be found to awaken quite
easily in point of fact, it will be discovered that the mere
contemplation of Kether, the center above the head, will by reflex
action bring into operation the Malkuth center, these being the
two poles, height and depth, of the Middle Pillar.
This very briefly is the technique. Little can be said which the
zealous student will not be able to discover through application
to it. If the student spends about five minutes in the
contemplation of each Sephirah on the middle column, the exercise
will take approximately twenty-five minutes to half an hour. And
surely there is no one so busy today who cannot devote at least
one half hour a day to the task of self-mastery, to the
cultivation of spiritual insight, and in the quest of his own
divine nature.
My own plan of personal instruction, was to perform this exercise
sitting beside that stu dent I had decided to teach. The principle
involved was that of induction. I assumed that by bringing into
operation the centers within my own sphere of sensation while
sometimes, though not invariably, holding the hand of the student,
the unawakened centers of the latter would react and revolve out
of sympathy, or by reflex. It amounted, in a word, to a sort of
initiation, and powerful it may become too. And I discovered that
whereas the average stu dent took some while before stumbling upon
the best means of producing the desired results by the Middle
Pillar, those few stu dents whom I had initiated in this way were
capable of performing the exercise immediately after in a highly
successful way, even when away from my presence and atmosphere.
When seeking for the ideal technique of initiation, to perfect a
rite of initiation from a purely individualistic point of view,
one of the methods I hit upon was the combination of the Middle
Pillar formula with an actual ceremony. That is to say, by
ceremonially invoking a spiritual force by means of the
appropriate pentagram or hexagram ritual, vibrating congruous
divine names, and per forming the Middle Pillar in a room or
temple thus powerfully charged by the manifestation of this
spiritual force, the result was all the more effectual and
definitely realized in consciousness. (11)
A simple ceremony which invokes the divine and archangelic
currents of elemental force, using invocations composed of
ecstatic passages from various sacred scriptures, is almost ideal
for the purpose. Not only does this method succeed in providing a
neophyte with an introduction to the light of his own higher
genius and to the realm of magic, but it is a supreme technique of
self-initiation.(12) Various changes may be rung on a simple
theme. And according to the student's own ingenium and spiritual
aspiration, so will he devise several methods of employing the
techniques I have described above.
There will be some who will propound belabored theories as to
suggestion - that because I consciously or otherwise suggested to
these students that there were magical centers existent within
their own system, their unconscious accepted the suggestion and
produced the looked-for result. Others, yet again, will murmur the
magical word "telepathy" - arguing that I projected, though not
necessarily deliberately, certain ideas or sensations from my mind
into that of the receptive student who thus was influenced against
his own better judgment or skepticism. With none of these am I
wholly in accord, though in each of them may be some germ of
truth. None of them answer the facts of experience. And I can only
suggest that these people would do far better to apply themselves
zealously to a little experimental work rather than waste time in
vain explanations and baseless theories.
Some will note that this exercise corresponds in some ways to the
yoga chakra system. There is, assuredly, correspondence. But there
are several very important differences and variations. The first,
a minor difference, is the number and position of the centers
involved. But this does not require discussion. What is
fundamental, however, is the entirely different approach. The yoga
technique commences its meditations from the lowest chakra and
works upwards to the Sahasrara above the head. On the other hand,
in the western system, the Middle Pillar starts from the highest
and works downwards. In a word, the Western ideal is not to escape
from the body but to become involved more and more in life, in
order to experience it more adequately, and in order to obtain a
mastery over it. The ideal is to bring down godhead so that one's
manhood being enriched may thereby be assumed into godhead. Always
does this system begin from the real center of working - the
higher genius which, by definition, is in contact eternally with
whatever infinite deity there may be. That is to say, through the
Yechidah we have immediate access to all the dynamic inspiration
and spiritual power of the collective unconscious.
By the magical hypothesis, the higher genius corresponds within
man to the possible relationship of God to the universe. That is
to say, man being the microcosm of the macrocosm, a reflec tion of
the cosmos, is a universe within himself, a universe ruled and
governed by his own divinity. So whatever magical work is
undertaken must always be in accordance with the dictates and
under the surveillance of that higher genius. And since, at first,
there is no immediate method of realizing whether any particular
magical effort has the approval, to state it simply and naively,
of the higher self, the sole course of action must be for the
student to place himself in alignment with that genius. This is
done by invoking it at the outset of any magical operation, and
trusting to be made a vehicle of wisdom and understanding. (13)
The first movement of the Middle Pillar - as also the Qabalistic
Cross, which is a quick method of obtaining the same result -
achieves precisely that. For since the source of life and love has
always been conceived of as light, the preliminary step is to
perceive that brooding brilliance above which is the emanation of,
or the direct center through which manifests, that higher genius,
or with which the latter is in especial sympathy. And the
remaining steps are deliberately to open one's manhood as it were
to the descent of divinity - to bring down the light into the
personality. Here it must be emphasized lies the vital distinction
between the yoga chakra system of the Hindus and the magical
exercise of the Middle Pillar. At first such a descent is
characterized by an increased sense of power and vitality.
Gradually this widens to emotional quiescence and control with a
mental poise, followed by a gradual broadening and enhancement of
the entire mental horizon.
There is yet another highly useful application of this formula. It
is to the art of healing that I refer. Formerly when I employed
mas sage and magnetic healing in my professional work I found the
Middle Pillar and the spiritual energy that it generates and makes
available of inestimable value.(14) Cases of nervous exhaustion,
catarrh, constipation, incipient consumption, pleurisy, and many
another will respond in an incomparable manner to this combination
of massage and the willed communication of power. That is to say,
using effleurage and friction, especially on the spine, as the
principal massage technique one should place oneself in rapport
with the higher self by the contemplation of the center of light
above the head. By silently vibrating the divine name appropriate,
one is enabled to tap a tremendous source of healing power which
is infinitely greater than that which ordinarily one has at one's
disposal as an average human being. This magnetic or spiritual
power flows through one steadily and powerfully. Directed by a
calm will, and assisted by a clear visualized idea of the result
desired, it may be communicated like an electric current through
the arm and hands to the finger tips. Thence it enters the
patient's body as the palms of the masseur's hands glide over the
surface being treated. It requires some little practice to retain
awareness of this divine Light while engaging in so strenuous a
physical effort as deep massage, but it is not an impossible one.
It is a great help if the visualization of the sphere above the
head is attempted whilst walking, for example. When this can be
done, then its employment for the purposes of healing is quite
simple. I can commend it unequivocally, both to physicians and
psychologists. It is my hope that analysts will take over the
technique for use in their own consulting rooms. Let them adopt it
in its entirety as the one ideal method of inducing the right
state of mind appropriate to free association and the cathartic
confession. Should its present form be considered unsuitable, I
reiterate that it has possibilities which render it worthy of
being remodeled in the light of present-day psychological
knowledge to suit modem contingencies.
There are several little physical helps which greatly enhance the
degree and amount of power which can be made available. Correct
breathing, especially, is one of them. There could hardly be a
better adjunct than breathing in a rhythmical manner. The latter
in itself, quite apart from the Middle Pillar, is supremely
efficacious in producing quiet and calm. The entire system is
stilled and strengthened as the lungs slowly take up a rhythm, and
keep to it indefinitely.
First of all the student should train himself in the method of
breathing correctly - that is to say, in the method of filling his
lungs with air from the very bottom. He should combine abdominal
with both diaphragmatic and costal breathing. The act of
inspiration, if carefully observed, consists of these three
phases. First the abdominal part of the lungs are filled, then
that underlying the diaphragm, and finally as the shoulders are
slightly lifted the thorax itself becomes filled. They are so
continuous as to appear an undivided act. In this way, every cell
of the entire lung surface comes into con tact with the oxygen
inhaled, which is thus passed into the blood stream. Most of us
usually breathe very insufficiently, only a fraction of the
cellular surface of the lung coming into contact with the inhaled
air. Thus there is always a large quantity of residual air in the
lower reaches of the lungs. There is always a large surface of the
lung area which is not employed; and a quantity of carbon dioxide
and cells in an impoverished state of health are ever present.
This method of breathing introduces a far greater content of
oxygen into the lung, destroying therefore, by combustion, toxins
and undesirable elements, and also producing a better state of
health. There are many individuals who, because of conflict and
neurosis, have attempted to flee from life. They have attempted to
evade a full contact with the stream of vital experience, and this
psychological attitude of evasion has reacted upon the bodily
functions. One of these particularly affected is that of
breathing, the lungs falling into the habit of functioning at
about half their proper capacity. The circle is a vicious one. For
inadequate breathing by itself induces an enfeebled state of
health, perpetual exhaustion, catarrh, and many another ill.
Likewise, this constant state of ill-health reacts upon the mental
outlook, confirming and strengthening the escapist attitude
towards life because the individual is now only half alive,
incapable of reacting to the pleasures and joys of life. For mind
and body, as so often reiterated in these pages, are not two
distinct units. The functions of the one interlap with and
interpenetrate the functions of the other. More accurately they
should be regarded as the two functions of one entity, two methods
whereby it may acquire experience. Too much therefore cannot be
said of the necessity for cultivating the lungs to operate at full
capacity. This cultivation cannot be too often stressed, for life
is power, and power is life and consciousness, indispensable in
the path of magic which leads to the knowledge of the higher self.
The proper method of deep breathing having been acquired, the
cultivation of a rhythmic breath should be the next step. The most
suitable and simple method is the four-beat rhythm. If the student
will inhale very slowly, mentally counting one, two, three, four
and then exhale to the same beat, he will discover that this
undoubtedly is the best rhythm for inducing that state of calmness
and peace which is so necessary for meditation and reflection.
And, in passing, let me add that the state of quiescence sought
after is one not of passivity and negativity. It is one of
alertness and eagerness. What one should cultivate is a quiescence
in which every mental faculty is alert, waiting to be used. A
tranquility characterized by a sense of enormous power and
capacity is the state to be aimed at, one in which there is the
maximum of awareness and inner poise.
Success in the technique of the rhythmic breath is an unmistakable
symptom which cannot fail to be recognized when it arises. There
is first the sense of peace, satisfaction and quiet joy, without
the least cessation of one�s mental capacity. Next follows a sense
of vibration felt all over the body, as though every cell and
molecule were acting in unison and moving, as it were, in a single
direction. The result of this vibration is to transform the lungs
and the entire body into a single storage battery, generating and
storing electric ity and power, transmuting them into will and
faculty. Hard upon this, if the rhythm be persisted in, comes a
quiet ripple over the diaphragm or solar plexus�a difficult
symptom to describe, because it produces no perceptible physical
or recognizable change, though the sense of the rhythm is none the
less distinctly felt. When this occurs, and when one becomes aware
of a single vibration through the body, and a gentle vibration or
sense of luminosity and lightness in the brain, the student may be
assured that he has achieved success in this particular practice.
This state gained, the Middle Pillar should be proceeded with, and
the names could be silently vibrated in tune with the rhythmic
inhalation and exhalation of the breath. The sense of the
brilliance above which I prefer to think of as the "lamp above the
head," or as others have called it "the candle of vision," becomes
much more per ceptible and marked. Very often it develops into an
awareness of a whirling sphere of fiery light radiating peace and
illumination into the mind and body. Little more need be said, for
I have no desire to provide material which may act upon
suggestible minds. There are people so constituted as to be able
to produce symptoms of any described kind with the least
application, and with practically no spiritual effect upon
themselves or their mental or moral nature, and certainly no
progress in that path which leads to the knowledge of the higher
self. Silence with reference to symptoms and results is therefore
most desirable.
Endnotes -
(1) This is Daath, which is not a Sephirah, but rather a
conjunction of Chokmah and Binah.
(2) From the Neophyte Ritual. See Regardie, The Golden Dawn, 129.
(3) The symbol of the Rosicrucians. Rosicrucianism is a form of
mystic or esoteric Christianity whose teachings embrace the
Hermetic sciences.
(4) The Philosopher's Stone is an alchemical symbol of true
spiritual attainment. The search for the Philosopher's Stone is
the search for truth and illumination.
(5) Along the same lines, each letter of the Hebrew alphabet has a
musical note attributed to it. Thus each divine name in Hebrew can
be sung or played on a musical instrument. See the Appendix: The
Musical Qabalah.
(6) In this list, Regardie has given the name of the Sephiroth of
the Middle Pillar next to their corresponding part of the soul.
Beneath that he has provided the divine Hebrew name that is to be
intoned or vibrated in the exercise. Thus Kether, which is equated
with the Yechidah, is activated in the aura by vibrating the
divine name "AHJH" (which is the transliteration for Eheieh), and
so on.
(7) Daath has no divine name of its own, so in the exercise of the
Middle Pillar, it "borrows" the divine name for Binah which is the
highest Sephirah that is close to Daath. (Since Daath is usually
considered a passageway to the Supernals, Binah would be the
Sephirah at its point of termination.) Although Regardie states
here that YHVH is to be pronounced as "Yeh-hoh-voh," we see no
reason it should be pronounced differently from the way it is
pronounced in the LBRP - as "Yod-Heh-Vav-Heh." The term Jehovoh or
Jehovah is simply a transcription of the Four-lettered Name YHVH -
the letters of which were merely considered as stand-ins for the
actual name of God, which was unknown and unpronounceable. We
believe that the divine name YHVH Elohim should be pronounced "Yod
Heh Vav Heh El-oh-heem" in all Golden Dawn rituals.
Some modern magicians believe that the divine name given for Daath
(and for Binah) should not be pronounced as YHVH Elohim. They
argue that YHVH was never vocalized by devout Jews who thought it
was too holy to pronounce. Whenever it occurred in writing, the
words Elohim (god or gods) or Adonai (lord) were always spoken as
a substitute word for YHVH. Thus some magicians contend that the
compound word YHVH Elohim is a mistake, and that what was intended
was that the spoken word "Elohim" be substituted for the written
word "YHVH" in Binah and in Daath. (The second word in the
compound name YHVH ELOHIM was considered by Jews as a reminder
that the holy name YHVH is never spoken but rather vocalized as "Elohim.")
While this argument may be true for devout Jews, it is not valid
for practicing magicians in the tradition of the Golden Dawn.
There are several examples of Hebrew mystics vocalizing the
various permutations of the Tetragrammaton for specific ritual
work with the Sephiroth. This points to the differences between
orthodox Jewish practice and the esoteric practice of westem
Hermetic magicians.
( For the same reason indicated in the above endnote, the divine
name here should be pronounced "Yod Heh Vav Heh EI-oh-ah
ve-Dah-ath."
(9) The "ch" in Chai should be pronounced like the Scottish word
"loch."
(10) Another common suggestion is to vibrate the name several
times until it fills the mind completely, and no other thoughts
remain. One other method is to pronounce the name as many times as
there are Hebrew letters in the name.
(11) One very potent combination of such rituals is the LBRP,
succeeded by the Rose Cross Ritual, and followed by the Middle
Pillar Exercise. The RCR can be found on page 306 of Regardie's
The Golden Dawn.
(12) Regardie strongly advocated the idea of self-initiation,
particularly in those cases where it was not possible to find a
local temple of duly qualified initiators.
(13) According to Golden Dawn tradition, the highest must always
be invoked first - the highest divine name, followed by
archangels, angels, and finally elemental rulers and spirits. (In
principle this can be compared to a military chain of command, If
you want something to get done, you must contact the highest
ranking officer, who then delegates the work down to officers of
lower rank.)
(14) Regardie was both a chiropractor and a Reichian therapist.
Deep massage is an important part of Reichian therapy, designed to
break down rigid muscular tension (armoring) that affects both
body and psyche. Chiropractic medicine uses the manipulation of
the spine to relieve physical pain. It is easy to see how one
system can be used to complement the other.
Excerpt from pages 69 to 82 of The Middle Pillar, Israel Regardie
ISBN 1-56718-140-6. Copyright 1938 Israel Regardie. Llewellyn
Publications. A Division of Llewellyn Worldwide, Ltd. P.O.Box
64383, Dept. K140-6, St. Paul, MN 55164-0383, U.S.A
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