Friday, July 15, 2011

The magician


The magician is thus responding to the wishes of the person consulting him or her.

On the face of it, the intention to help that person attain happiness is positive. So are we here dealing with white magic that is entirely beneficent?

In some cases, yes, in others, no!

Allow me to explain that answer using two specific examples.

If it is a question of encouraging love between two single people, it is indeed white magic since nothing is harming anyone.

On the other hand, let’s imagine that one person wishes to win the heart of another who isn’t free. If the person “to be won” is already loved by someone else, somebody will inevitably suffer if the magic practices achieve their end.


We immediately see that in this case the white magic aiming to unite two people is not as “white” as it claims to be, since at the same time it is causing unhappiness to a third person.

To sum up, we can say that if someone suffers from magic practices, even indirectly, we are not dealing with white magic.

Take care: every magic practice
entails a “repercussion”

First of all, what is a repercussion?

It is quite simply the well-known scientific principle:

Every action produces a reaction.

That reaction may vary in speed, but it always exists.

In fact, in the universe, everything is linked:

Good and evil alike, a word, a gesture, a thought,
form part of a whole and act on it.

Everything that happens is the consequence of something else, an act or a thought-force that has given birth to it.

Which explains why every act triggers
a long sequence of chain reactions.

Those reactions vary in speed and in most cases are totally unforeseeable.

Do you want me to give you an example of an apparently harmless act that can have unforeseeable devastating and negative effects?

 Think of avalanches…

A simple noise in the mountains can trigger a deadly avalanche that is totally unforeseeable and of incalculable strength.

That more or less describes what a repercussion can be!

Where magic is concerned, the commonest example of repercussion is when the magic act fails to achieve its objective.

In that case the “magic” intention to alter the natural order of things does not get an opportunity to apply. 

Therefore the negative vibrations that have failed to achieve their objective come back towards their originator, the “black magician” who had practised black magic with the aim of doing harm. Of course he tries to protect himself, but this is far from always being possible.

But the negative vibrations sent into the universe to do harm also come back towards the real culprit, the person who really wanted to do harm, in this case the magician’s client.

As that person can’t protect him or herself, he or she will feel the full impact of the repercussion and undergo the consequences of the harm he wanted to inflict.

As you see, it’s more or less the same principle as a boomerang which, if it doesn’t hit its intended victim, comes back to the person who threw it.

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