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Becoming the Enchanter: A Journey to the Heart of the Celtic Mysteries
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Aaron, Moderator
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Dec 05, 2015 10:32PM

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Will be giving that a miss I think...I get a bit ranty when folk use it in relation to magic as it's almost meaningless. Something vaguely Welsh=Celtic...slightly Irish=Celtic...granny's cousin's uncle's friend's workmate came from Edinburgh=Celtic.


Will be giving that a miss I think...I get a bit ranty when folk use it in relation to magic as it's almost meaningless. Something vaguely Welsh=Celtic...sli..."
Oh, but this one is fun: people exploring the Welsh myths on the Orcadian mainland (on which trees mysteriously appear). :D

I spied this book on a shelf at my local library. I thumbed through it checked it out and read it.
At first I wanted to keep this title to myself feeling I had stumbled onto some secret...

Slightly worried about that 'At first' in Joseph's post though...

This one is well-written and even compelling, but somehow I can't turn off my inner interrogator.



Will be giving that a miss I think...I get a bit ranty when folk use it in relation to magic as it's almost meaningless. Something vag..."
Re. the 'Celtic' niggle, the author speaks of her knowledge of Britain's 'secret tradition' and during a lecture dismisses witchcraft as '...made up by Gerald Gardner in the fifties.' I've no problem with that, although some would say that there's no unbroken word-of-mouth British tradition either.
Ancestral, it's interesting that you say this is 'fun'. There are things that worry me here...

Caveat: I am not reading this and merely following the discussion.
Folks, I pretty much nailed my colours to the mast on other threads on this: Witchcraft is modern and there is no authentic unbroken tradition. OK...admittedly that all depends on definitions of "witchcraft"; "authentic"; "unbroken"; and "tradition".
The idea of an unbroken word-of-mouth tradition over any period of time bearing any resemblance to the initial tradition is...well...unlikely (to be charitable).

It can be a very useful literary device to claim a work is a "true story"...
Though I prefer the "found document" approach to claims of truth...a particular favourite is: The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner
In a sense though, the actual "truth" of a text is given by the reader...whether events actually happened as claimed can be entirely secondary.
However, when a text claims to be a truth to the exclusion of other points of view I'd be taking it with a large pinch of salt.

You make a good point for me, Nell, albeit outside the discussion of the book itself. Not only is a book influenced by the "observation bias" of the writer, it's also influenced by that same bias in the reader. Hmm.

OB wrote: The idea of an unbroken word-of-mouth tradition over any period of time bearing any resemblance to the initial tradition is...well...unlikely (to be charitable).
Old-Barbarossa, thanks for confirming my understanding of 'the British Tradition' (as the author calls it). She's so firm in her belief that it's authentic, that I was beginning to doubt all the serious studies.
I've finished the book now, but thought about it a lot yesterday. There's a sentence at the end of the blurb (so I'm not giving anything away):
- hidden within these pages - are clues and riddles that other seekers may wish to follow on the path.
Hmmm, I thought, (as you do). Then later, walking the whiplington, an answer arrived that seemed to solve the problem I have with the truth in this particular true story. It may be over simplistic, it may well be wrong, but I'm not so bothered by the book any more.
Will maybe post my idea later (hidden by spoiler tags).

Please don't read the spoiler unless you've already read the book or have no intention of doing so. It really will spoil the story, which I actually enjoyed in spite of the niggles.
(view spoiler)
But of course, I could be wrong...

..."
How could something come from nothing?
Question could only be answered from first hand experience.
This is the answer I came away from the book with.
(see if this will kill the thread... I if I succeed it will be on the shoulders of others before me!)

Joseph, I think you've come to a strong conclusion. It's more obvious than mine and (rather annoyed by the ending) I had to find another. The author did seem to be telling readers to go form their own covens and act out the story throughout the book, but who the heck is going to do that? So in the end it seemed to me a cop-out - she practically promised the answer and then indicated one riddled with danger that few (if any) would or could begin or follow through, although a certain sort of seeker lacking knowledge might just take this on - the results could be baaaaad.....
Bet that's really killed the thread...:(

I have the same feeling that I tend to kill the threads. It's very sad. I haven't read the book, but I feel what you're saying.

I may have been least interested in the specific question.
More interested how, who, and where this was taking place.
(something from nothing happens in quantum physics)

I have the same feeling that I tend to kill the threads. It's very sad. I haven't read the book, but I feel what y..."
It stops me posting sometimes Aaron, I have this feeling that I'm too critical...

I may have been least interested in the specific question.
More interested how, who, and where this was taking place.
(something from nothing happens in quantum p..."
The process was interesting, although sorting out what was taking place in the material world as opposed to the experiential world of the coven members was tricky sometimes. I wondered too if those experiences were the same for them all, but the author didn't enlarge on that aspect.
I haven't explored quantum physics, but never say never... :D