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It is a sorcerer's idea that the parameters of our normal perception have been imposed upon us as part of our socialization, not quite arbitrarily, but laid down mandatorily nonetheless.
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Taisha Abelar is one of a group of three women that were deliberately trained by some sorcerers from Mexico; under the guidance of Don Juan Matus.
I have written at length about my own training under him, but I have never written anything about this specific group, of which Taisha Abelar is a member.
It was a tacit agreement among all of those who were under don Juan's tutelage that nothing should be said about them.
For over twenty years we have upheld this agreement.
Even though we have worked and lived in close proximity, never have we talked with one another about our personal experiences.
In fact, never had there been an opportunity even to exchange our views about what specifically don Juan or the sorcerers of his group did to each one of us.
And such a condition was not contingent upon don Juan's presence.
After he and his group left the world, we continued to adhere to it, simply because we had no desire to use our energy to review any previous agreements.
All our available time and energy was employed in validating for ourselves what don Juan had so painstakingly taught us.
Don Juan had taught us sorcery as a pragmatic endeavor by means of which any of us can directly perceive energy.
He had maintained that in order to perceive energy in such a fashion, we need freedom from our normal capacity to perceive.
To free ourselves and directly perceive energy was a task that took all we had.
It is a sorcerer's idea that the parameters of our normal perception have been imposed upon us as part of our socialization, not quite arbitrarily, but laid down mandatorily nonetheless.
One aspect of these obligatory parameters is an interpretation system which processes sensory data into meaningful units; and renders the social order as a structure of interpretation.
Our normal functioning within the social order requires a blind and faithful adherence to all its precepts; none of which call for the possibility of directly perceiving energy.
For example, don Juan maintained that it is possible to perceive human beings as fields of energy; like huge, oblong, whitish luminous eggs.
In order to accomplish the feat of heightening our perception, we need internal energy.
Thus, the problem of making internal energy available to fulfill such a task becomes the key issue for students of sorcery.
Circumstances proper to our time and place have made it possible now for Taisha Abelar to write about her training, which was the same as mine, and yet thoroughly different.
The writing took her a long time, because, first, she had to avail herself of the sorcery means to write.
Don Juan Matus himself gave me the task of writing about his sorcery knowledge; and he himself set the mood of this by saying, "Don't write like a writer, but like a sorcerer."
He meant that I had to do it in a state of enhanced awareness which sorcerers call 'dreaming.'
It took Taisha Abelar many years to perfect her dreaming to the point of making it the sorcery means to write.
In don Juan's world, sorcerers, depending on their basic temperaments, were divided into two complementary factions: 'dreamers' and 'stalkers'.
Dreamers are those sorcerers who have the inherent facility to enter into states of heightened awareness by controlling their dreams.
This facility is developed through training into an art: the art of dreaming.
Stalkers, on the other hand, are those sorcerers who have the innate facility to deal with facts and are capable of entering states of heightened awareness by manipulating and controlling their own behavior.
Through sorcery training, this natural capability is turned into the art of stalking.
Although everybody in don Juan's party of sorcerers had a complete knowledge of both arts, they were arranged in one faction or the other.
Taisha Abelar was grouped with the stalkers and trained by them.
Her book bears the mark of her stupendous training as a stalker.