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So, You Think You've Found a Teacher...
by Valerie Voigt
A young woman had done quite a bit of reading
and some solitary practice, and felt the Wiccan Path was where she belonged.
After some time, she felt she was ready to expand her Craft understanding
by studying with a teacher. She had finally found someone who had offered
to teach her, but she wasn't entirely comfortable with the idea. He assured
her that he was a Lord High Purple Robe Something-or-Other, and therefore
well-qualified to be a teacher, but this "assurance" didn't make her more
comfortable.
Sound familiar?
Well, just offhand, I'd say the guy sounds like
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a black magician
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an egomaniac
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a crank
I've run into people who sounded like him -- claiming
all sorts of ooga-booga-type titles, etc.
Some of those were just harmless nut cases, but
others were genuinely dangerous (in the sense of physical danger, and sometimes
spiritual/magical danger as well).
There are many things that can be said about the ethics and relationships
of teachers and students, but one of the most important is this:
Magical training forges a permanent karmic
link between teacher and student.
Therefore, you should exercise caution and judgement
when deciding to apprentice with any teacher: their problems, as well as
their skills and strengths, will naturally, through the karmic link, tend
to get passed along to you. Thus, you want to choose a teacher whom you
respect as a person, AND who has a reasonably good control over her/his
life.
Some things you might want to think about:
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Does this person have a healthy sense of her/his
own identity? That is, does s/he seem to have both an honest appreciation
for herself and an honest awareness of her weaknesses? (We all have them,
and anyone who can't accept that fact will tend to trip themself up.) Does
s/he like herself, yet have reasonable humility? (If the phrases "power-tripper",
"doormat", "egomaniac", "paranoid" or "perpetual victim" apply, the answer
is probably no.)
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Does this person handle their life, including the
annoying aspects of mundane reality, in a reasonably balanced manner? The
inner and the outer often mirror each other, and a person who is continually
in crisis mode is not exercising their magic to good effect. This doesn't
mean that a Witch should necessarily be rich, or free of problems, or otherwise
above the daily work of living; but a Witch should not live habitually
in self-generated crisis.
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Do you WANT to share this person's karma, or would
you hope that, er, not too much of it would rub off, thank you?
Isaac Bonewits devised this handy little tool.
The higher the score, the more dangerous a group is likely to be. Bonewits
deliberately omits any numerical scoring system, preferring to leave it
more to intuition:
The Advanced Bonewits Cult Danger Evaluation
Frame
Copyright c 1987 by P. E. I. Bonewits. Used by
permission.
Note: The current version of the ABCDEF may
be found at Isaac Bonewits' website: http://www.neopagan.net/ABCDEF.HTML.
Rate each of the following from 1(low) to 10(high)...
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___ Internal control, amount of internal political
power exercised by leader(s) over members.
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___ Wisdom claimed by leader(s); amount of infallibility
declared about decisions.
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___ Wisdom credited to leader(s) by members; amount
of trust in decisions made by leader(s).
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___ Dogma, rigidity of reality concepts taught; amount
of doctrinal inflexibility.
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___ Recruiting, emphasis on attracting new members;
amount of proselytizing.
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___ Front groups, number of subsidiary groups using
different names from that of the main group.
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___ Wealth, amount of money and/or property desired
or obtained; emphasis on members' donations.
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___ Political power, amount of external political
influence desired or obtained.
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___ Sexual manipulation of members by leader(s);
amount of control over sex lives of members.
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___ Censorship, amount of control over members' access
to outside opinions on the group, its doctrines, and/or its leader(s).
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___ Dropout control, intensity of efforts directed
at preventing or returning dropouts.
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___ Endorsement of violence when used by or for the
group or its leader(s).
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___ Paranoia, amount of fear concerning real or imagined
enemies; perceived power of opponents.
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___ Grimness, amount of disapproval concerning jokes
about the group, its doctrines, or its leader(s).
There's no shame in learning from books, either;
and most good teachers will expect you to have read a few. There are many
excellent books available. Some of the standards include:
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The Spiral Dance by Starhawk.
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This one's her basic book, and recommended before
her others, which are also good.
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Anything by Doreen Valiente or by Janet and/or Stewart
Farrar.
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These are particularly valuable for their English
Traditional background.
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Real Magic by P.E.I. Bonewits.
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This little book is entertaining, informative, and
very useful from a practical standpoint.
Should you be near a good library, you might also
like to take a stroll through the Oxford Classical Dictionary --
starting with the entry for "magic" and going from there.
Well, I hope my comments have been useful. Best
wishes for spiritual and personal fulfillment.
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