By David Cherubim
(Frater Aurora Aureae).
Copyright © 1994 e.v.
All rights reserved.

Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law.
There are a number of techniques in the
arts of Magick and Karate that are very similar in nature. Magick and Karate
are, however, two separate systems of training dedicated to two separate types
of activity. Nevertheless they share some common techniques, as well as certain
goals of a spiritual and psychological kind.
For example, Kiai, the Karate Shout of Power, is very similar to the magickal
art of vibrating Divine Names. Kiai, however, is not really a shout of power,
nor is the shout of power the object of Kiai. Kiai signifies the meeting of
body-mind and spirit. "Ki" is the symbol for spirit or energy, and "ai" is the
symbol for a meeting or union. The shout of power is but the product of this
union of body-mind and spirit. The same is true in Magick with regard to the
vibration of a Divine Name or Word of Power. The name or word is not the true
source of power, but rather is it the union of the body-mind and spirit of the
Magician.
Kiai is done from Hara. Hara is "The Center." Hara is located two inches (three
fingers) below the navel. It corresponds to the lower abdomen in the body. But
Hara is not just the center of the body; it is the center of our being, a
central point of energy, which is both inside and outside of the body. In the
center of Hara is a vital point of equilibrium where the body-mind and spirit of
the Karateka meet. A Karateka is a practitioner of Karate. Ki is a
psychophysical energy (spirit). Ki is released through Kiai, which originates in
the diaphragm and is forced up to the throat by the muscles of the lower abdomen
or Hara. This is very similar to the vibration of a Divine Name, which is done
from the Central Self of the Magician, where his/her body-mind and spirit are
one. And just as the Karateka must move from Hara twenty-four hours a day, so
must the Magician always move from the center of his/her being, letting all
actions flow out to the periphery from this central point of consciousness.
Let us also think of the Kata, which is a Budo Ritual. (Budo is the name for the
Japanese Martial Arts.) Kata is a sequence of forms or movements in which the
Karateka fights several opponents in his/her imagination. Kiai is applied at
certain points of the Kata when the body-mind and Ki meet in the Hara. Such is
very similar to the Banishing Ritual of the Pentagram, which is also a sequence
of movements (kata) in which the Magician banishes (fights) the elemental demons
(opponents) and vibrates (shouts) certain Divine Names at certain points in the
ritual (kata) while s/he is united with his/her spirit (ki) in the center (hara)
of his/her being.
Just as the Magician attains perfection through Ritual Magick, so does the
Karateka attain perfection through the Kata. Both Kata and Ritual Magick are
forms of Moving Zen, or active forms of meditation. Karate itself is called
"Moving Zen." The word Zen is a Japanese transliteration of the Sanskrit Dhyana
(Meditation). The aim of Zen is Satori, which is an instantaneous awakening or
inner experience of enlightenment through intuition. Satori is attained through
the art of non-attachment, by living in the Spirit of Emptiness. Karate
instructs us to move fearlessly and freely through intuition without attachment
to anything. Karate literally means "empty hands," which not only signifies
"empty-handed combat," but it also represents the power of detachment, which
constitutes the Spirit of Zen. Such is the nature of Karate-do (Way of the Empty
Hand). In Magick we are also instructed to live fearlessly through intuition and
to do our Will without lust of result, that is, without attachment.
The Karateka must perform his/her art without interference from the mind. This
same principle applies to the Magician, whose Magical Will ultimately identifies
itself with his/her whole being, so that it becomes an unconscious or natural
part of his/her personality. In both Karate and Magick we ultimately transcend
the need to think about the techniques of the art. Ergo, it becomes an artless
art, growing out of the unconscious.
Ultimately the goals of Karate-do and Magick are the same. It is the integration
of body-mind and spirit, the central unification of microcosm and macrocosm, and
the consequential development of the whole WoMan, which constitutes the
perfection of his/her soul. This makes for the ultimate form of enlightenment
called, in Karate, the Eye of the Storm. It is the attainment of moving Zen, or
active meditation, in the center of the battle of life. It is freedom from the
enemy within - the self. Both Karate and Magick constitute a personal battle
with the self, so as to transcend that very self. Karate-do teaches us that the
only enemy is within, that the true warrior or Budoka must only conquer
him/herself if s/he would conquer the so-called enemy without. The same is true
of Magick, which teaches us that the only demon (enemy) is inside of the
Magician, that it is only by defeating (resolving) this internal demon (complex)
that the Magician can overcome all obstacles, to do his/her True Will in
freedom, and to accomplish the Great Work.
Love is the law, love under will.
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