- Joined
- Nov 19, 2023
- Messages
- 32
- Reaction score
- 70
Magical societies come in all sorts, from suburban Wiccan covens to highly anonymized, distributed colleges that collaborate through correspondence. Working with others adds intersubjectivity, and the effect of shared belief, to magical operations, and one can learn things through that which otherwise one might not, but they are not absolutely essential.I ran across an article a while back by Stephen Flowers/Edred Thorsson arguing that the best way to progress in magick was in the embrace of a traditional order. (Sorry---forgot title.) Mostly I've been a solo act; latterly, I've started following the "strongly recommended" practices of an online group. Were I in a locale with physically present groups, I'd probably be trying that route. Mostly it's a disinclination to waste time reinventing the (training) wheel. What's anyone else's take on solo act vs. group? I suppose there are at least a few stops in between: single pupil & mentor; online group; small circle; widely-spread formal order.
Do be discriminating in what you join. Consult your oracles, intuition and common sense.