The Magician - 28 Lessons In Magic
This was a fascinating project, one that came literally out of nowhere but was
timed so perfectly in all ways and now it is a Fantasy novel called The
Magician.
The Magician was written by Master Story Teller Starfields on 28 consecutive
nights in November of 2006, so that we may learn something new about magic and
in the process of this, should be entertained and delighted, just the same.
There are many strands to The Magician.
At the very top level we have a story, a fascinating story some might say, about
a woman who, once she had completed her duties of child rearing, decides to take
up the study of magic in her world.
In mid winter, she locks the door to her rented dwelling for the last time and
makes her way to the foot of the White Mountains, where a magician is said to
reside, in the hope that he will take her in as an apprentice, even though she
is already past the middle of her life.
Her life has left traces, scars and many things ingrained by daily repetition;
and as we follow with the story, we learn that to learn magic is as much to
unlearn all that came before as it is the acquisition of new skills and the
tricks of the trade.
As should be expected of any good story, there are events, surprises, twists,
turns and momentum to keep the story vibrantly alive and The Magician has all of
these things in good measure.
Of course, there is more to The Magician than meets the eye at the very first
glance.
This story is also a sequence of lessons – there are 28 in all, and as all
things in The Magician, this number is not an accident. 28 chapters from the
beginning to the end, and each chapter contains an important lesson, an aspect
that needs to be dealt with in one way or the other before a person can become a
magician in all truth and reality.
As we follow along with the central character and experience the challenges with
her and through her, we as the readers are also confronted with the puzzles that
she must solve.
This is often a very emotional journey, and our responses are a personal mirror
to guide us towards those places within ourselves where we might well be stuck,
or where our own roadblocks on the pathway may reside.
It is also not just the case that each chapter only contains a single lesson.
Each chapter contains a central lesson, and a number of secondary ones, which
become revealed to any reader who wants to engage with the book in that way upon
reading it for the second time, and for the third.
In this way, The Magician is a fascinating book for discussion and reflection.
There are many profound issues being raised, from practical, technical
considerations about magic to very global questions of destiny and the path an
individual may be taking in their lifetimes and beyond.
The Magician therefore makes a perfect tool for study groups or for an
individual who would look at each one of the lessons separately and over time,
taking time to absorb as well as challenge and discuss the learnings and points
raised.
But there is more.
Clearly, The Magician is a Project Sanctuary habitat. Any Project Sanctuary
player will immediately see that behind the events we are observing lies an
entire world which is ready to take and explore by anyone who would choose to do
so.
Anna took but one of the seven magical objects in the market – what do the
others contain? May there be one for you? May there be merit to visit with
Alarin, or with Satara, or with Cedrick at Rosea to ask personal questions and
start an exploration of your own? Would you like to face the challenge of the
magic book, one of your very own?
The Magician, being a full and stable Project
Sanctuary world can become a real step stone for self learning in that way, and
it invites anyone who feels drawn to magic to come and explore, to learn and to
be delighted just the same.
Finally, The Magician is a manifest to delight.
The Magician speaks of real magic, of worlds beyond what we have come to expect
around us; of hope and most of all, of delight.
Delight is the healer of the past and the gateway into the future. One might say
that the measure of a person’s life is the total sum of their delights along the
way and The Magician encourages us gently to let go of old entrainments and to
go forth and seek out those delights this world has to offer us all, on so many
different levels and in so many different ways.
The Magician is an inspiration, through and through.
It tells us that it doesn’t matter if we are old or young, rich or poor,
downtrodden or damaged, wise or silly, or what our lives might have been like up
to this point – The Magician tells us that we have the right to magic. Magic is
real and it is here. It is up to us to step forward and embrace it, seek to know
it, become fascinated by it and yes, enraptured.
When we do, our lives begin to take on a different flavour, and we find
ourselves in a world that is in essence, beyond our wildest dreams.
Buy,
Read & Use The Magician Now
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