X

Castaneda, Carlos – The Second Ring of Power

You don’t believe me, do you? she asked.

Without giving me time to answer, she squatted and began

again to produce her display of sparks. I was calm and col-

lected and could place my undivided attention on her actions.

When she snapped her fingers open, every fiber of her muscles

seemed to tense at once. That tension seemed to be focused

on the very tips of her fingers and was projected out like rays

of light. The moisture in her fingertips was actually a vehicle

to carry some sort of energy emanating from her body.

How did you do that, Gorda? I asked, truly marveling

at her.

I really don’t know, she said. I simply do it. I’ve done it

lots and lots of times and yet I don’t know how I do it. When

I grab one of those rays I feel that I’m being pulled by some-

thing. I really don’t do anything else except let the lines I’ve

grabbed pull me. When I want to get back through, I feel

that the line doesn’t want to let me free and I get frantic. The

Nagual said that that was my worst feature. I get so fright-

ened that one of these days I’m going to injure my body. But

I figure that one of these days I’ll be even more formless and

then I won’t get frightened, so as long as I hold on until that

day. I’m all right.

Tell me then, Gorda, how do you let the lines pull you?

We’re back again in the same spot. I don’t know. The

Nagual warned me about you. You want to know things that

cannot be known.

I struggled to make clear to her that what I was after were

the procedures. I had really given up looking for an explana-

tion from all of them because their explanations explained

nothing to me. To describe to me the steps that were followed

was something altogether different.

How did you learn to let your body hold onto the lines

of the world? I asked.

I learned that in dreaming, she said, but I really don’t

know how. Everything for a woman warrior starts in dream-

ing. The Nagual told me, just as he told you, first to look for

my hands in my dreams. I couldn’t find them at all. In my

dreams I had no hands. I tried and tried for years to find them.

Every night I used to give myself the command to find my

hands but it was to no avail. I never found anything in my

dreams. The Nagual was merciless with me. He said that I

had to find them or perish. So I lied to him that I had found

my hands in my dreams. The Nagual didn’t say a word but

Genaro threw his hat on the floor and danced on it. He patted

my head and said that I was really a great warrior. The more

he praised me the worse I felt. I was about to tell the Nagual

the truth when crazy Genaro aimed his behind at me and let

out the loudest and longest fart I had ever heard. He actually

pushed me backward with it. It was like a hot, foul wind, dis-

gusting and smelly, just like me. The Nagual was choking

with laughter.

I ran to the house and hid there. I was very fat then. I used

to eat a great deal and I had a lot of gas. So I decided not to

eat for a while. Lidia and Josefina helped me. I didn’t eat any-

thing for twenty-three days, and then one night I found my

hands in my dreams. They were old and ugly and green, but

they were mine. So that was the beginning. The rest was

easy.

And what was the rest, Gorda?

The next thing the Nagual wanted me to do was to try to

find houses or buildings in my dreams and look at them, try-

ing not to dissolve the images. He said that the art of the

dreamer is to hold the image of his dream. Because that’s

what we do anyway during all our lives.

What did he mean by that?

Our art as ordinary people is that we know how to hold

the image of what we are looking at. The Nagual said that we

do that but we don’t know how. We just do it; that is, our

bodies do it. In dreaming we have to do the same thing, except

that in dreaming we have to learn how to do it. We have to

struggle not to look but merely to glance and yet hold the

image.

The Nagual told me to find in my dreams a brace for my

belly button. It took a long time because I didn’t understand

what he meant. He said that in dreaming we pay attention

with the belly button; therefore it has to be protected. We

need a little warmth or a feeling that something is pressing

the belly button in order to hold the images in our dreams.

I found a pebble in my dreams that fit my belly button,

and the Nagual made me look for it day after day in water

holes and canyons, until I found it. I made a belt for it and

I still wear it day and night. Wearing it made it easier for me

to hold images in my dreams.

Then the Nagual gave me the task of going to specific

places in my dreaming. I was doing really well with my task

but at that time I lost my form and I began to see the eye in

front of me. The Nagual said that the eye had changed every-

thing, and he gave me orders to begin using the eye to pull

myself away. He said that I didn’t have time to get to my

double in dreaming, but that the eye was even better. I felt

cheated. Now I don’t care. I’ve used that eye the best way I

could. I let it pull me in my dreaming. I close my eyes and fall

asleep like nothing, even in the daytime or anywhere. The

eye pulls me and I enter into another world. Most of the time

I just wander around in it. The Nagual told me and the little

sisters that during our menstrual periods dreaming becomes

power. I get a little crazy for one thing. I become more daring.

And like the Nagual showed us, a crack opens in front of

us during those days. You’re not a woman so it can’t make

any sense to you, but two days before her period a woman

can open that crack and step through it into another world.

With her left hand she followed the contour of an invisible

line that seemed to run vertically in front of her at arm’s

length.

During that time a woman, if she wants to, can let go of

the images of the world, la Gorda went on. That’s the

crack between the worlds, and as the Nagual said, it is right

in front of all of us women.

The reason the Nagual believes women are better sorcer-

ers than men is because they always have the crack in front

of them, while a man has to make it.

Well, it was during my periods that I learned in dreaming

to fly with the lines of the world. I learned to make sparks

with my body to entice the lines and then I learned to grab

them. And that’s all I have learned in dreaming so far.

I laughed and told her that I had nothing to show for my

years of dreaming.

You’ve learned how to call the allies in dreaming, she

said with great assurance.

I told her that don Juan had taught me to make those

sounds. She did not seem to believe me.

The allies must come to you, then, because they’re seeking

his luminosity, she said, the luminosity he left with you.

He told me that every sorcerer has only so much luminosity

to give away. So he parcels it out to all his children in ac-

cordance with an order that comes to him from somewhere

out there in that vastness. In your case he even gave you his

own call.

She clicked her tongue and winked at me.

If you don’t believe me, she went on, why don’t you

make the sound the Nagual taught you and see if the allies

come to you?

I felt reluctant to do it. Not because I believed that my

sound would bring anything, but because I did not want to

humor her.

She waited for a moment, and when she was sure I was not

going to try, she put her hand to her mouth and imitated my

tapping sound to perfection. She played it for five or six min-

utes, stopping only to breathe.

Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74

Categories: Castaneda, Carlos
curiosity: