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Don't
Break The Spirit
Slave Training in an Animistic Pagan World

By Raven Kaldera
cauldronfarm@hotmail.com
http://baphomet.genderrage.com
Slave Joshua: josh@cauldronfarm.com
Read the SCENEprofiles Interview with Raven
Read Raven's
article The Ordeal
Path: Introduction to Neo-Pagan BDSM
Raven Kaldera is a well known author, shaman, FTM transgendered
intersexual activist, and minister. Kaldera’s books include The Urban
Primitive: Paganism in the Concrete Jungle; Handfasting and Wedding
Ritual: Inviting Hera’s Blessing, MythAstrology; Lies And Scars;
Darkness Bound: Beyond Bondage and Discipline, and Hermaphrodeities: The
Transgender Spirituality Workbook, as well as countless short works of
erotica, religion, and sometimes the two combined. ‘Tis an ill wind
that blows no minds.
Disclaimer:
In this article, it is taken as obvious that the "slave" in
question has agreed to this relationship of their own free will, and
that it makes them happy and fulfilled to be owned. This is not about
kidnapping and coercion, it's about D/s, OK? I figured everyone ought to
know that, but my wife suggested that I put in this disclaimer for those
people who just don't get it.
I've read a lot of articles on how full-time slaves ought to be trained,
and they all make me vaguely uncomfortable. While it's true that every
slave is different, and every master has different needs, I had problems
with the overly-detailed procedures designed to rob a slave - someone
who you, hopefully anyway, chose because you liked them as a person -
and take away everything that they are, clearing them like a blank slate
to be written across. Somehow this seemed wrong to me, and not just
ethically wrong but full of wasted effort, like burning down a house
rather than renovating it.
After a while, I realized what the root problem was. These trainers were
working out of the mechanistic worldview that has bedeviled our culture
for the past two centuries. In this worldview, of which B.F. Skinner's
theories were one extreme example, everything is a machine. Every part
of the universe, including the human psyche, is a collection of bits and
parts that can be disassembled and reassembled if one only has the
Chilton's manual and the right tools. Nothing has a soul, because there
are no such things. We are all just machines to be "fixed" and
"rebuilt", and when it comes to slave training, it's machining
on a grand scale.
This kind of mechanistic worldview is also evident in military basic
training and certain forms of cult brainwashing. It's the idea that a
human being is a computer to be programmed, and all you need are the
right codes.....but first you have to reduce them to a brainless,
soulless thing. It's rather like the way that they are trying to design
robots in the MIT robotics lab (a fascinating place, to be sure). First
you build a dumb robot, then a slightly smarter one, and then a still
smarter one. Each one has more lines of code, more rules to program in.
In order to program a human being this way, you first have to reduce
them to a dumb robot and start from there.
Except that I'm not convinced that this is best way to go about building
a robot, much less changing the behavior of a human being. I recently
watched a show on robotics and saw a rogue tech who was working on the
concept of neural networks rather than programming every function; he'd
made some simple insectoid bots who didn't do much except crawl about,
but they were able to learn simple things on their own and adjust their
own behavior accordingly. He played with them and called them by name,
and was affectionate with them, because their "life-
mimicking" behavior inspired his human nature to do so. To me, he
was in the process of giving them souls.
Then it clicked for me. To me, the sort of paganism that I practice is
strongly bound up with animism - the idea that inanimate objects can
have souls, can have a spirit and a character of their own. In the
mechanistic worldview, everything is a little less than fully alive. In
my worldview - compared to the "ordinary" one - everything
has, as my boy Joshua has pointed out, "an extra level of being
alive". Certainly I don't feel spirit in everything I touch - some
things are just inert - but I do sense it in a lot more things than the
average person will ever admit. It's most obvious in objects from the
natural world, such as water, or fire, or rocks. Rocks definitely have
spirit, although it's long and slow and for them to speak a single
sentence takes a century, so it's hard for us to communicate with them.
But big rocks have a strong spirit, and mountains (the biggest rocks of
all) even more so.
The land beneath my feet, of course, most definitely has a spirit. I
talk frequently to my land-wight, and I've made some rather heavy deals
with it - it runs the wards on my land in return for attention and
certain services. But it's a little different with man-made things. Most
machined things don't have much of a spirit. Items lovingly made by hand
are more likely to, because the maker dropped energy and soul into them.
But the most soul-full things of all are valued, loved, much-used tools.
My guitar has a spirit, one that is mellow and cooperative and very
feminine - I named her Madrigal, and she loves me. I can tell every time
I play her. My knives have spirits. My car has a spirit. My big
old-fashioned Victorian wood cookstove, Esmeralda, already had a spirit
when we bought her and moved her into the kitchen.
My wife summed it up in talking about her.22 rifle. It was basically
"empty" when she brought it home, but she pointed out that it
developed a spirit over a period of time through regular use, respect, a
feeling of being valued, and most of all, special rituals for its care
that one did over and over again. In the case of her rifle, it was
cleaning it, carefully trigger-locking it and putting it away, and
having the proper signs and sigils (the FID and the registration
paperwork) ready to hand.
This way of working with valued tools is what I think a pagan master
ought to base "slave training" on. After all, as a pagan
animist I *expect* my most valuable and useful property to have spirit.
Why would I want less from my human property, which would arguably be
the most valuable treasure of all? Instead of trying to reduce them to a
drone and then programming them from the ground up, wouldn't it be more
appropriate to use the kind of techniques that an animist uses to create
spirit in and bond with their precious tools?
This was driven home by a comparison I made mentally with a line from
the Oath of Service that I wrote, where the master refers to the servant
as being an "extension of his hands". This was echoed in one
of the "slave training" articles, but in a very different way.
For the author of this article, to be an extension of the master's hands
was to be a mindless robot who would obey strict orders very literally,
and never try to anticipate anything or use critical thinking skills. I
was taken aback, as I saw the line in my Oath very differently. To use a
modern example, if I had a couple of extra hands hanging off me, and I
cut them loose to go places and do things that I couldn't, I wouldn't be
thinking of them as programmed robotic hands. I'd be thinking of them as
becoming rather like Thing, the disembodied-hand servant of the Addams
Family, who definitely has a mind and a spirit (and a gender) of his
own. He is utterly devoted to the Addamses, and especially Gomez, but he
can do all sorts of intelligent things in order to make life better for
them. He has character. He has Soul.
I was reminded of my (now decommissioned) 1972 Dodge van, named Lurch
for his personality - large, strong, and devoted in a grouchy way. A car
once cut us off in dangerous traffic, and we would have had a fatal
collision except that the steering wheel wrenched itself out of my
wife's hands, and the van made a neat and perfect switch to the next
lane between two other cars. We were both stunned. We also took Lurch
straight to the mechanic's and gave him an oil change in gratitude.
That's the kind of servant I want to have around - human or nonhuman.
So if the paradigm of slave training for the mechanistic world is
programming a computer, then what's the paradigm for the animistic
world? Why, magic, of course. It would be a matter of using the same
magical techniques on your slave that you would use to bond with a
valuable tool and make it into a devoted and soul-full servant. To do
this, there are several points to remember.
The first point is that you can't choose the kind of spirit that is
going to come into your tool. You don't place the soul into it so much
as *call* the soul into it, and maintain that soul with bits of your own
energy. Object spirits come in many different forms. Madrigal is sweet
and a little wistful; Esmeralda is cheerful and warm and a little stuffy
and old-fashioned. I had a knife with a spirit so nasty that people were
constantly cutting themselves on it. Could I change its nature? No. I
had to put a binding spell on it, and feed it a little of my own blood
regularly. (It eventually disappeared...probably off to newer hunting
grounds.) You have to work with the character of the individual tool's
spirit, and this goes for human slaves especially. Changing the person's
basic nature is not only wrong but an exercise in futility. All you can
succeed in doing is implanting behavior so alien to their natures that
the dissonance will cause them to slowly suffocate.
Sometimes it may be important to implant a little alien behavior or
energy - one example of where this might be useful in the non-D/s world
is a Reiki attunement, where the Reiki master "scoops out" a
bit of your energy and replaces it with something to aid you in doing
Reiki. However, this is something to be used very sparingly, and it must
never be extensive enough that it blocks the slave's own personality
from coming out.
The second point is that the training must be a 50/50 partnership all
the way. This is not something that the dominant inflicts upon the
helpless submissive. The two parties *must be in collusion* with regard
to the goals of the training. I am made profoundly uncomfortable with
the idea that a dominant can do Jedi mind tricks on a submissive and not
tell them about it. Aside from the fact that it's really sleazy ethics,
the dominant may miss valuable feedback from the slave that would make
the exercise more effective, or on the other extreme, keep it from being
mentally harmful.
I try to keep all my Jedi mind tricks open and aboveboard. If there's a
behavior that I want changed or implanted, first I tell my slave about
it. Then I give reasons for my desires, and I try to make them good
ones, as this is not something that should be done on a whim. Then I
explain how we are going to go about changing this part of him, and why
I think that this method will work effectively. This is especially
important with a slave who is past the point of consent; i.e. has
consensually given up the ability to consent. If I have taken that away
from him, then I at least owe him the clear knowledge of what is being
done to him.
Then it's up to the slave to actively collude with me on the project.
This might mean that we would brainstorm the most effective context and
tools together, or that he would work with me on getting into a slightly
(or not so slightly) altered state where he would be more open to
suggestion. It might also mean that she might voice objections based on
our agreed-upon ethical code, or that she might point out information I
had missed. Even a dominant with excellent judgment can screw up based
on insufficient information. If you work a spell with incorrect
information about the situation, it often simply doesn't work, or it
might manifest in a way that you didn't expect and don't particularly
like. This is no different.
The tools that we use are the same ones that are used in magic energy
work with objects. They include, but are not limited to:
1) Words Of Power. In spellwork, we might speak a particular word or
phrase that embodies the idea we want to put across to the nonverbal
part of our brain, which is the part that handles all magic work,
connects with the Universe, and most drastically affects behavior. If a
word, it is usually a connotatively "loaded" word; if a
phrase, it is short, pithy, succinct, and perhaps rhythmic or poetic. It
is spoken in a tone of voice that conveys power and certainty. I use the
same "command voice" to utter a spell that I use to tell my
slave that from now on, he will do X, and that's the way it's going to
be. I think as carefully about my phrasing in these delicate proceedings
as I do when doing a magic working where I ask the Universe to send me
something. Words count drastically in these situations. There shouldn't
be too many of them, and they should all be loaded with visual and
"feeling" content, and be memorable.....because your slave is
going to commit them to heart, at least subconsciously.
2) Touch. This is the medium by which we usually pass energy into our
tools, especially ritual tools. In some traditions, one marks the ritual
tools with one's own bodily fluids, such as blood, sweat, saliva, urine,
or sexual fluids. As you smear them on, you impress the intent into the
tool through the fluid medium, which holds a great deal of your energy.
For some spells, you write your intent in letters, or perhaps use runes,
or symbols. Adapting this for the body of a submissive is obvious,
especially if you remember that skin is absorbent.
Just touching the tool, not once but repeatedly (and in the same
ritualized manner) over a long period of time is probably the most
common method of invoking soul into it. We often have the urge to stroke
and touch our ensouled property; it's a way of maintaining it's energy
and bond with us. A blind former lover pointed out to me that when
people say, "Let me see that," they hold out their hand to
take it, because you can't fully see something with only your eyes. You
can "see" many things with your sense of touch that may elude
your eyes.
Regular touch is good for building intimacy anyway, but for purposes of
magically inducing changes of behavior, body contact and gentle stroking
is extremely useful. It's what you'd do to an object that you were
"charging", and you can "charge" the submissive in
the same way, releasing a little of your own will into them as a way to
"set" a command. When I thought hard about the sort of touch
that I use, especially during those verbal commands that are meant to
change significant behavior, I realized that I tended to touch my slave
in two different places depending on the command. For commands that
required a great deal of trust, I would lay my hand over his heart
chakra; on some level I wanted him to "take this to heart".
For commands that were to slip under the conscious mind and become
mental conditioning, I'd put my hand on the back of his neck and head,
where the brain stem is. (It's important to tell your slave that you're
attempting to send a command in under her conscious "radar";
if your bond is good enough, it will go in regardless of her skeptical
"Yeah, sure," and she'll find herself following it anyway, to
her surprise. If you neglect to let her know what you're doing, she will
have no clear basis for her sudden change of behavior, and it may be
upsetting to her. Making her doubt her sanity is not a useful outcome.)
3) Rituals. This could be seen as the sort of thing that comes under the
name of "protocol", except that it feels a little different
when it's structured as ritual. The non-spiritual meaning of
"ritual" is something that is done deliberately the same way
every time. This certainly resembles "traditional D/s
protocol", if you will; rules are agreed upon that boundary many
aspects of the slave's life (and that vary widely from mistress to
master to mistress, I might point out), and the slave repeats them day
in and day out. There's a lot about BDSM play that is similar in tone to
a pagan ritual, in that it is theatrical and uses lots of props. The
difference between "traditional" D/s ritual and the adaptation
of pagan ritual to train a slave is that a skilled witch/magician/energy
worker will be a lot more cognizant of what they are raising, and where
to put it. If the couple practices painplay, this can be used to raise
energy which can then be funneled into the slave, along with a command.
Another approach might be for the submissive to strive to see the
everyday work of their path as a sacred ritual in and of itself, much
like a Shinto priest carefully and elegantly rakes spirals into his
garden, or like a tea ceremony, or a sacred dance. A slave's path, when
done in a mindful and not a mindless manner, can give a great deal of
psychological and spiritual satisfaction in proper and graceful service.
Unfortunately, training by the book of the mechanistic worldview tends
to create mindlessness instead of mindfulness. A soul-oriented approach
would seek primarily for parts of the service path that are nourishing
to the spirit, and would use these as the basis of the training. It's a
great deal more than simply making the slave want it. It's showing them
how to learn to need it as part of their spiritual path.
I'd like to say that, for the record, although this may work most
intensely when the individuals involved are in love with each other
(those love drugs add a level of passion and vehemence to the energy),
it can work quite well where "being in love" is not present.
It does, however, require at least mutual respect, liking, and
affection. If you didn't like a tool, or didn't think much of it, you
wouldn't use it very often, and you'd get a better one as quickly as you
could. When you did use it, you wouldn't be filling it with anything
very nice. If a master doesn't at least have warm feelings for their
slave, then for gods' sake send them somewhere they'll be more
appreciated.
There's one other point to make that is uniquely pagan in worldview.
Each spirit that gets called into a man-made object is a tiny
reflection, a snapshot, a splinter, an avatar of a much greater spirit.
For example, my guitar's spirit is a tiny reflection of the much greater
Spirit Of Music. The spirit in my wife's.22 is an avatar of a much
greater Warrior's Weapon Spirit. In invoking these spirits into the
items, we make them sacred in some sense. Through them, we can contact
the greater spirit that they are linked to. When someone takes on the
archetype of the Owned Slave, they allow into themselves a piece of the
greater spirit that is All That Is Sacrificed That We May Live. This
Spirit has many faces and names - the Sacred King, John Barleycorn,
Iphigenia, Persephone, the Sacrificed Maiden, the Prey Animal, the Bull
God and Goat God, Lugh, Baldur, the Corn Dollie, the Wicker Man, and so
forth. It appears in every ancient culture, because our ancestors deeply
revered the life that gave itself for our survival.
To become an owned slave is to become an object, to some extent, but a
cult object, a sacred thing, a living altar piece. Through them we touch
the life of that particular divine force, the one that is present in
every sheaf of wheat at the moment it is cut down, and every steer at
them moment that it is butchered, and every deer at the moment that it
gives itself to the wolf pack. Their presence invokes into us dominants
the archetypal spirit of the Gods who accept the sacrifice, who are
usually the implacable deities of Death. Through them, we become divine.
However, we are also human. The proper response of a human being to John
Barleycorn the Sacrificed God is gratitude. We as tops need to balance
those two spirits within us, and remember when to be the Gods of Death
and when to just be quietly, humanly grateful for our good fortune in
having this tender soul to serve us. Conversely, the slave is also a
human being, and the proper response of a human being to the Gods of
Death is a respectful distance, whereas John Barleycorn hurtles
willingly and with abandon into the dark embrace of the Death Goddess,
with all the self-destructive urges of a bridegroom fly going to the bed
of his spider bride. The submissive's task is to balance the urge to
immolate themselves and their individuality upon the altar of our
desire, and to keep enough of them respectfully distant from the cutting
edge of our darkness that they will still retain the ability to do that
active colluding. To do this is to base D/s protocol on the protocols of
pagan worship, and as such it keeps a mutual respect in place between
partners.
This kind of work is long and slow and takes a lot of patience. It's not
good for people who want instant gratification. You're slowly shaping
what's already there, not tearing down and starting from nothing. It's
less radical treatment, but it gets the same results without the same
levels of confusion and trauma, and most of all, it's more permanent.
The kinds of changes made in mechanistic world-view slave training force
the individual's spirit down into a box, where it sits until it is
released. It may never be released, but it's still there, waiting, and
getting more and more cramped. Eventually, if the slave is let loose, it
will reassert itself. Using magical and animistic ritual means that you
are changing the spirit itself. What's done is done, and it's much
harder to undo. This can be good or bad, depending on the situation.
However, by tying slave training into a spiritual path, if something
goes wrong and the slave is abandoned by his/her owner or is forced to
leave, they can always fall back on the Gods, at least temporarily, for
comfort, consolation, and the promise of a more appropriate venue in
which to follow their path.
(c) Raven Kaldera 2003
This article is reprinted here with the explicit permission of the
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