Homage to the Chancellor

By Coral Carte

I was settling down to write a small offering of gratitude to Peter J. Carroll, when word broke that Gordon White had also departed this earthly plane. I was unprepared for the wave of grief that swept across the internet — mine included — and I found my project abandoned as I tried to process this fresh loss for someone whose voice, teachings, and community had also accompanied me through so many years of my life.

In the many tributes to Gordon, countless people have said they would not be where they are today without him. For me, this is true of both Gordon and Pete. One after the other, they taught me many of the things I have since incorporated and embodied in my own life and magical practice.

I met Pete first. I was never a particularly gifted student at school, but when I moved to Milan, I found myself on my Mercury line and my hunger for knowledge expanded exponentially. Once the internet arrived, I no longer had to wander bookshops dowsing for the texts I needed and magically, mysteriously, it brought me everything I needed.

I found Lyn Buchanan’s website and flew to America to study Remote Viewing. At the time this was a huge undertaking, only made possible by my then job in advertising. Later, online schools began appearing, and I found Maybelogic Academy, where I learnt astrology with Antero Alli. There I discovered Peter J. Carroll, “Stokastikos”.

After his experience teaching at MaybeLogic he founded his own magical school, the Arcanorium, and I signed up. I spent nearly three years there, the equivalent, for me, of an undergraduate degree. Unlike my difficult years at university, where failed exams made obtaining a degree excruciating, I applied myself wholeheartedly to every course offered. The teachers were extraordinary. Pete, who had visualised a magical order at only twenty-five, had by then gathered around him some of the finest magical minds of the era.

That time left traces in me both outwardly and inwardly. Some of those traces still exist physically: the wand I made for the course and still carry today, the sigil art, the staff from the six weeks of Chaos Monasticism during the Jihad of Chaos, the Ouranos figurine I sculpted, and all the things I managed to materialise through those years of practice.

Pete taught us everything. He led us on the KKK, pushing us to accomplish in 6 weeks what would normally take a year, enchanting, evoking and invoking, divination and illumination. We crafted our own lamps for illumination work, and somewhere in the middle of those studies I began to understand my life’s mission and the direction of my deeper interests. He recorded himself doing the Vortex Ritual, and we all did it and wrote up our results. He taught us about using magic in business, he taught us about the elements, about the Noosphere. I created a servitor tasked with bringing me “the others” — a phrase I would later hear when Gordon found him for one of his first “Find the Others” Podcasts.

That servitor still works to this day.

Pete was razor sharp, brilliant, demanding, and endlessly creative. We read all of his books, and studied his essays from Chaos International. At the time he was writing The Apophenion, so he entrusted us with proof copies to read through. I still have my signed copy, hand-delivered by the maestro himself, and a signed certificate of completion of the Jihad he later sent out to all of us by post.

We documented all of our work and magical experiments on the boards, Pete would comment on it in the class notes. 

Then, at International public Colours of Chaos Day in 2008, I discovered another side of Pete: in person, he was also kind. After the lectures came rituals. The then-head of the IOT was magnificently robed in a striking cloak with tiny buttons all the way down the front. Before he delivered his ritual, Temple Draig conducted a group ritual, and we were called in to participate. We were divided into smaller groups, I found myself – to my terror – placed in a group with Pete himself. My first non-solo public ritual suddenly mattered very much, but he stood beside me with warmth and generosity.

That meeting eventually led me to apply to the IOT, but as magic so often does, it also shattered open the life I thought I knew and forced me into an uncompromising confrontation with myself. My life imploded and exploded in equal measure. I had already lost my job, my mother, and later my adopted father, but after the Arcanorium, and during my novitiate, I also ended a deeply conflictual marriage and stepped into the abyss with my young son beside me.

By then, however, I had magical tools. I had skills. I had sigils everywhere — painted, mosaiced, consigned to fire and earth — and I had that servitor entrusted with bringing me connection, community, and “the others.” And survive I did.

I never finished the novitiate that time. It took another ten years before I was ready to return to that path. But Pete’s school and his direct, hands-on teaching were unconditionally seminal for me. They left marks on my psyche and practice that endure to this day. Much like The Apophenion itself — philosophical, speculative, expansive, the work of a magician in maturity — Pete’s influence carried me into a lifetime of consciousness hacking and exploration.

And then there was Gordon.

From the very first podcast all those years ago, Gordon became another kind of guide entirely. Through him came names, ideas, teachers, systems, histories, and possibilities. He had an unerring eye for brilliance and an extraordinary generosity in sharing it. Gordon created bridges: between worlds, between traditions, between people. Through his writing, and teachings, he carried Chaos Magic out into the wider world, expanding it, illuminating it, and making its possibilities visible to countless others.

I can’t write any better words for Gordon than have already been spoken by some of the best writers of our time. It is enough to say this: magically, spiritually, and personally, I would not be where I am without these two great magicians.

Pete took me into the world of magic and taught me about Chaos magic but Gordon also created a bridge that profoundly changed my own path: the bridge between Remote Viewing and magic. With his unerring eye for greatness, he too found Lyn Buchanan, my teacher and mentor and interviewed him. He realized the real magic in it and had Lyn give training directly to a group of magicians in Rune Soup.

Until then, I had remained largely incognito as a magician, preferring invisibility to vulnerability – unlike Gordon, who spoke his truth openly, unerringly, and without flinching. But the bridge Gordon built gave me permission to step forward publicly as both a magician and a remote viewer, and to recognise that Remote Viewing, despite its scientific terminology, also leaves space for magical thinking and direct experience of mystery.

The Rune Soup viewers became firm friends and excellent viewers in their own right, and to this day we still collaborate. Through Gordon, worlds that had seemed separate suddenly recognised one another. And many of us found ourselves reflected back through that meeting.

Travel safely onwards, dear magicians, and thank you for lighting the way for so many of us.

Dave Lee’s Tales of Magic (12th Instalment)

Tales of Magic Part 12: The First UK IOT Group’s First Meetings

Liber Null was a revelation. Here was an attitude to the Mysteries that did not reject the things science had discovered about how the material world works but neither did it approach that world with the dull, prison-planet mentality of scientism. Nor did it place years of tedious theoretical training in the way of doing actual practical magic.

And ‘Sorceries of Tao and Zos’ – it all sounded so romantic!

I met Pete Carroll in the Sorcerer’s Apprentice on one of the aforementioned coffee mornings. He’d come back from his world travels, in the course of which he’d founded the first IOT Temple, The Church of Chaos, in Sydney, Australia, with one Frater Vegtan. Pete referred to it as the ‘IOT in style’. Judging by the stories he told, this meant some elegant public rituals and some serious partying. The Church apparently ran for about 6 months in 1980, leaving no succession.

Pete moved to East Morton, the village where Ray Sherwin lived. The Yorkshire group was the next IOT group, and the first in the British Isles.

The group started in late 1980, and ran till May 1982. The theme for the first working was perhaps an odd choice – an astral sabbat – but it was to try out Pete’s home made belladonna ointment. His previous experiment with belladonna had not gone well. He made some into jam, and he and his friend kept sampling it, making that classic naïve-drug-taker mistake of thinking ‘Oh, it’s over an hour now, and nothing’s happened, let’s have some more.’ On the basis of that experiment, Pete’s wife summed up belladonna as ‘Good for a night in the intensive care unit.’

The idea was we would find a site to visit in dream, go home and rub the ointment on ourselves, dream and meet up. Here’s part of my diary entry for when we went to get a feel for the site in East Morton:

SAT 15TH NOV: PREP. OF SABBAT SITE:

PD, Anjie, Ray, Pete Carroll and me. Foundations under the grass, left from Morton’s better days, before the (local) flood. We dowsed the site. Got feel of it for Sabbat, returned to centre and placed blood and spit beneath centre stone as homing beacon.

Stood facing east and dedicated whole working to Higher Self.

The actual working was a week later.

SAT 22ND NOV: THE SABBAT NIGHT (00.00 onwards, PD’s place)

Moon incense, violet robe, dog skull, one candle.

Anointed forearms, forehead, thighs with belladonna flying ointment: ‘This ointment is the key of night/ unlocks the eyes of dream / I go in cloak of Dark Mother / … Let the wings of dream unfold / and cast me on the night to place prepared’

SHADDAI EL CHAI!

A few pranayama cycles, retaining breaths.

After maybe ¼ hour, abrupt changes: in and out of tiny dream sequences … visualized the Sabbat site from a remarkable number of different perspectives.

Slept for 8 hrs. Dreams of normal vividness and no special interest. Woke fine and refreshed!

This was disappointing, but a worthwhile belladonna experiment. Tropane alkaloids are notoriously capricious, with a disturbingly low ratio of effective dose-to-lethal-dose, and I never felt like trying again with a larger amount. I’m more of a tryptamines man myself.

Dave Lee is the author of several books, including Chaotopia, Bright From the Well and Life Force: Sensed Energy in Breathwork, Psychedelia and Chaos Magick. Visit his website and sign up for his newsletter.