lol would that it was so simpleHe says that reading fiction is one of the greatest things you could do in your occult practice.
It can alter your mindset so it can alter your practice both for the better and for the worse. It can be used intentionally for improvement. I like to read vampire tales books to strengthen my connection with the current, but it is re-reading stories I already know for the purpose. Fortunately the effect has to be build up, so no reason not to read something new and explore what is out there.I was reading Theodore Rose's "Lucifer and the Hidden Demons" the other day. He says that reading fiction is one of the greatest things you could do in your occult practice. How true have you found this to be?
Not sure about reality change, but change of reality perception is already described. The Exorcist Effect is both the term and the book about it, worth reading.William S. Burroughs believed (and claimed to have observed) that fiction/the written word could change reality itself. He was doing experiments in this realm decades before Grant Morrison coined the phrase "hypersigil" even. I think there is some truth to this, however, it (probably) gets lost in a web of complexity that we can barely understand on any rational level. Perhaps long-term acolytes of gods like Thoth might understand the ebb and flow of such a sorcerous practice?
Maybe what he meant is that in reading fiction you are actively forming the imagery in your mind, thereby training visualisation. As opposed to mindlessly consuming videos.I was reading Theodore Rose's "Lucifer and the Hidden Demons" the other day. He says that reading fiction is one of the greatest things you could do in your occult practice. How true have you found this to be?