Description
The Middle Pillar: The Balance Between Mind and Magic
The classic book on working with the energy of the body for spiritual purposes, The Middle Pillar by Israel Regardie, is now more complete, more modern, more usable, and better than ever.
The exercise known as the Middle Pillar was devised by the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Regardie expanded upon it and made it public over 60 years ago in the first edition of this book. Since that time, the exercise has been altered and adapted for just about any spiritual use you could think of. It is a mainstay of many Western traditions of magic.
Now in its third edition, The Middle Pillar is better than ever. It has been edited by Chic Cicero and Sandra Tabatha Cicero, close friends of the late Regardie and senior Adepts of the Golden Dawn. They have also added new material in a separate section that more than doubles the size of the book with their valuable insights and knowledge.
- Includes the complete original text, with nothing eliminated
- Spelling has been standardized to Western traditions
- Each chapter now has a title to identify its content
- The Ciceros’s notes to each chapter add insight and history to Regardie’s work
- Modern and clearer illustrations have been added
- New, a further exploration of the relationship between magic and psychology
- New, more than five techniques to enhance relaxation
- New, the Middle Pillar and the chakras
- New, versions of the Middle Pillar exercise in Egyptian, Greek, and Gaelic
- New, a shamanic version of the Middle Pillar
- New, how to use the Middle Pillar to charge talismans and do healings
The Middle Pillar is now expanded to what it always should have been, a thorough, accessible examination and extension of the single ritual that has become the very embodiment of magic. Get The Middle Pillar and learn the real secrets of magic.
Francis I. Regardie, born in London, England, November 17, 1907; died in Sedona, Arizona, March 10, 1985. Â Came to the United States in August 1921, educated in Washington D.C. and studied art in school in Washington and Philadelphia. Â Returned to Europe in 1928 at the invitation of Aleister Crowley to work as his secretary and study with him. Â Returned to London as secretary to Thomas Burke 1932-34, and during that time wrote A Garden of Pomegranates and The Tree of Life.
In 1934 he was invited to join the Order of the Golden Dawn, Stella Matutina Temple, during which time he wrote The Middle Pillar and The Art of True Healing, and did the basic work for The Philosopher’s Stone.
Returning to the United States in 1937 he entered Chiropractic College in New York, Graduating in 1941, and published The Golden Dawn. Â Served in the U.S. Army 1942-1945, and then moved to Los Angeles where he opened a chiropractic practice and taught psychiatry. Â Upon retirement in 1981, he moved to Sedona.