The Fascinating World of Egyptian Magic Unearthed in Costco

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Egyptian magic, also known as Egyptian witchcraft or Egyptian sorcery, refers to the ancient mystical practices and beliefs associated with the civilization of ancient Egypt. These practices revolve around the belief in the existence of supernatural forces and their use to achieve desired outcomes or solve problems. Egyptian magic is rooted in the ancient Egyptians' belief in the power of gods and goddesses, as well as their association with natural elements and celestial bodies. The ancient Egyptians believed that by tapping into these divine forces, they could manipulate the world around them and bring about positive changes in their lives. One key aspect of Egyptian magic is the use of spells and rituals. These spells were usually written down and recited by priests or skilled individuals who had knowledge of the magical arts.


Just opinions, but I have the advantage of people talking to me 2-30 years after a performance and telling of the experience.

P presence, being here and now for them O organize, being prepared for any situation so as to act incisively and confidently W - willingness to do the work to make them important and open E enthusiasm about what they want and need R respect, for yourself, magic, art, the VA and the audience. most folks I know are mostly often amused by the foibles of others the demonstrated lack of empowerment , but never to their face or at their expense.

The monkey chuckles in amusement at the magic trick

These spells were usually written down and recited by priests or skilled individuals who had knowledge of the magical arts. The spells often involved the use of specific words, symbols, and gestures to invoke the aid of a particular deity or to harness a specific kind of energy. Another significant element of Egyptian magic is the use of amulets and talismans.

The monkey chuckles in amusement at the magic trick

I like the idea that magic can be a form of empowerment. Far too often, one can watch magicians making their audience feel stupid and their volunteers on stage look silly. I would much prefer effects that make the audience and the volunteers on stage feel great. Take stage hypnosis, as an obvious example: It is often used to make the hypnitist look great, while hypnosis, as every hypno*therapist* will tell you, is all about the empowerment of the hypnotee.

In magic, some tricks can be presented in a way that they are empowering: I like to perform OotW in a way that underlines the spectator's excellent choices. Then I know some effects that have empowerment as their main theme. Chris Philpott has some of those, like "Anxious Monkey" (on "Pantheon") or "All tied up".

I am looking for more empowerment effects. There must be some out there - any advice?

Posted: Feb 26, 2019 02:01 pm

Empowerment is in the presentation - so take any effect you like and change the presentation. A quick example I can think of is taking PK Touch and make it about the volunteers' ability to connect with each other.

Christopher
Witch Doctor

Posted: Feb 27, 2019 09:34 am

I have always preferred effects that make either the Volunteer Assistant or magic the hero rather than me. It works!
The VA is also a witness for those in the back seats.

In business consulting it is important to develop trust and put he business owner at ease. So, the concept of "M-powerment" applies there too.

P = presence, being here and now for them
O = organize, being prepared for any situation so as to act incisively and confidently
W - willingness to do the work to make them important and open
E= enthusiasm about what they want and need
R= respect, for yourself, magic, art, the VA and the audience.

the "M" comes from "magic" in the sense of challenging what they consider to be impossible.
In my 40+ years of active consulting I included a magic trick in my presentation/appraisal more that 40,000 times. (not for entertainment, just allegory)

Thus, ANY magic effect can be presented with M-Powerment.

I guess it may be what you wish every spectator to remember about your performance - "must be magic" or "what a jerk."

the "for entertainment" effect that I received the most notable affect from is "Falcon Eye" in which one VA reads the mind of another with me far away.
I don't do it as mentalism - just as a reward for VA's who have shared my stage and helped M-Power my audience.
The idea is that "pretending at magic" has elevated their awareness and empathy. Note my sig-line

I would also add that I always have a special mastered effect in my pouch for the rare occasion that a VA is "more than willing" to help.
You know it will be astounding because of the M-Powerment of the VA freely gifted back to you.

Just opinions, but I have the advantage of people talking to me 2-30 years after a performance and telling of the experience.

a magician came to our school
so many years ago,
and did wondrous skits with balls and rings
that our teacher said were tricks;
and that we must be wary of strangers
who promise impossible things.

But I recall some magic yet,
for he called me to the stage
and transformed me for a moment
into someone bold and brave –
for his eyes were kind and flecked with gold,
and treated me with respect,
though I was only nine.

"the more one pretends at magic, the more awe and wonder will be found in real life." Arnold Furst

Posted: Feb 28, 2019 03:39 am

Harry Houdini was the most empowering magician ever.

“No prison can hold me; no hand or leg irons or steel locks can shackle me. No ropes or chains can keep me from my freedom.”

The way it works is they associate with the hero: in their heads, it is they who are escaping not Harry.

If there is a single truth about Magic, it is that nothing on earth so efficiently evades it.

Posted: Mar 14, 2019 05:54 pm Quote:

On Feb 26, 2019, adrianrbf wrote:
I like the idea that magic can be a form of empowerment. Far too often, one can watch magicians making their audience feel stupid and their volunteers on stage look silly. I would much prefer effects that make the audience and the volunteers on stage feel great. Take stage hypnosis, as an obvious example: It is often used to make the hypnitist look great, while hypnosis, as every hypno*therapist* will tell you, is all about the empowerment of the hypnotee.

In magic, some tricks can be presented in a way that they are empowering: I like to perform OotW in a way that underlines the spectator's excellent choices. Then I know some effects that have empowerment as their main theme. Chris Philpott has some of those, like "Anxious Monkey" (on "Pantheon") or "All tied up".

I am looking for more empowerment effects. There must be some out there - any advice?

Watch every TV magician. They all seem like the read the same book. As awesome as they look on screen, they seem to give the power to the participants. They find a way to make it all about the person. I don't like that. I want it to be about me displaying a power. Call it what you will. However, you can always switch the presentation up to be what you want it to be. I recently did Wayne Houchin's French Kiss with business cards and framed it as Thanos snapping his finger making things happen to bend reality. Now that trick has nothing to do with that, but that's where I took it.

"Pushing The Boundaries of What is Possible With Hypnosis"

Posted: Mar 15, 2019 07:08 pm

I often find spectator "empowerment" presentations to be condescending and presumptuous. It isn't easy to convince a spectator that they are the actual cause of an impossible event, and if they know you are just "pretending" that they are, well, then it seems kind of lame to me.

Posted: Mar 15, 2019 07:14 pm Quote:

On Mar 15, 2019, Pop Haydn wrote:
I often find spectator "empowerment" presentations to be condescending and presumptuous. It isn't easy to convince a spectator that they are the actual cause of an impossible event, and if they know you are just "pretending" that they are, well, then it seems kind of lame to me.

I agree. BUT. I think that is the magician trying to:

A) Stay Humble and not make it all about themselves
B) Jumping through hoops trying to not take credit for having or claiming supernatural powers

I have never claimed Supernatural powers, but by nature when we do magic, we are therefore doing something supernatural. At the end of the day, I want to take credit for what happened. That's not everyone. I get it. But I want that credit.

"Pushing The Boundaries of What is Possible With Hypnosis"

Posted: Mar 15, 2019 08:09 pm

I agree, Pop. It's easy for this type of presentation to go wrong. The scripting must be delicate, and must take into account the audience's intelligence and common sense.

It's not easy. But if it were, anyone could do it.

Christopher
Witch Doctor

Posted: Mar 16, 2019 12:20 am

Empowering someone does not require that they be the "cause" of what happens.

Nor does the performer have to "be the cause" in order to take credit for orchestrating the event.

I would stress again the importance of having any Volunteer Assistant be a witness for those spectators far away for the action.
This requires trust and making the individual important and cooperative. Having them be involved in astonishment as well as the action - a form of empowerment.

I certainly think that the assistants in Pop's classic rings routine are empowered and even told they are special and unique.
Yet, no one thinks the magic could occur without Pop being there. He gets the credit while the Assistant and magic are the heroes.

"the more one pretends at magic, the more awe and wonder will be found in real life." Arnold Furst

Posted: Mar 16, 2019 12:45 am

The good usually lies in between and so on that basis it would be good to share our magic with our audience. One cannot perform magic without an audience, so it follows the audience play their part. As Pop explained it is akin to playing tug with a poppy, give and take and all that.

If there is a single truth about Magic, it is that nothing on earth so efficiently evades it.

Posted: Mar 17, 2019 10:55 am

My concern is not that the spectator should get credit for the magic. Not at all.

To illustrate what I am looking for, let us compare two of Chris Philpott's tricks with the "100th monkey" method:

First, the classical 100th monkey trick: A spectator joins you on stage, you take a sheet of paper with some words on it and show it to the audience. You ask if they can read it, they affirm that they can. Then, you show it to the volunteer on stage, and he/she cannot read it. While this is a great comedy effect when performed well, it is certainly not an empowerment effect: You take away the volunteer's ability to read and make him/her look a bit silly.

On the other hand, consider the "Anxious Monkey" trick from "Pantheon": Again, a spectator joins you on stage, this time, you show the sheet of paper to the audience and they can clearly read some words that express negative feelings. The volunteer holds it so that the audience can see it, while you tell a story that includes positive feelings. You talk about how the mind can overcome negativity and perceive the positive energy and so on. You finally ask the volunteer to look at the card and read what it says, and now he/she will read positive words, not the negative ones that the audience saw.

The latter is clearly an empowerment effect: The volunteer makes the experience that he/she can perceive something differently, in a more positive way.

Posted: Mar 17, 2019 11:55 am One would rather be amused than empowered.

If there is a single truth about Magic, it is that nothing on earth so efficiently evades it.

Posted: Mar 17, 2019 12:31 pm Quote:
On Mar 17, 2019, tommy wrote:
One would rather be amused than empowered.

by "one" I assume you mean yourself

most folks I know are mostly often amused by the foibles of others (the demonstrated lack of empowerment), but never to their face or at their expense.
Is staying at the same level of competence while others decline a form of empowerment? (see Billy Joel) Regardless, they do not choose "amusement" as a preference.

Methinks others in an audience may enjoy seeing either the performer or volunteer seemingly more empowered since they can share such in imagination,
but "amused?" If they are amused by the plight of a volunteer the performer has possibly failed in his/her task - if on purpose it is bullying, if accidental it is inept.

Surely, the universal popularity of 'pretending at magic' is based on empowerment or the yearning for it.

I love Pop's performances where everyone laughs WITH the antics, but never AT the volunteer.

When the volunteer succeeds everyone cheers, for they also feel empowered.

"the more one pretends at magic, the more awe and wonder will be found in real life." Arnold Furst

Posted: Mar 17, 2019 01:03 pm

When a magician starts talking about the power of positive thinking, then his audience will start to smile and receive the proposition with absolute incredulity and be rather amused than empowered. Whether I "prefer" to be amused or empowered is "rather" irrelevant.

If there is a single truth about Magic, it is that nothing on earth so efficiently evades it.

Posted: Mar 17, 2019 01:58 pm

I think the objective of magic should be entertainment and create wonder. Even laymen realize it's a trick so I don't think the trick can really be empowering. However your patter can definitely inspire.

Posted: Mar 17, 2019 03:26 pm Quote:
On Mar 17, 2019, tommy wrote:
When a magician starts talking about the power of positive thinking.

I fully agree! Which is why I would never do such a thing as a way of empowering folks.

Maybe it is just enough to focus on not diminishing any sense of pride or presence or joy a volunteer may have when they come up.

For me, both the volunteer and audience should feel better about the experience.
With society constantly dragging people down, perhaps the greatest affect of magic is pulling them up.
That may not be empowerment to you, but it is to me and all of my volunteers over the last 60 years.

Thanks for the divergent angle, though - I will rewrite a couple of chapters in a pending book to cover any possible confusion over volunteer selection and management.

"the more one pretends at magic, the more awe and wonder will be found in real life." Arnold Furst

Posted: Mar 17, 2019 03:56 pm Quote:

On Mar 17, 2019, magicianbrady wrote:
Even laymen realize it's a trick so I don't think the trick can really be empowering. However your patter can definitely inspire.

Tricks, no. Magic effects, yes. What the observer perceives, feels, remembers and tells others about can all lead to empowerment.

Is 'inspiration' empowerment or just part? Words and be important, certainly, as well as how they are said and a balance with silence.

The very concept of awe & wonder being kindled has the potential for empowerment of self, a volunteer and a distant spectator.

I was mentored many decades ago that the magician's last thoughts for the day should be,

*What did I learn from today's performance that will help be better create astonishment tomorrow?"

"What did I learn today that will make of me a better person tomorrow?"

ideas to entertain.

"the more one pretends at magic, the more awe and wonder will be found in real life." Arnold Furst

Posted: Mar 18, 2019 01:36 am

When a magician starts talking about the power of positive thinking, then his audience will start to smile and receive the proposition with absolute incredulity – which is precisely what the magician wants, because then he can go on and prove the absolutely incredible true!

If there is a single truth about Magic, it is that nothing on earth so efficiently evades it.

Posted: Mar 18, 2019 01:28 pm

Go for it tommy! I would love to see a video of you performing such a routine.

That's not what I want from my audience, but glad it works for you.

I will be especially interested to see how handle volunteer selection and care - the theme of this thread.

"the more one pretends at magic, the more awe and wonder will be found in real life." Arnold Furst

Posted: Mar 18, 2019 03:09 pm

I think all the magic in all the world begins with an incredulous proposition. I have never heard of anybody doing credible magic.

If the audience finds the proposition credible then what would be the point of proving it is true? Mind you, if you did propose the credible and prove it, I suppose you could bill yourself as the most boring magician in the world. Ladies and Gentlemen, you may find this very easy to believe, but I am now going to pour myself a cup of tea before your very eyes, watch!

If there is a single truth about Magic, it is that nothing on earth so efficiently evades it.

I would also add that I always have a special mastered effect in my pouch for the rare occasion that a VA is "more than willing" to help.
You know it will be astounding because of the M-Powerment of the VA freely gifted back to you.
Egyptisn magic costco

These objects were believed to possess magical properties that could protect the wearer from harm or bring good fortune. Amulets often depicted powerful deities or symbols associated with specific aspects of life, such as love, health, or protection. The ancient Egyptians also believed in the power of charms and charms made from various materials like precious stones, metals, or even animal parts. In addition to spells and amulets, divination and dream interpretation were also common practices in Egyptian magic. Divination involved the use of various methods, such as reading the patterns in animal entrails or observing celestial events, to gain insight into future events or receive guidance from the gods. Dream interpretation, on the other hand, played a crucial role in understanding and deciphering the messages and predictions believed to be sent by the deities through dreams. Despite its ancient origins, the practice of Egyptian magic continues to intrigue and inspire people to this day. Many modern practitioners of witchcraft and occultism incorporate elements of Egyptian magic into their practices, adapting and evolving it to suit their individual beliefs and needs. In conclusion, Egyptian magic is a fascinating and complex ancient mystical tradition that was deeply ingrained in the daily lives and beliefs of the ancient Egyptians. It involved the invocation of gods and goddesses, the use of spells and rituals, the wearing of protective amulets, and the interpretation of dreams and divination. Its influence can still be seen in contemporary mystical practices and continues to captivate people with its rich symbolism and connection to the ancient world..

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Ancient Egyptian Spells and Charms Now Sold at Costco

Rediscovering the Ancient Art of Egyptian Magic at Costco