Nobody has their **** together in high school. Nobody.
I love this! It made me look back and laugh! The funny thing is we all thought we did! HA! *sigh*
Nobody has their **** together in high school. Nobody.
still reading, but not educated enough to catch your meaning... at least as it goes to jungian psychology and shadow selves
I love this! It made me look back and laugh! The funny thing is we all thought we did! HA! *sigh*
I'll try to give the Cliff's Notes version as this is kind of a complex topic.
Carl Jung theorized that the Shadow is the part of our unconscious mind that acts as the repository for all aspects of ourselves that we repress. In the darkness and alienation of the Shadow, these traits gradually become hostile to the Ego, which is the conscious mind. The Shadow, being unconscious, is not capable of moral constructs like good and evil. The Ego however projects the perception of evil onto the Shadow. This is where our inner demons come from.
Jung's assertion was that it is vital to observe our projections and mirrored behaviors in order to understand our Shadow, integrate with it, and thus become a whole person.
My own perception (and I may very well be full of **** on this one) is that pride and extreme confidence are considered negative and sent to the Shadow. That doesn't make them go away, it just means that they manifest in unconscious ways. The Ego calls these behaviors immoral, but continued to believe that it has banished them and instead projects those evils onto others. Magicians, who must be proud by nature as I said before, do not seek to reconcile their Shadows, but instead dress up their intentions and actions in pseudo-intellectual or pseudo-philanthropic surfaces. Because they have not integrated the Ego with the Shadow, they remain unaware of their own selfish actions and thoughts and rationalize away those doubts in the back of their mind with a thin veneer of excuses and affectations.
Tell me about it. You should have seen me in high school.
I just have to say... theirs nothing wrong with just doing card magic, if it's just a hobby, if it's a profession, it a different story.
You also have to look further and expand in the opposite direction,of the new era learning ever new trick that comes out, and buying it with their parents money, only no never actually preform it for people other than friends, or family.
A good read though... thanks!
~Shades
With all of the "knowledgeable" threads popping up since my post on the morality of the online members, one must question the ability, will, and reason that the author has to write such things.
This is one, amongst the few, that I decidedly acquiesce with.
Being an actor doesn't necessarily mean becoming some sort of character for the audience, but rather using the entire body to interact with the audience in a way that a card technician could not. As stated before, the only reason I practice as much as I do is so I won't have to think about moves while I perform. The important part of magic, to me at least, is using my body to create emotion for my audience. I have a big ego because I want the audience to remember Ben Long that awesome funny sexy witty dude and book him again so they can give him more money. I don't want them to remember that "magic tricks are cool--we should get a magician for our next party." That's the actor talking.
The thing is, to be a performer requires a certain degree of selfishness. You have to get off on the applause to some extent. The problem is that I notice most people are still trying to find validation through it.
I don't know if we can say that making yourself a better performer will come from removing your "ego" from your magic. I do agree with a lot of what you said, especially the character part. But I think that the fact that there are a lot of crappy magicians today comes from the fact that there are a lot of magicians today, much more then yesteryear. There are also a lot of good magicians, though. Adhering to a specific character and mirroring your favorite performers is a part of finding your own character- we all go through it. We must be patient.
Ive never thought of it the way you put it. but in a certain sense ego is kind o essential for magic, Im not saying its the only factor that matters but the reason we do magic is to get attention, but there is nothing wrong with that, it's human nature. also keep in mind i am not trying to contradict what you are saying at all, there is a lot of this thread i agree with completely, but i think it's a little much to assume that if we remove ego from our performance it will make it better, because with ego comes confidence, which in my opinion is the most important element in performing magic.
I had a friend ask me to do a trick yesterday. She hasn't seen me do too much so I did my adaptation of Carlile Aces. Before I even started she said, "Normally I don't like magicians or magic really for that matter. But when you do it, you seem to enjoy it as much as the people watching. I don't feel like you're tricking me. I feel like you're astonished at what you do too and it makes me believe."
Don't forget that magic is a shared experience. You don't want to trick and audience you want to astonish them. Part of that starts with you!
Tell me about it. You should have seen me in high school.
Also, sure, you could entertain with just card magic. But are you doing card tricks because you have a solid reason for that being your entire performance, or because it's just easy to be doing card tricks now?
What I figure is, nobody's going to take me to task for saying, "a lot of magicians take the easy way out," when others have been saying that for a long, long time.
It's a different form of arrogance. Assume I'm talking about the bad kind.
My image of you has been completely shattered. I originally imagined a dark and callous hermit, hunched over the keyboard due to the powerful swelling of hate stored in his back, much the way Bill Hicks described. I could see you sitting atop a throne made of your conquered foes, the posts of which adorned by skulls of their loved ones. Every edict you issued brought nations to ruin. Your soul consorted with demon and imp, and you had vivid dreams of violated dead swallowing the world in a withered, shameful apocalypse.
Every morning you would scald yourself, to bring forth the septic anger dwelling within your cold, black shell, and before making a post, you would devour a human heart.
And when you say to imagine you in high school, that - that - turns that image into something really scary.
None of which can do more than foreshadow the reality of the horror of my teenage existence. For example, I wore an 80's metal mullet back then. I'll leave you to get a change of pants now.
What!? But I love the Ego! Best colour change ever
That's what I thought when I saw the thread title too. I was lie "Why would I remove the ego?" lol.
Nice points though, lots to take in. I know I probably perform for my ego but that doesn't mean that the spectator doesn't enjoy it as well. A little ego (or big!) in a performance works for some people too.
LMAO!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Hopefully you realized you looked like a tool and that was why nobody wanted to hang out with you.
Once again, we have to differentiate between "ego" and "confidence."
Which is a distinction most people don't think about.
-Don MarquisIf you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you.