Numbing was my first physical effect dramatic enough for me to be sure it was working. This post explains the technique.
Direct magick isn’t about belief. For months, each time I would numb myself I’d be surprised when the pain stopped instantly. The doubt didn’t matter. Only the technique mattered.
This is numbing the hard way. There are easier ways to numb an injury. Reiki. Aspirin.
You don’t learn direct magick to learn numbing. You learn numbing to learn direct magick.
The skills it requires — recognizing and adjusting signatures, creating inverse and quiet signatures — are the building blocks of seeing reality clearly enough to alter it consciously.
The Plan
Shift the energetic state of the nerves from “in pain” to “at rest”.
The Preparation
To find nerves, you need to know their basic signature. Learn it by connecting to your brain (based on its physical location), then looking around your body and finding signatures that look similar.
Next, learn the normal signature of nerves when they’re not in pain by looking around your body and your friends’ bodies. As you learn what signatures to expect, it will become easier to find everything.
The Effect
The numbing effect starts by locating the “in pain” nerves. They will have the same basic signature as normal nerves, but a clearly different surface signature. I think of the signature differences as bumps rising above the normal signature. Connecting to some normal nerves while looking at the “in pain” nerves will make it easier to see the differences.
Think about what signature would move each bump back down. Do one at a time at first, and combine the signatures later.
The numbing signature is the sum of those bump-reducing signatures, with as little power into other parts of the signature as possible. Numb the area by filling it with energy with that quiet, precise signature.
The first time I tried this, my pain intensified. In addition to the bump-reducing signatures, the energy I used had a broad signature that energized the area. It took me a while to understand that quieting the rest of the signature was important to numbing properly. But I was excited to noticably, insantly change to reality, and I was learning. If the pain intensifies, remove the energy, rest a bit, then try again.
Summary
All this signature talk is pretty technical. Adding aspects together, quieting the signature, it’s all pretty foreign your first time. But try it. Once you see signatures this way, you’ll gain an intrinsic understanding and insight that words can’t give.
Like I said, this is numbing the hard way. But doing things the hard way is the price of building the understanding to move reality with thought.
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