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Don Juan Quotes Warrior Path & Carlos Castaneda [Don Juan is what he calls a Man of Knowledge.

The most knowledgeable mystic av ailable in writing through the work of Carlos Castaneda. Through him the The As semblage Point was revealed to the world.] See: Ego and Self Importance quotes Talking Types of petty tyrants found in pe ople Intent The Assemblage Point External: http://www.prismagems.com/castaneda/donjuan7.html Quotes Seeing is a peculiar feeling of knowing, of knowing something without a shadow o f doubt. What a strange paradox! Every warrior on the path of knowledge thinks, at one ti me or another, that he's learning sorcery, but all he's doing is allowing himsel f to be convinced of the power hidden in his being, and that he can reach it.---Don Juan Matus, The Power of Silence "The basic difference between an ordinary man and a warrior is that a warrior ta kes everything as a challenge, while an ordinary man takes everything as a bless ing or as a curse."--Don Juan "A petty tyrant is a tormentor.......Someone who either holds the power of life and death over warriors or simply annoys them to distraction."--Don Juan He (Don Juan) said that a warrior had no compassion for anyone . For him, to h ave compassion meant that you wished the other person to be like you, to be in y our shoes, and you lent a hand for that purpose. The hardest thing in the world is for a warrior to let others be. Only a sorcerer who sees and is formless can afford to help anyoneto his understanding every effort to help on our part was an arbitrary act guided by our self interest alone.(271) La Gorda "Self-importance is man's greatest enemy. What weakens him is feeling offended b y the deeds and misdeeds of his fellow men. Self-importance requires that one sp end most of one's life offended by something or someone."--Don Juan "My benefactor used to say that a warrior who stumbles on a petty tyrant is a lu cky one."--Don Juan (The Fire From Within p34) "A nagual never lets anyone know that he is in charge. A nagual comes and goes w ithout leaving a trace. That freedom is what makes him a nagual."-----Don Juan "The characteristic of miserable seers is that they are willing to forget the wo nder of the world. They become overwhelmed by the fact that they see and believe that it's their genius that counts." ----Don Juan p58 "It's better to get something worthwhile done using deception than to fail to ge t something worthwhile done using truth."---Don Juan (Carlos Castaneda) Inner silence works from the moment you begin to accrue it. What the old sorcere rs were after was the final dramatic, end result of reaching that individual thr eshold of silence. Some very talented practitioners need only a few minutes of s ilence to reach that coveted goal. Others, less talented, need long periods of s ilence, perhaps more than one hour of quietude, before they reach the desired re sult. The desired result is what the old sorcerers called "stopping the world", the moment when everything around us ceases to be what it's always been. This is the moment when sorcerers return to the TRUE nature of man. The old sorcerers a lways called it "total freedom" ----Don Juan (Carlos Castanada)

Power always makes a cubic centimeter of chance available to a warrior. The warr ior's art is to be perennially fluid in order to pluck it. "There is something you ought to be aware of by now. I call it the cubic centime ter of chance. All of us, whether or not we are warriors, have a cubic centimete r of chance that pops out in front of our eyes from time to time. The difference between an average man and a warrior is that the warrior is aware of this, and one of his tasks is to be alert, deliberately waiting, so that when his cubic ce ntimeter pops out he has the necessary speed, the prowess to pick it up. Chance, good luck, personal power, or whatever you may call it, is a peculiar state of affairs. It is like a very small stick that comes out in front of us and invites us to pluck it. Usually we are too busy, or too preoccupied, or just too stupid and lazy to realize that that is our cubic centimeter of luck. A warrior, on th e other hand, is always alert and tight and has the spring, the gumption necessa ry to grab it. "--Don Juan (Journey to Ixtlan) Everything we do, everything we are, rests on our personal power. If we have e nough of it, one word is enough to change the course of our lives. If we don't, the most magnificent piece of wisdom can be revealed to us and that revelation w on't make a damn bit of difference. Do you know that at this very moment you are surrounded by eternity? And do you know you can use that eternity, if you so de sire? Do you know that you can extend yourself forever in any direction and use it to take the totality of yourself forever in any direction? Do you know that o ne moment can be eternity? If you had enough personal power, my words alone wou ld serve as a means to round up the totality of yourself and get to the crucial part of it out of the boundaries in which it is contained.-From Tales of Power Once inner silence is attained, everything is possible. The way to stop talking to ourselves is to use exactly the same method used to teach us to talk to ours elves; we were taught compulsively and unwaveringly, and this is the way we must stop it: compulsively and unwaveringly. from The Fire From Within It doesn't matter how one was brought up. What determines the way one does anyth ing is personal power.-From Journey To Ixtlan

"Churches are monuments to self importance."--Don Juan http://alignment2012.com/warrior.html WARRIOR QUOTES THE WARRIOR SAYINGS OF DON JUAN The following quote collection has been culled from the Casteneda books and repr esents a distillation of Don Juan's philosophy of the warrior. Regardless of wha t you may think of the literal veracity of these books, they were for many in ou r culture, including me, the first encounter with the philosophy of the warrior. Don Juan's teachings about the Warrior stance have the perfection of a Samurai sword or arrows shot by a master Zen archer. Their concise, penetrating power is unequaled, and they pierce ego illusions like diamond bullets. Taken together t hey amount to a Toltec Warrior Manifesto. Someone once defined stories as "equip ment for living." Don Juan's warrior teachings are also equipment for living, so mething never to leave behind, like a blade of impervious metal, a powerful ally to accompany you into any sort of wilderness. I am already given to the power that rules my fate. And I cling to nothing, so I

will have nothing to defend. I have no thoughts, so I will see. I fear nothing, so I will remember myself. Detached and at ease, I will dart past the Eagle to be free. Warriors have an ulterior purpose for their acts which has nothing to do with personal gain. The average man acts only if there is a chance for profit. Warriors act not for profit, but for the spirit. For the average man, the world is weird because if he's not bored with it, he's at odds with it. For a warrior, the world is weird because it is stupendous, awesome, mysterious, unfathomable. A warrior must assume responsibility for being here, in this marvelous world, in this marvelous time. Impeccability begins with a single act that has to be deliberate, precise and sustained. If that act is repeated long enough, one acquires a sense of unbending intent which can be applied to anything else. If that is accomplished the road is clear. One thing will lead to another until the warrior realizes his full potential. Any movement of the assemblage point means a movement away from an excessive concern with the individual self. Shamans believe it is the position of the assemblage point which makes modern man a homicidal egoist, a being totally involved with his self-image. Having lost hope of ever returning to the source of everything, the average man seeks solace in his selfishness. A warrior must cultivate the feeling that he has everything needed for the extravagant journey that is his life. What counts for a warrior is being alive. Life in itself is sufficient, self-explanatory and complete. Therefore, one may say without being presumptuous that the experience of experiences is being alive. A warrior must focus his attention on the link between himself and his death. Without remorse or sadness or worrying, he must focus his attention on the fact that he does not have time and let his acts flow accordingly. He must let each of his acts be his last battle on earth. Only under those conditions will his acts have their rightful power. Otherwise they will be, for as long as he lives, the acts of a fool. NoteAlthough the quotes use the default masculine pronoun "he," it is not assum ed that warriors must be males. Many of the most powerful warriors in the Casten eda books are female. Warriors compress time; this is the sixth principle of the art of stalking. Even an instant counts. In a battle for your life, a second is an eternity, an eternity that may decide the outcome. Warriors aim at succeeding, therefore they compress time. Warriors don't waste an instant. A warrior acknowledges his pain but he doesn't indulge in it. The mood of the warrior who enters into the unknown is not one of sadness; on the contrary, he's joyful because he feels humbled by

his great fortune, confident that his spirit is impeccable, and above all, fully aware of his efficiency. A warrior's joyfulness comes from having accepted his fate, and from having truthfully assessed what lies ahead of him. The basic difference between an ordinary man and a warrior is that a warrior takes everything as a challenge, while an ordinary man takes everything as a blessing or as a curse. The self-confidence of the warrior is not the self-confidence of the average man. The average man seeks certainty in the eyes of the onlooker and calls that self-confidence. The warrior seeks impeccability in his own eyes and calls that humbleness. The average man is hooked to his fellow men, while the warrior is hooked only to infinity. It is much easier for warriors to fare well under conditions of maximum stress than to be impeccable under normal circumstances. What seems natural is to think that a warrior who can hold his own in the face of the unknown can certainly face petty tyrants with impunity. But that's not necessarily so. What destroyed the superb warriors of ancient times was to rely on that assumption. Nothing can temper the spirit of a warrior as much as the challenge of dealing with impossible people in positions of power. Only under those conditions can warriors acquire the sobriety and serenity to withstand the pressure of the unknowable. Knowledge comes to a warrior, floating, like specks of gold dust, the same dust that covers the wings of moths. So for a warrior, knowledge is like taking a shower, or being rained on b specks of dark gold dust. A warrior is a hunter. He calculates everything. That's control. Once his calculations are over, he acts. He lets go. That's abandon. A warrior is not a leaf at the mercy of the wind. No one can push him, no one can make him do things against himself or against his better judgment. A warrior is tuned to survive and he survives in the best of all possible fashions. Acts have power. Especially when the warrior acting knows that those acts are his last battle. There is a strange consuming happiness in acting with the full knowledge that whatever he is doing may very well be his last act on earth. If a warrior is to succeed in anything, the success must come gently, with a great deal of effort but with no stress or obsession. Our fellow men are black magicians. And whoever is with them is a black magician on the spot. Think for a moment, can you deviate from the path that your fellow men have lined up for you? And if you remain with them, your thoughts and your actions are fixed forever in their terms. That is slavery. The warrior, on the other hand, is free from all that. Freedom is expensive, but the price is not impossible to pay. So, fear your captors, your masters. Don't waste your time and your power fearing freedom. A warrior is never under siege. To be under siege implies that one has personal possessions that could be blockaded. A warrior has nothing in the world except his impeccability, and impeccability

cannot be threatened. To discard everything that is unnecessary is the second principle of the art of stalking. A warrior doesn't complicate things. He aims at being simple. He applies all the concentration he has to decide whether or not to enter into battle, for any battle is a battle for his life. This is the third principle of the art of stalking. A warrior must be willing and ready to make his last stand here and now. But not in a helter-skelter way. The flaw with words is that they always make us feel enlightened, but when we turn around to face the world they always fail us and we end up facing the world as we always have, without enlightenment. For this reason, a warrior seeks to act rather than to talk, and to this effect, he gets a new description of the worlda new description where talking is not that important, and where new acts have new reflections. Applying these principles brings about three results. The first is that stalkers learn never to take themselves seriously; they learn to laugh at themselves. If they are not afraid of being a fool, they can fool anyone. The second is that stalkers learn to have endless patience. Stalkers are never in a hurry; they never fret. And the third is that stalkers learn to have an endless capacity to improvise. Only as a warrior can one withstand the path of knowledge. A warrior cannot complain or regret anything. His life is an endless challenge, and challenges cannot possibly be good or bad. Challenges are simple challenges. The recommendation for warriors is not to have any material things on which to focus their power, but to focus it on the spirit, on the true flight into the unknown, not on trivialities. Everyone who wants to follow the warrior's path has to rid himself of the compulsion to possess and hold onto things. Self-importance is man's greatest enemy. What weakens him is feeling offended by the deeds and misdeeds of his fellow men. Self-importance requires that one spend most of one's life offended by something or someone. The hardest thing in the world is to assume the mood of a warrior. It is of no use to be sad and complain and feel justified in doing so, believing that someone is always doing something to us. Nobody is doing anything to anybody, much less to a warrior. A warrior takes his lot, whatever it amy be, and accepts it in ultimate humbleness. He accepts in humbleness what he is, not as grounds for regret but as a living challenge. By the way, Casteneda, just before he died, published an entire book of Don Juan quotations entitled The Arrow of Time. When nothing is for sure we remain alert, perennially on our toes. It is more exciting not to know which bush the rabbit is hiding behind than to behave as though we knew everything. As long as a man feels that he is the most important thing in

the world, he cannot really appreciate the world around him. He is like a horse with blinders; all he sees is himself, apart from everything else. There is no completeness without sadness and longing, for without them there is no sobriety, no kindness. Wisdom without kindness and knowledge without sobriety are useless. Everything that warriors do is done as a consequence of a movement of their assemblage points, and such movements are ruled by the amount of energy warriors have at their command. Power always makes a cubic centimeter of chance available to a warrior. The warrior's art is to be perennially fluid in order to pluck it. The worst that could happen to us is that we have to die, and since that is already our unalterable fate, we are free; those who have lost everything no longer have anything to fear. What we need to do to allow magic to get hold of us is to banish doubts from our minds. Once doubts are banished anything is possible. A warrior must learn to make every act count, since he is going to be here in this world for only a short while, in fact, too short for witnessing all the marvels of it. Feeling important makes one heavy, clumsy and vain. To be a warrior one needs to be light and fluid. Dwelling upon the self too much produces a terrible fatigue. A man in that posit ion is deaf and blind to everything else. The fatigue itself makes him cease to see the marvels all around him. When one has nothing to lose, one becomes courageous. We are timid only when the re is something we can still cling to. For a seer, the truth is that all living beings are struggling to die. What stop s death is awareness. The only freedom warriors have is to behave impeccably. Not only is impeccabilit y freedom; it is the only way to straighten out the human form.

In the tradition of the sorcerers to which don Juan belongs, it is maintained th at the universe is predatorial in nature. For sorcerers, this is not a matter of speculation or of metaphorical predilection - they know for a fact that it is p redatorial. Throughout the ages they have described the condition of man, which is about the bleakest description we know. As time goes by, this description gai ns more and more ground. Sorcerers say that just as we keep chickens, or gallina s in Spanish, in a coop, or a gallinero, some entities that come from a universe of awareness keep us in human coops. Sorcerers make a joke and say that those e ntities, which they call flyers, or voladores, keep us human beings, or seres hu manos, cooped up in humaneros. The flyers of the sorcerers' tradition are black shadows that we sometimes detec t and explain away as floaters in the retina. Sorcerers know for a fact, by mean s of their capacity to see energy directly, that those shadows are predatorial a

nd that they keep us alive in order to devour our awareness. Sorcerers say that our awareness is like a sheen around our total field of energy that looks to the m like a luminous ball. To them, this sheen of awareness is like a plastic cover that would make the luminous ball shine even more if it were not for the fact t hat it has been eaten away down to the level of our heels. Here is where the sorcerers description gets very disturbing to us; sorcerers sa y that the only sheen of awareness left in us by our eaters is the awareness of self-reflection. Therefore, all we are left with is the concern with me, myself and I. In our personal lives we have corroborated that the only force left in th e immediate world around us is the force of self-importance, which comes disguis ed in the form of humility, compassion, altruism, kindness, you name it. This sorcerer's description is of course our ultimate nemesis; we don't want to believe that we are being raised for food. In this sense, naturally, the sorcere rs' tradition is at total variance with any other kind of spiritual tradition. S orcerers say, and believe me, not out of cynicism, that every ideal we deal with in terms of spiritual traditions, religions, etc, is a device concocted by the flyers to keep us in a lull. Imagine our disquietude upon examining, weighing an d pondering this proposition. through recapitulating we can acquire a hard discipline which is the only means by which we can make ourselves unpalatable to the flyers. Sorcerers assert that the only awareness which cannot be eaten is the awareness produced by iron-hande d discipline. The recapitulation seems to create a condition of fluidity and det ermination which is the discipline that sorcerers talk about, not the discipline of compulsive, routinary behavior. http://www.nagual.net/ixtlan/interviews/kin dred1.html

'We are perceivers,' he proceeded. 'The world that we perceive, though, is an il lusion. It was created by a description that was told to us since the moment we were born. 'We, the luminous beings, are born with two rings of power, but we u se only one to create the world. That ring, which is hooked very soon after we a re born, is reason, and its companion is talking. Between the two they concoct and maintain the world. 'So, in essence, the world that your reason wants to sus tain is ' the world created by a description and its dogmatic and inviolable rul es, which the reason learns to accept and defend. 'The secret of the luminous beings is that they have another ring of power which is never used, the will. The trick of the sorcerer is the same trick of the ave rage man. Both have a description; one, the average man, upholds it with his rea son; the other, the sorcerer, upholds it with his will. Both descriptions have t heir rules and the rules are perceivable, but the advantage of the sorcerer is t hat will is more engulfing than reason The diagram in the ashes had two epicentres; one he called 'reason', the other, 'will'. 'Reason' was interconnected directly with a point he called 'talking'. T hrough 'talking', 'reason' was indirectly connected to three other points, 'feel ing', 'dreaming' and 'seeing'. The other epicentre, 'will', was directly connect ed to 'feeling', 'dreaming' and 'seeing'; but only indirectly to 'reason' and 't alking'. I remarked that the diagram was different from the one I had recorded years befo re. 'The outer form is of no importance,' he said. 'These points represent a human b

eing and can be drawn in any way you want.' 'Do they represent the body of a human being?' I asked. 'Don't call it the body,' he said. 'These are eight points on the fibres of a lu minous being. A sorcerer says, as you can see in the diagram, that a human being is, first of all, will, because will is directly connected to three points, fee ling, dreaming and seeing; then next, a human being is reason. This is properly a centre that is smaller than will; it is connected only with talking.' "What are the other two points, don Juan?'.....'We may say that every one of us brings to the world eight points. Two of them, reason and talking, are known by everyone. Feeling is always vague but somehow familiar. But only in the world of sorcerers does one get fully acquainted with dreaming, seeing and will. And fin ally, at the outer edge of that world one encounters the other two. The eight po ints make the totality of oneself.' He showed me in the diagram that in essence all the points could be made to conn ect with one another indirectly. I asked him again about the two mysterious remaining points. He showed me that t hey were connected only to 'will' and that they were removed from 'feeling', 'dr eaming* and 'seeing", and much more distant from 'talking' and 'reason'. He poin ted with his finger to show that they were isolated from the rest and from each other. 'Those two points will never yield to talking or to reason,' he said. 'Only will can handle them. Reason is so removed from them that it is utterly useless to t ry figuring them out. He touched my head and said that that was the centre off 'reason' and 'talking'. The tip of my sternum was the centre of I 'feeling'. The area below the navel w as 'will'. 'Dreaming' was on the right side against the ribs. 'Seeing' on the le ft. He said that sometimes in some warriors 'seeing' and 'dreaming' were on the right side. We are perceivers. We are an awareness; we are not objects; we have no solidity. We are boundless. The world of objects and solidity is a way of making our pass age on earth convenient. It is only a description that was created to help us. W e, or rather our reason, forget that the description is only a description and t hus we entrap the totality of ourselves in a vicious circle from which we rarely emerge in our lifetime.

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