The Requirements of Intent – The Two One-Way Bridges

Castaneda reflects on his “here and here” experience, prompting don Juan to explain that such a “movement of the assemblage point” is a sorcerer’s goal, achieved through impeccability and curtailing self-reflection to access inner energy. Don Juan recounts his own initiation by nagual Julian, who, to teach him about the spirit, threw him into a raging river, forcing a shift into silent knowledge and split perception. Don Juan later learns from nagual Elías that Julian’s act was a masterful display of “waking up intent” to bring him to the “third point”—freedom of perception. This “third point” is a bridge from “reason” (the current human state) back to “silent knowledge,” accessible through “concern” and “pure understanding,” with the spirit responding to “gestures” of true abandon rather than words.

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The Requirements of Intent – The Third Point

Castaneda recounts an experience where his reason ceased, leading to a state of “silent knowledge” where his assemblage point shifted, allowing him to perceive “here and here”—being in multiple places at once. This enabled him to perceive a real jaguar, which don Juan explained was a manifestation of the spirit that moved Castaneda’s assemblage point through intent. Don Juan emphasizes that this “third point” is freedom of perception, beyond typical two-dimensional reality, and highlights how average men’s self-reflection prevents them from recognizing this accessible freedom.

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