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			The LAM 
			Statement 
			Sub-Figura vel Liber VIII  
  
			
			Lam, an extra-terrestrial 
			Intelligence with whom Crowley 
			was in astral contact in 1919.  
			 
			This drawing by Crowley 
			appeared in an exhibition held 
			in Greenwich Village, New York, 
			in the same year  
  
			
			  
			
			Aleister 
			Crowley and the LAM Statement 
			by Ian Blake  
			
			 
			Thus far in my articles on the paranormal I have tried to convey an 
			impression of pragmatism and common sense, dealing almost 
			exclusively with the brain, its functions and -- more especially -- 
			its dysfunctions.  
			
			  
			
			My aim has always been to explain various types of 
			phenomena without explaining them away. Magic and the occult have 
			been mentioned on a number of occasions, but only in passing, as a 
			side issue, as it were. In the main I have confined myself to 
			"armchair UFOlogy", leaving the wider implications (magical, 
			spiritual, etc.) to other, possibly more capable hands.  
			
			  
			
			It is a fact however, that one seldom 
			gets very far in these areas without coming across occult doctrine 
			in one form or another, usually updated and translated into "new 
			age" jargon. In this article I intend to examine some of the more 
			esoteric aspects of UFOlogy, hopefully laying the ground-work for 
			further investigation.  
			  
			
			
			 
			 
			MAGICK 
			RELIEVES BOREDOM 
			
			 
			UFO research, even of the armchair variety, calls for a high degree 
			of mental flexibility. One can draw up general rules to assist in 
			analysis, but it is necessary to keep an open mind at all times, and 
			be prepared for the exception that cuts across all previous 
			theories.  
			
			  
			
			This is especially true of the contacteé syndrome, which 
			serves as a crystallization point for all manner of complexes and 
			repressed desires. My own, albeit limited experience has led me to 
			the realization that most contacteés are basically no different from 
			the rest of us. They are in fact perfectly ordinary human beings 
			suffering from familiar symptoms, particularly those of boredom, 
			alienation and sheer lack of purpose.  
			
			  
			
			But what of the exceptions to this rule? 
			What, for instance of the occultist who strives by an effort of will 
			to establish contact with trans-spatial entities? According to a 
			recent edition of the OTO (Ordo Templi Orientis) journal Khabs, 
			 
			
				
				"the central concern of magic is communion with discarnate or 
			extraterrestrial intelligences."  
			 
			
			It is to this end that much 
			contemporary occultism is predicated. As long ago as 1918 Aleister 
			Crowley conducted a series of experiments in what would today be 
			termed channeling, or "induced contacteeism". (This is of course a 
			simplification of what actually took place, employed here for the 
			sake of convenience. ) Since then, several occultists, notably 
			Michael Bertiaux in the 1960s and a group of OTO initiates in the 
			1970s, have carried out similar magical workings.  
			
			  
			
			What is more their efforts in many cases 
			have been crowned with remarkable success - at least if the official 
			OTO party line is to be believed. This in turn raises serious 
			implications for the entire field of UFO research. In order to place 
			these implications in their proper context, it is first of all 
			necessary to say a few words regarding Aleister Crowley’s
			
			Amalantrah 
			Working, a series of visions and trance-communications received 
			circa January - March 1918 by the oddly-named Roddie Minor, who was 
			at that time acting as Crowley’s Scarlet Woman.  
			
			 
			It is not my intention in writing this article to provide an 
			introduction to the wider field of occultism, or to 
			
			Thelemic 
			doctrine per se. For readers who would prefer a clear and reasonably 
			objective summary of the Amalantrah Working, Crowley’ s own "Magical 
			Record" is invaluable. So too are Roddie Minor’s own thoughts on the 
			matter. 
			 
			
			  
			
			Readers who do not have access to either of these are best 
			advised to consult John Symond’s "The Great Beast," which gives a 
			well-balanced and coherent account of what actually took place.  
			 
			  
			
			
			 
			CROWLEY 
			IN NEW YORK 
			
			 
			The facts of the matter are briefly as follows: At the outbreak of 
			WWI, Crowley set sail from his native England aboard the Lusitania, 
			bound for the USA. Arriving in high spirits, he took up residence in 
			an apartment on New York’s bustling West 36th street and there 
			divided his time more or less equally between acts of sex magic and 
			the composition of crackpot pro-German propaganda for The 
			Fatherland.  
			
			  
			
			Following an expedite to Vancouver via San Francisco and 
			New Orleans he returned to New York and moved into furnished rooms 
			on Central Park West. Roddie Minor, a married woman living apart 
			from her husband, joined him there circa September/October 1917 and 
			together they set about exploring the wilder shores of magica 
			sexualis.  
			
			 
			Crowley’s personal record for October 1, 1917 describes Minor as 
			"big, muscular, (and) sensual." John Symonds adds that she was 
			"broad-shouldered and pleasant-faced." In addition to these homely 
			attributes, she also possessed a well-developed clairvoyant faculty. 
			Under the influence of hashish and opium she described to Crowley a 
			series of archetypal visions involving (among others) a king, a 
			small boy and a wizard who introduced himself as "Amalantrah" - who 
			delivered exhortations to "find the egg."  
			
			  
			
			The reaction of most 
			people would no doubt be to view these accounts as nothing more than 
			drug-induced hallucinations having no wider significance, but 
			Aleister Crowley was no ordinary man. According to Symonds, he, 
			
				
				"made no attempt to interpret this 
				material in terms of unconsciousness. To him the characters and 
				incidents of mescal visions were more real than anything reality 
				or the ego could provide. He would not have been surprised to 
				meet... Amalantrah strolling up Fifth Avenue. The wizard would 
				have descended onto the plane of illusion, that is all." 
				 
			 
			
			At length, feeling that Amalantrah had 
			nothing further to impart, Crowley decamped for Europe, leaving 
			Roddie Minor to her own devices. But the story doesn’t end there. It 
			would be beyond my competence to provide a complete and faithful 
			account 
			 of the
			Amalantrah Working and its aftermath. The last word 
			on the subject will probably never be written.  
			
			  
			
			For the purpose of 
			this article I need only observe that Crowley was not interested in 
			ideas for their own sake, but in results. The details are unclear, 
			but it seems that at some stage during the proceedings he underwent 
			a form of contactee experience involving a large-headed entity now 
			known to occultists as Lam. (image 
			right) 
			
			 
			Lam, (whose name derives from the Tibetan word for "way" or "path") 
			later became the subject of a portrait by Crowley, drawn from life 
			and imbued with a haunting inner quality of its own. The original 
			was first exhibited in New York in 1919 and has been reproduced 
			several times since then, most recently in the third issue of "Starfire" 
			magazine. Although lacking the crude power of Crowley’s more 
			extravagant canvases and murals, it is nevertheless a remarkable 
			piece of work.  
			
			  
			
			The subject is depicted in extreme 
			close-up and appears somehow dwarfish, despite the fact that there 
			is no indication of scale in the overall composition. The head is 
			large, smooth and hairless, tapering to a pointed chin. The mouth is 
			slitlike; the eyes extend part-ways around the sides of the face. 
			 
			
			  
			
			There is no suggestion of clothing beyond what appears to be a cloak 
			buttoned at the neck, nor does the entity have any ears. In short, 
			Lam resembles nothing so much as a typical UFO occupant of the 
			"examiner" type (what Americans would call "greys". )  
			 
			  
			
			
			 
			ASK AND 
			YE SHALL RECEIVE 
			
			 
			Crowley’s portrait of Lam passed into the hands of Kenneth Grant 
			circa 1945 following an astral working in which he and Crowley were 
			jointly involved. Grant, who was authorized in the early ’50s to 
			work the first three grades of the OTO, is now widely perceived as 
			Crowley’s natural heir and successor. His interest in CETI-type 
			phenomena is of long-standing duration. In 1955 for instance, he 
			announced the discovery of a trans-plutonian planet called Isis, and 
			simultaneously established an order called the New Isis Lodge OTO 
			for the purpose (among others) of contacting higher intelligences.
			 
			
			  
			
			A similar situation arose some 30 years 
			later in the late 1980s, when Grant allegedly received ’ strong 
			intimations’ to the effect that Crowley’s portrait of Lam, 
			
				
				"is the 
			present focus of an extraterrestrial - and perhaps trans- 
			plutonic-energy which the OTO is required to communicate at this 
			critical period..."  
			 
			
			I have no idea as to the nature of these ’ 
			intimations’, besides which, writing about magic is a dubious 
			enterprise at best, fraught with semantic difficulties. Perhaps the 
			best option in an article as necessarily as brief as this, is to 
			quote directly from "The Lam Statement", a text circulated among OTO 
			initiates with a view to 
			
				
				"regularizing the mode of rapport 
				and constructing a magical formula for establishing 
				communication with Lam."  
			 
			
			We are told first of all that:  
			
				
				"It has been considered advisable by 
				the Sovereign Sanctuary to regularize and to examine results 
				achieved by individual members of the OTO who have established 
				contact with the magical entity known as Lam. We are therefore 
				founding an Inner Cult of this dikpala for the purpose of 
				amassing precise accounts of such contacts...  
				 
				The portrait of (Lam) which is reproduced in "The Magical 
				Revival" may be used as the visual focus, and can serve as
				the Yantra of the Cult; the name Lam is the Mantra; and the Tantra 
				is the union with the dikpala by entering the Egg of Spirit 
				represented by the Head. Entry may be affected by projecting 
				consciousness through the eyes"...And elsewhere in a section 
				titled "The Magical Procedure"  
			 
			
			The Mode of Entering the Egg may proceed 
			as follows. Each votary is encouraged to experiment and evolve his 
			own method from the basic procedure:  
			
				
					
					1)  Sit in silence before 
					the portrait.  
					2)  Invoke mentally my silent repetition the Name.  
					3)  If response is felt to be positive...enter the Egg 
					and merge with That which is within, and look out through 
					the entity’s eyes on what appears now to the votary an alien 
					world.  
					4)  Seal the Egg, i.e., close the eyes of Lam and 
					await developments.  
				 
			 
			
			The Remainder of "The Lam Statement" 
			deals with the practicalities of invocation and banishing in a 
			ritual context. Some parts of the text are esoteric, having to do 
			with the Cabala and other such difficult matters (my knowledge of 
			occultism is largely theoretical; I have very little practical 
			experience); others are remarkably straightforward. It is difficult 
			to assess whether the claims made for "LAMeditation" have any basis 
			in fact. 
			 
			
			  
			
			Certain objections inevitably remain open. Nevertheless, we 
			should be cautious about assuming that it is all pure imagination.
			 
			
			  
			
			There is a definite residue of data here 
			that cannot be dismissed out of hand. The real question now facing 
			us is simply: what exactly happens at times like this? What is the 
			basis of these extraordinary accounts? Do we, in order to explain 
			them need to invoke the concept of ’trans- plutonian entities’, or 
			are we dealing instead with archetypes dredged up from the 
			collective unconscious? There is pervasive evidence to support both 
			alternatives. All it takes is a willingness to look at the facts.
			 
			 
			Perhaps the most important point arising from "The Lam Statement" is 
			simply that contactee type experiences can be induced at will. There 
			are in fact a number of important parallels between "LAMeditation" 
			and the broader issue of "contacteeism" in general. Consider 
			John 
			Keel once remarked that "in most contacteé events the percipient is 
			alone...when the UFO contact occurs." This observation might equally 
			apply to the abductee syndrome. Once again the vast majority of all 
			cases are uncorroborated by hard evidence.  
			
			  
			
			Independent witness testimony is so rare 
			as to be virtually unknown. In short, whatever else it may be, 
			"alien contact" (I am loath to use the phrase without quotes) is 
			essentially a solitary experience. And so too is LAMeditation.  
			
			  
			
			"The 
			Lam Statement" makes this point in no uncertain terms, warning that 
			group working is considered inadvisable.  
			
				
				"Each votary should work in 
				isolation," it stresses, "or only with his or her magical 
				partner..IX  Working is held to be _extremely dangerous_ (sic 
				emphasis) in this area even if both partners are officially IX."
				 
			 
			
			The precise nature of this danger is not 
			specified but we are left in no doubt as to its reality.  
			 
			Nor do the similarities (with the contacteé experience) end there. 
			In common with most forms of magical procedure, rapport with Lam 
			requires stern self-discipline and dedication to a higher purpose. 
			Referring back to "The Lam Statement" we find that "adumbrations of 
			identity with Lam may be experienced as a strong sense of the 
			unreality or unfamiliarity of the "objective" universe. There is a 
			definite parallel here with the curious sense of dissociation 
			experienced by very many witnesses. In recent years there has been 
			an increasing acceptance that this sort of thing is not pure 
			delusion. Jenny Randles for instance, refers to it as the "Oz 
			Effect".  
			
			  
			
			Writing in "The Pennine UFO Mystery" she describes a 
			typical case in which the witnesses, 
			
				
				"said that they were not afraid: 
				indeed they were very strangely calm and subdued...isolated in 
				time and space as if removed from the real world and melded with 
				the UFO above them; only they and it existed..."  
			 
			
			Having personally experienced this odd 
			sensation on two separate occasions I am reluctant to dismiss it 
			merely as the subjective reaction of a highly-strung temperament. On 
			the other hand, however, I am equally reluctant to interpret it as 
			some form of rapport with extraterrestrial entities. I suspect that 
			most investigators would share my reluctance. 
			 
			
			  
			
			There is a tendency 
			nowadays, particularly among UFO researchers here in the U.K., to 
			dismiss the ETH (Extraterrestrial Hypothesis) as little more than a 
			form of American cultural imperialism, rather on par with Coca Cola, 
			McDonald’s, and Ninja Turtles. 
			
			  
			
			It is far more likely that we are 
			dealing here with some form of psychic response, the precise nature 
			of which is at present a mystery.  
			 
			  
			
			
			 
			THE EGG 
			AND I 
			
			  
			
			
			 
			In magical terms it is possible to identify Lam with the Dwarf Self, 
			the Silent Self, Harpocrates, Hadit, and perhaps most significantly, 
			the Babe In The Egg. Here I quote from Michael Staley’s forward to 
			"The Lam Statement" in "Starfire" vol. 1 no. 3:  
			
				
				"The Amalantrah is in many ways a 
				continuation of the Abuldiz Working of several years previous. 
				In both of these Workings the symbolism of the egg featured 
				prominently. One of the earlier versions of the Amalantrah 
				Working ended with the sentence, "It’s all in the egg." During 
				the final surviving version of this Working, in reference to a 
				question about the egg, Crowley was told: "Thou art to go this 
				way."  
			 
			
			There is a certain danger in 
			constructing theories based on intuitive or inspired source 
			material. At this point I may be allowing my knowledge of UFOlogy to 
			influence my interpretation of the Lam text: (Inevitably some of my 
			assertions may seem to cross the line into pure fantasy; I can only 
			ask the reader to bear with me) I can’t help seeing in Roddie 
			Minor’s channeled references to "the egg" a parallel with various 
			issues relating to UFO research in general.  
			 
			Eggshaped UFOs are of course, by no means uncommon. There are dozens 
			of examples on file. The famous Soccoro, New Mexico case (April 24, 
			1964) springs readily to mind. So too do the Salem, Massachusetts 
			(July 16, 1952), Saigon, Vietnam (April 17, 1967), Levelland, Texas 
			(November 3, 1967); and White Sands, New Mexico (also November 3, 
			1967) sightings. Space and brevity preclude going into these cases 
			at length. Besides which, it would be to little purpose - a tenuous 
			connection at best. Far more significant are those cases where the 
			witness seemingly enters what psychologists would term an "altered 
			State of consciousness".  
			
			  
			
			Testimonies abound in this respect. For 
			instance:  
			
				
				"The room is whitish," abductee 
				Stephen Kilburn recalled under hypnosis in 1978; "it’s curved on 
				the inside... I don’t think there are any angles in the room. 
				Everything is kind of milky or misty or something. it doesn’t 
				shine, but everything has that metallic glow to it."  
			 
			
			Accounts like this are by no means 
			uncommon, and it is unlikely that all are pure fabrication. But what 
			is the alternative? We seem to be dealing here with something very 
			similar to the process of LAMeditation which, it will be recalled, 
			entails "entering the egg and merging with that which is within." 
			This recognition is important, for it leads us once again to the 
			suspicion that the abduction syndrome may have something in common 
			with what is traditionally called "magic".  
			 
			Before we allow ourselves to be convinced however, it is worth 
			taking into account John Rimmer’s observation that the witness in 
			this case, "one of a number investigated by Budd Hopkins, had no 
			conscious memory of an abduction before the investigation." The 
			phrase I have underlined is important, not least because the Lam 
			procedure also involves a form of hypnosis, albeit self-administered 
			and -regulated. Rimmer adds that, 
			
				
				"the UFO abduction as a distinct 
				phenomenon exists as a result of the process of hypnotic 
				regression."  
				  
				
				And again: "...to a very great 
				extent the evidence for alien abductions stands or falls on the 
				reliability of memories recalled through regression, and the 
				techniques of hypnosis themselves."  
				
				(Budd Hopkins and others do report 
				that many abduction events are recalled without the aid of 
				hypnosis-but bear with Mr. Blake here-ed.)  
  
				
				  
			 
			
			STEP INTO MY 
			PARLOR... 
			
			 
			These comments obviously go to the very heart of the matter. In real 
			terms most accounts gained under hypnosis are so vague and imprecise 
			as to be virtually worthless. The sensible reaction to them must 
			inevitably be that they contain a certain amount of "confabulated" 
			material, expressing the repressed desires of the unconscious mind. 
			Hilary Evans seems to be referring to something of this sort in 
			"Visions * Apparitions * Alien Visitors" when he asks,  
			
				
				"Are we to suppose that, 
				subconsciously, all the witnesses... were unconsciously seeking 
				their encounter? And in that case do we have to suppose that 
				every UFO percipient is also responding to some subconscious 
				motivation?"  
			 
			
			I suspect so - at least as a broad 
			percept. I suspect furthermore, just as the vampires of eighteenth 
			century Hungary were unable to cross a threshold uninvited, so the 
			UFO entities of contemporary folklore are bound by a similar 
			constraint. Having given the matter careful consideration, I am 
			forced reluctantly to conclude that they too are unable to cross the 
			threshold of human experience without first being "invited" in some 
			way.  
			
			 
			In writing this article I have experienced none of the satisfaction 
			from seeing a range of facts fall neatly into place. At the end of 
			it all, I am left feeling just as bewildered as ever. In order to 
			assess "The Lam Statement" fully, it is necessary to consider the 
			possibility that there may indeed be such a thing as genuine alien 
			contact. Is it conceivable that some students of Thelema have indeed 
			established contact with non-human entities? I believe that it is. I 
			am not however, convinced that these entities are necessarily 
			"trans-plutonian".  
			
			  
			
			There is a certain amount of evidence 
			(internal consistency, cross-correspondences) to support such a 
			contention, but the matter by its very nature cannot be proved 
			scientifically. No matter. More than anything else, "The Lam 
			Statement" testifies to the power of the unconscious mind. 
			Translated out of occult terminology into the language of 
			conventional psychology, we can see that it describes a process of 
			self-exploration leading to a greater realization of inner 
			potential.  
			
			  
			
			Perhaps this is the best way to view it.  
			
			  
	
	
	
			
			  
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