Practices
Practice: The Shape of Focus
Ref: M20 Ann,p 572
Practice means “to make” or “to do.” And so, a mage – guided by her beliefs – does her magick through a practice. As the name suggests, a practice is also practical, turning abstract
ideas into useful activities.
When your character makes things happen, she employs
a practice that serves her needs and beliefs. One mage might
petition her gods, whereas another dons her business suit,
applies subtle cosmetics, and goes off to work her Will at the
shareholders’ meeting. In game terms, every mage has a practice;
in story terms, that practice comes from that character’s culture,
beliefs, and circumstances.
An appropriate practice can also spell the difference between coincidental magick and vulgar magick.
Name | Summary | Associated Paradigms |
Associated Abilities |
Common<Instruments |
---|---|---|---|---|
Alchemy | In all its forms, alchemy demands discipline. An alchemist studies principles, experiments with materials, deciphers codes, puzzles over symbols, works in his lab, creates useful goodies, and constantly challenges and refines himself. For him, the practical applications of alchemy – drugs, acids, and other chemical compounds; quick wits; foreign languages; and other techniques of transformation – take a back seat to the self-perfection at the core of this venerable Art | A Mechanistic Cosmos; Bring Back the Golden Age; Creation’s Divine and Alive; Divine Order and Earthly Chaos; Everything is Data; Might is Right; Tech Holds All Answers | Art, Crafts, Cryptography, Enigmas, Esoterica, Medicine, Pharmacopeia, Science (chemistry) | Books, brews and potions, designs, devices, drugs, formulas, laboratories |
The Art of Desire/ Hypereconomics | ...the Art of Desire focuses upon achieving your desires through finding out what other people desire and then using that knowledge to enact
your Will. This discipline involves plenty of self-perfection: athletic exercise, meditation, mental gymnastics, self-reflection, etiquette, and other social graces. Fashionable clothes, subtle yet influential cosmetics, poise and grace, martial arts, seduction, intimidation, and the trappings of wealth and refinement provide essential tools for this practice. Although it’s most readily associated with the Syndicate and its original form as the High Guild, the Art of Desire has adherents throughout the mortal and Awakened worlds. | |||
Chaos Magick | It’s not what you think it is. Although the term “chaos magic” tends to be associated with demons and evil, occultists understand chaos magick as a postmodern and often
improvisational Art. Like other mystic practices, it emphasizes knowledge, reflection, and other forms of self-improvement. This revolutionary inversion of traditional mystic disciplines, however, depends upon personal intuition and interpretation; individual freedom; a deliberately iconoclastic approach; and an often subversive use of pop-culture symbols, social behaviors, and improvised designs. Chaos magick spits in the face of established dogma. Often regarded by outsiders as a Left-Hand Path, it’s a sex, drugs, and rock-n-roll sort of practice, raising and directing personal energy (that is, Quintessence) through extreme experiences. |