Thursday, July 9, 2015

Things That I Like: A Few Systems of Magic for the Taking

Like everything, these ideas are free for the taking. Consider them to be public domain. Just… grab them, and use them, and stuff. That’s what they’re there for.
  1. Financial Astrology
Developed in the throes of the Great Depression, financial astrology is the art of using magic to make money, and using money to make magic. To those that have sworn the oaths, the signs of the stars unfold to their understanding. They are able to decipher the currents of the future, at least so far as it pertains to currency. The stock market becomes child’s play to them that have sold their eyes and their hearts to the great god Pluto, and the more learned among them can predict its changes to the minute.
What they do next is based upon a principle that everyone knows: Wealth shapes the world. Only the merchant-kings know how true that statement is, however. Currency has an effect on the ley lines of the world, which themselves have subtle effects on the environment when “plucked” by the presence of money. Where a ley line is plucked, and how strongly (that is, how much money is affecting it) determines what happens, so that the right amount in the right place can lead to decreased social stability in another city.
With the right plucks nearly anything can be done, with the caveat that ley lines influence only living organisms and not natural systems like the weather, and so the financial astrologers carefully manipulate the flow of money to get the changes that they want (which is not to say that others want it— they are not a unified lot). With enough money, ley lines can be plucked so severely that they actually shift in place.
The one thing about their condition that makes life difficult is that they cannot physically handle money. Credit cards and checks are okay, but actual money catches fire or melts in their hands, leaving them with dross (and burned hands).
  1. Orthosurgy
A system of magic based upon the principle of sympathy, using teeth and nails as foci. While teeth are reasonably potent and retain their power until destroyed, a single full nail is useful for no more than a couple of weak spells, to say nothing of a mere clipping. They may, however, be used for reanimation, whereas teeth can do nothing to one that has died (including those that have suffered death temporarily), and reanimation is not a terribly powerful spell. Full resurrection may require years of clippings, but to turn a corpse into a shambling walker bound to one’s will for a few weeks requires only a few nails.
However, whether they be teeth or nails foci must be taken, not given. This is why children leave offerings for the tooth fairy. It robs the leavings of their power by explicitly giving them out to anyone who would be interested in taking them.
The power of orthosurgy is a gift, however, twisted, and it must be passed on to another in order to persist. Without a declared heir, the death of an orthosurgeost permanently reduces their number by one. Heirs may not be replaced except in the case of premature death, so orthosurgeosts are careful about speaking the “naming words.” Orthosurgeosts become more inhuman as time goes on, first in mind and eventually in body. Among other things they are prone to developing slight kleptomaniacal tendencies, long fingers, and in some cases fingers without nails. Their teeth may change shape and their stomachs change, both in response to whichever diet the orthosurgeost prefers.
  1. Lychery
A kind of ritual magic that makes you the temporary channel for a Power, timeless things from outside existence. The exact ritual sets bounds on the Power and guides its actions toward the desired result: healing, transformation of the body, the unleashing of fire, or whatever other effect is desired.
Lyches know how to use preexisting magical patterns easily enough but experimentation is dangerous. The slightest error can give the Power summoned too much free reign or, if the binding is successful, force it to take an undesired action. Accordingly, innovation is very slow.
Another limitation is tied to candles, which are necessary to strengthen the invoked Power— it might be said that a Power is like a hole of a certain shape which supplies nothing of itself but determines the shape of whatever is put through it. Each candle adds to the potency at hand to make the spell 1.05 times greater than before.
Repeated channeling of Powers affects the body, most principally granting longevity. A lych’s mind is not equipped for this, however, and the weight of memory proves an eventual but inevitable strain. Suicide among very old lyches is common, as senility begins to settle in over the course of centuries. On the bright side, however, senility within the context of a conventional lifespan is far rarer, due to the efforts of lyches to ward off the effects of aging wherever they can, for as long as they can.
If you want some quick figures: 15 candles are necessary to make a spell 2.078 times as powerful as with one candle. 33 to reach 5.003x potency, 50 candles gives it a potency of 11.467x, and 93 candles before the potency overtakes the number of candles at a potency of 93.455x. 100 candles gives a potency of 131.501x and 200 gives a potency of 17,292.58x.
  1. Greensinging
In the earliest days of Man, he was taught language. The language that was taught him was the language of the world— of life and death, or connection and destruction, of bonds and the severing thereof— and Man’s teachers were the birds. But Man’s first act was to sever the bonds that were between him and the birds, so that they would hold no power over him, and ever since that time the birds have spoken no word that can be understood.
Or so goes the story of the langua verde, a peculiar tongue consisting of whistles and other sounds in marked similarity to bird song. Greensingers, or Green Men, sing songs of empathy and decay. The songs allow them to feel what others are feeling and transmit the same. Skilled Greensingers can learn how to feel falsely, to give fear when they are calm, or to calm the crowd though they have also been roused to anger. The songs also allow them to accelerate the natural processes of destruction by spying weaknesses, magnifying flaws, weakening strengths, and instilling, nurturing, and hastening all rot.
Your turn: What’s your favorite system of magic, and what do you like so much about it?
R. Donald James Gauvreau works an assortment of odd jobs, most involving batteries. He has recently finished a guide to comparative mythology for worldbuilders, available herefor free. He also maintains a blog at White Marble Block, where he regularly posts story ideas and free fiction, and writes The Culture Column, an RPG.net column with cultures ready for you to drop into your setting. 

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Applying History #2: Disciples of the Peacock Angel

The Dawaaseen (singular: Daasin), more commonly known as Yezidis or Yazidis, are an ethnic and religious group based primarily in Iraq but also in Armenia, Turkey, &c. They believe that they are holders of a cultural tradition which was otherwise lost when the Kurdish people converted to Islam.
For most of their history they have been most well-known for allegations of devil worship, but some people nowadays may know them from reports of persecution by Daish in Iraq. Many have expatriated from Iraq, Turkey, and elsewhere in the Middle East to Europe, especially Germany (which now has more than 100,000 Dawaaseen).
Some sources disagree on certain details of the Daasin religion. For the sake of conserving space I’ve erred on the side of the majority view. Not even YezidiTruth.org— which is dedicated to dispelling false beliefs about the Dawaaseen— appears to be written by the people it describes, so I am left only with secondhand sources.

Thursday, June 18, 2015

The Idea Emporium #6: The Agloanikoi [2/3]

The Agloanikoi’s living relatives, who are about as close to them as chimpanzees are to humans, are omnivores, and it appears that in this respect the “shepherd bugs” bear the strongest resemblance to their most common recent ancestor. The Collopodus clade distinguished itself with females that specialized in a carnivorous diet. To grossly simplify the evolutionary process and risk implying that it has goals, meat-eating proved to be a wildly successful idea for females, who had to bear the bulk of the energy demands placed by reproduction. They will, in fact, even eat one or more of their husbands if they have to, not unlike some arthropods. It’s obviously not their preferred choice, since that can make things harder in the long run, but you gotta do what you gotta do (the other males will eat the plant matter in the poor sap’s digestive tract).

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Worldbuilding Wednesday: Drug-free Dystopia

Wherein I take some time to expand a concept of mine and see how far I can take it. I have something like 50 pages of story ideas (just the ones I've sorted, moreover) and this will be an exercise in seeing how much potential they have. 

In an inversion of a popular type of dystopia, the masses are not kept on drugs. In fact, it is only the rulers that are even permitted to do drugs. Everything else will follow from this.

Why this peculiar policy? Let's take a page from the Rastafari, among others, and say that the issue is about the power of drugs to open and enlighten the mind. The rulers are concerned with their, ahem, creative power and their ability to broaden the mind.

With this decided we begin to see our dystopic world take shape. It is very straightedge below the top: alcohol, marijuana, acid, and all the rest are banned. And not just this. What the rulers want is for the ruled to see and know only this world. Visions, ideas, and thoughts of other worlds cannot be permitted. Accordingly, while fiction exists it is wholly literary, mainstream, and thisworldly. Historical fiction is popular, but The Lord of the Rings is known only to the rulers.

Religion is scoffed at by the proles. To the extent that this is possible it is not even known of. Simply telling children about religion before they are old enough is considered to be a form of abuse, endangering a developing mind. Total positivists, the hold that only what can be determined is real and even in the sciences care is taken to avoid conjecture: Nobody even guesses at what color a dinosaur may have been, and remains credible for long.

Pics or it shouldn't even be talked about, you could say (human testimony is allowed, of course, although we might say that the world is such a surveillance state that it isn't allowed and criminal trials proceed along well enough without human testimony).

Schizophrenics, &c &c are taken away in the dead of night. The proles fear mental disorders, thinking that the mad are punished for being caught in fantasies even against their will, but in truth these are potential additions to the ruling class. Should they be capable of functioning and telling the difference between this reality and any other that they may be experiencing then they are given position and authority commensurate to this ability. Otherwise they are sealed up for their own good, fisher kings in gilded cages who want for nothing and are given just that much power outside of their luxurious cells.

Conversely, the rulers are full of religion. They are fit to burst at the seams with it. The religions of today's world have been mixed, remixed, dosed with aced, and served ala mode in order to satisfy the otherworldly, Mantic focus of the rulers. Their God is technicolor and their sacrament is the mescaline wafer and the cup of wine, but make no mistake: they have gods and they have sacraments.

The rulers dream of other worlds than this to sing in. Their vision for this world is excited and enflamed by their visions of other worlds, and they are not distractible.

That is really what it comes down to. The masters of this world know the power of bread and circuses. Keep the people focused on the here and now, not even giving them space enough to consider tomorrow. Give them what they think they want but which never truly fills them. Make sure that the supply never runs out, and make sure that they know whose hand is on the tap. Most of all, though, don't let them catch a whiff of true wonder, of genuine ecstasy, of that moment where meet the falling angel and the rising ape.

The rulers do not generally consider their religions and visions to be objective truths. These are experiences. They are subjective things. But they are subjective things that inspire them to look at the world with fresh eyes and see behind the curtain, and for this reason they are to be equally treasured in oneself and feared in those that elsewise would call themselves thy servant.

Reality television will be widepspread. Not because it is shitty and pathetic but because it is real. The Controllers probably don't mind the existence of highbrow reality shows any more than they do the shitty ones. Probably there is a certain segment of the population which requires the stimulation of the more complex, ingenious reality shows if they are to be kept content.

Logban or a similar language is in use. Beautiful, perhaps, but with the utmost precision of language. The idea is not to create a Newspeak-style effect where the proles cannot possibly think of certain off-limits concepts, but to reinforce a certain aesthetic value.

Perhaps there will be no fiction at all, only reality shows and documentaries and news channels and nonfiction books.

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

Thursday, June 11, 2015

Things That I Like: 5 More Ways to Use Dragons

  1. The old man with jobs for heroes is a dragon
So dragons can shapeshift in your world? And they don’t always get along with each other?
Think back to The Hobbit and put your Imagining Hat back on. Imagine that Gandalf was a dragon. That Smaug was a rival of his, for territory or treasure or something else, or maybe just an undesirable loose cannon and potential threat somewhere two or three centuries down the line.
So Gandalf-the-dragon tracks down some dwarfs that have a personal stake in the issue, gives them advice, and sends them in the right direction. Even helps them pick up a hobbit for the journey, too. And the thrush that mentions Smaug’s Achilles’ heel? Shapeshifted Gandalf again.

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Worldbuilding Wednesday: Parasite-Concepts from Alternate or Failed Universes

Wherein I take some time to expand a concept of mine and see how far I can take it. I have something like 50 pages of story ideas (just the ones I've sorted, moreover) and this will be an exercise in seeing how much potential they have. 

This one isn't so stream-of-consciousness, since I had some time to think about it before starting. Oops. I try to not do that, but sometimes it happens anyway. 

There are things that have been destroyed and written out of reality: histories that no longer happened, colors that don't exist anymore, emotions that nobody can experience now, lifeforms that never walked the Earth... Perhaps they're what was erased from the drawing board once God decided what would be included, or the remnants of dead universes, but they existed once and now they have ceased to exist so completely that for all intents and purposes they never existed. 

Except, they sort of do. Some of them, anyway. 

Thursday, June 4, 2015

The Hope Spot #8: Personalizing the Mythos

“If you want to write horror, think about the things that really scare you. Think about all the stuff that makes your mouth go dry and your insides shake uncontrollably. Go deep inside, so deep it scares you. Go to that place you refuse to bring to light because it makes you ill to think about such things… If you want to show the reader what scares him, then show him what scares you. Go deep and face your fear.” Elizabeth Peake. 

H. P. Lovecraft was afraid of a bunch of things. He had nightmares and night terrors (especially about being abducted by monsters), he had a weak constitution and was easily made sick by the cold, and didn’t like the sea, either. He was also afraid of people that weren’t white, foreigners that weren’t English, either of those kinds of people mixing it up with nice WASPs either geologically or socially, and so on.