Posts Tagged ‘books’

Further Back and Forward

Events | Posted by jmoore
Apr 18 2011

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2011 has so far been a very blessed year, and April is proving to be a very productive month.  I have had the pleasure of participating in some very fun events. On April 2nd, I participated in a reading  and launch for a chapbook put out by Don’t Forget to Flush Productions, the bathroom child of Chuck Byrd, who also read at the event. The book Holy Shit! It’s Tales from the Crapper #2 contains my piece, “The Alchemy of Shit” in which I wax poetic on territory originally mined by Coil on their album, Scatology, delving into the interior of Earth, claiming the muddy nigredo of the soul, and transforming all that shite into gold. Other great readers that night included Luke Radkey, and the marvelous Mark Flanigan.

This event was followed by a blast of a Neato Torpedo gig at Mayday last Thursday. We played alongside our comrades Hearts of Palm, and newcomers to the Cincinnati experimental music scene, Fractal Fractal, and Bad People.  It was all the more enjoyable as Andrew Hissett, was able to join us on the drum kit (the last few gigs he wasn’t able to play with us, though he is a member).  Brave Dave had made an excellent video, mostly of rocket ship space footage, and his step-daughter dancing, to go along with our astral domine. Thanks to the good folks at Art Damage, John Rich & John Lorenz for organizing the show.

Much of the year had also been spent getting some beuracratic paperwork done with regards to my radio show, On the Way to the Peak of Normal. Finally things are squared away. Much kudos go out to Brian “Thriftstore Leather” Riley for his infinite patience, and for being the best damn partner in radio crime one could ask for. (By- the-way tune in this Thursday 10PM to Midnight EST to WAIF 88.3 FM Cincinnati, for the second in our ongoing series exploring the Seven Deadly Sins. Our last sin was Gluttony, broadcast on Thanksgiving Day, now we are moving into the apocryphal realm of Vanity. Brian and I will be joined by Professor Nutbudder & Monster Syd.) Brian and I also recorded a special ultra-space-lounge-thrifty mix, this past winter, that will only be available to those who call in and pledge to our show in the upcoming spring memberthon. We have some other treats in store as well.

This week I’ll also be heading over to some secret studios in my neighborhood of Northside to add some electronic treatments to the second album of The Hela Cell, a boisterous avant-punk outfit I have been privileged to work with, headed by Dave Glasser and Dan Hall.  

Looking further forward, and faster, I was nudged by net friend, and fellow Silver Dusker, Dharma Buford to submit a proposal to the Esoteric Book Conference, which takes place in Seattle every fall. I wrote and submitted my proposal on the last possible day, the deadline.  I am delighted to announce, a little belatedly here on this blog anyway, that I will be speaking at this years Con, held on September 10th & 11th. My subject will be The Library Angel and It’s Oracle, and will be a further expansion and reinvigoration of the original paper I wrote.  I am very excited about this opportunity to meet so many people from the Occult and Pagan communities, some of whom I have been online friends with for years (especially those in the Hermaphroditic Order of the Silver Dusk & Horus Maat Lodge) but most of whom I’ve never met in person. I can feel the magick sizzling in the air already.

I have a number of other writing, radio, & recording projects in the works. Chuck and I are at work on a flip-book featuring a detective story from each of us, that will be a split from Aurore Press and Sothis Medias. Horus-Maat Lodge brother, and psychedelic rocker Adam Smietana and his band The New Captains are due to play a live set on the next edition of Silver Star Radio, on May 5th. Brian Riley is also working to bring some more live music to the air. We also have plans for Brian Burke to come to the studio and read his Anti-Car Manifesto, originally published in Streetvibes, and an appearance of Neato Torpedo on the air this June. Thanks for staying tuned to further developments in Astral Weather.

As usual none of this could have been possible without the support of my family and all my creative friends and allies!

Viral Emissions: The Work of Nigel Ayers

Dream | Posted by jmoore
Mar 28 2011

Nigel AyersI had the following dream on October 18th, 2009 while on my honeymoon in Maine.

Nocturnal Emissions Tribute
I am at home in Cincinnati. I am part of a Nocturnal Emissions tribute show that is going to happen at the Southgate House. In fact, I have to go to a meeting in the parlour of the Southgate House to discuss the show with other people involved. My friends Paul Bartley, Andrew Hissett and I will be performing one of cover versions of a Nocturnal Emissions song. Inside the parlor we talk about the logistics of having the Nocturnal Emissions tribute.

Then my wife and I are sitting on a park bench talking to a guy named Adam who works at the library with me. I call him Adam West, though I’m thinking of Herbert West. He is talking to me about the Nocturnal Emissions tribute show. He says, “You guy’s sounded good. Especially your keyboard part, the pattern you copied from my keyboard.” Images of going to his apartment to copy some code from his keyboard into my Korg MS2000 fill my mind. I am excited about the feedback.

It seems there was a tribute CD put together as well and a book. Nigel Ayers has come into town for for a release party associated with the cd/book. I am at the release party. People are talking about the book. Andy Hissett and I flip through it, really surprised by some of the contributors, such as Metallica, and other even more mainstream people. It is laid out in a very graphic, collage style. I point at the cover and say, “It looks like it was designed by R. Crumb” the famous comic artist. Adam is quick to point out that it wasn’t R. Crumb but another “crumb” who draws in a similar style and may even be a pen name of Crumb’s. Inside the tribute book is a book of R. Crumb’s comics about roots / blues / country musicians. I want to buy a copy of the tribute book. There are two versions. One is an oversized folio and is signed by Nigel Ayers. The other is octavo sized. I look at the octavo: it is made up of loosely bound cards, flexi vinyl discs, and other bric a brac. The folio is the same, but the flexi discs in it are so oversized I don’t think I’ll be able to put them on the turntable. So I decide to buy the small one and ask Nigel to sign it for me. It’s twenty bucks.

Then Nigel and I get to talking. I tell him I want to review the book for Brainwashed, “after I’ve had time to sit with it,” I say. He understands. I explain to him, “I reviewed your Nightscapes album.” He seems appreciative.

The book is held together by elastic bands going through a hole in one corner of the hard board. Holding it, it turns into a bracelet, made up of over-the-counter style drug packets, pill holders, the kind that are cased in plastic and foil, that you have to punch the foil out to get to the pill. This is an accessory that Nigel made to come with the book. Nigel says to me, “I’m a multimedia artist. I don’t limit myself to specific forms, only to what needs to be created.” He is a writer, musician, video and visual artists.

About a year after this dream I finally got in touch with Nigel. I shared the dream with him, and then I asked him if he would do an interview with me. The interview is finally done and is up now on Brainwashed.

I’ve also reviewed his recent album “In Dub Volume 1,”  and the  ‘zine he produced between 1990 and 1999, “Network News” which is now available as a print-on-demand trade paperback.

This dream also inspired some of my own work in another area. After having it I begin to obsess over “multidimensional art”.  Last winter I’d planned on writing a Manifesto of Multidimensional Art, or MOMA. I wrote some notes down, but nothing came of it, and yet the idea and desire to write it never left my mind. Somehow, at the beginning of march I was infused with an upsurge of inspiration (Thank you Mnemosyne).  Once I saw the way to structure the manifesto -in the pattern of the Qabalistic Tree of Life- writing it came easily. It is now available in the Spring Equinox edition of Silver Star: A Journal of New Magick. Shade, the editor, also published my poem Earth Goddess.

Image above is of Nigel Ayers.

Joan Grant’s Winged Pharaoh

Writing as Magick | Posted by jmoore
Dec 22 2010

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It is no secret that the author Joan Grant was a believer in reincarnation and she wrote “Winged Pharaoh” as a magical memoir told from the viewpoint of a life lived long ago, through the means of what she called her “far memory”. Writing while in a state of light-trance she was able to reach back into the past, claim knowledge of a previous life, and give it new life on the page. The vitality of the book speaks to the soul of the reader as it relays important information regarding the nature of dreams, magic, and the cosmos in an entertaining form. It is a manual on the nature of Egyptian seership disguised as a novel.

That Joan Grant had a highly developed moral character is in full evidence. There is nothing prudish in the story, though it doesn’t indulge in idle arousal either. War, love affairs, and the tribulations of everyday life are all part of the tale. What makes it an uplifting story is that the reader is able to take part in the main characters own growth. The book tells the story of an entire life from childhood to death at old age. Sekeeta is a daughter of the Pharaoh Atet. Many smaller stories and many dreams are woven through the book, which is as tightly wound as the strings of a lyre. In that sense the book is a fair imitation of life, reflecting many truths through its tangle of words. That it gives a clear reflection makes the work all the more valuable.

The first section of the book is about Sekeeta growing up with her brother Neyah, and how her dreams lead her to become a priestess of Anubis. Her father and mother recognize that their daughter has a gift for dreaming true and this brings her to the attention of the priest Ney-Se-Ra, who gives her further instructions that test and refine her abilities. Eventually when she has reached maturity, following the heroic death of her father in battle defending Kam (Egypt) from swarthy invaders, she goes to the temple for intensive training.

One of the most important things she develops here is her memory. Inscribing her dreams on wax tablets in the morning, Sekeeta learns to strengthen her memory. Her days and nights blend seamlessly together as she learns to remember all of her dream and out-of-body travels. Earlier in the book her mother had impressed upon her to “cherish memory above all things, for memory of yourself, which is the silver key, will stop your feet straying upon a path that you have found leads not to freedom…One day you will posses the golden key which unlocks the memories of others. And this will show you that there is no pit into which you may fall, from which others have not climbed, no great mountain though it may seem steep, that others have not conquered, even as you must conquer…”

While there she is also taught prayers to the various Egyptian deities. This one is good for any dreamer, “Anubis teach me to become a master of paths, so that I may be as thy symbol, the jackal, which can cross a desert on a night with no stars and leave a track which others may follow in the light. And by thy wisdom may I cross the chasm between this world and thine, and lead my people to thy country of peace.”

Throughout Sekeeta’s training the reader is taken on a journey into the mythic and imaginal realms of Egypt, to various astral locales utilized by the priesthood, such as the Place of Records “where the Keepers of the Great Scales of Tahuti take those of mankind who cannot themselves look into the past; and here they show them those things that are reflected in their future, so that upon Earth they know what, of their free will, they should do to adjust the balance.” The Place of Weather is visited, and also realms where teachers appear, where prayers are answered, and places where peace or harmony dwell. After visiting all of these realms Sekeeta must face seven ordeals before she becomes a winged one, the highest rank that may be attained in the temple.

It is also while at temple that she meets an architect from Minoas who initiates her into the mysteries of love becoming the father of her child. Sadly, because of her high duty to the land and its people this is a love that is never able to grow into old age. They must confine themselves to secret trysts in moonlit gardens. Eventually the relationship is cut off (after she has left the temple to become Pharaoh ruling alongside her brother) when Dio learns of her status as a co-ruler of the country.

thoth-wands_quI was also struck by certain similarities between Sekeeta and the Phrygian Goddess Cybele. Sekeeta was fond of lions, tamed one, and kept it as a pet and Cybele was raised by lions. Sekeeta gave birth to her son Pakee while seated on a throne, surrounded by seers, priests, and healers. There is an Anatolian figurine of Cybele giving birth on a throne that has two feline hand rests. Besides these similarities I also see Sekeeta and Cybele as the Queen of Wands in the Thoth tarot deck. If nothing else, both the Goddess and character in the novel have the qualities of a lioness.

Students of dreamwork and the Western Mystery Tradition alike would do well to read this book. For those who work with the Goddess Maat (and I speak here as a member of Horus Maat Lodge) there is much valuable insight about the Goddess of Truth in these pages. When Sekeeta becomes Pharaoh, ruling with the flail and the scales of justice, it is required of her to weigh the hearts of those who come before her seeking justice. Nothing can be hidden from her, least of all the Truth, for she is an adept who has purified her inner sight in service to the Gods and Goddesses of the Light. As a dream traveler who can look into a person’s soul, she has the ability to call out those things which are most noble in an individual, and adjure him or her to let the ignoble fall away. The justice dispensed is never cruel or injurious to a person. Balance is always sought to restore the scales and usually this is in a form of karmic yoga, i.e., a way to repay or work off the debt is found. This is a far cry from the punishments exacted by the U.S. legal system. Those who work in law would also do well to study the ethical system laid out in this book.

In one of his many wise counsels to his children Atet tells them, “The strong do not fear the contact of evil, for they are like the vulture who dies not when he eats filth, but of his special strength, thrives upon it, and after such a meal can fly to great heights.” Maat, Goddess of Truth was often depicted as having the wings of a vulture. For those who walk in Truth need not fear the evils of the world. Through the power of flight the dreamer is able to rise above evil and free herself from the control of base urges.

Many other elements of magic are taught or hinted at throughout the book. There is much about Egyptian knowledge of the soul, myths from their pantheon are taught and recounted, as well as talk of the healing arts in various forms: herbal, surgical, and energy healing. Seers played a vital role in the latter by being able to perceive the human energy field and adjust it as necessary for the benefit of the sick and injured.

Joan Grant is generous in sharing her knowledge of the magic power of song and poetry, from the folk magic of the people who worked the land to the high art of the temples. Music in the 21st century is not used in the same ways it was even a century ago. In the workplace music may be played to pass the time, to distract oneself from the actual work one is doing, or in the case of ambient music, as sonic backdrop and aid to thinking. Yet as little as 100 years ago and less, songs were still sung in the fields and other places of labor, while working. Songs were sung to babies, songs were sung while cooking. There were many types of music for many types of occasions and purposes. People made it themselves, and while the extremely talented were highly regarded, music was not an industry and the main purpose of it was not consumption. These musical practices lent themselves to greater enjoyment of work and living, bonded the community together, and made the job easier by acting as a type of folk magic spell. For instance in the story a fisherman sings,

“O my net! Swing widely for your master.

Call to the fish that you would give them shelter

from the monsters of the river.

O fish! Leave the caverns of the reeds

and drowse in the shadow of my boat.

Blow softly, wind! So that my boat glides through the water

quiet as a naked girl swimming at sunset.

O fish! Hear me and join your brothers in my net

so that it may be weighed with silver

so that all my family rejoice with me.”

There are other magical folk songs sprinkled throughout the book, each one crafted to give aid to the chores of living. Perhaps in this contemporary world, people need songs about programming code, making lattes, bioengineering, and recycling resources.

The final part of the book follows Sekeeta into the afterlife, as she takes the Boat of Time into the great hall wear dwell the Forty-two Assessors of the dead. The Feather of Truth is balanced against her heart. She leaves this “shadow-land of tears and pain” to join her ancestors and companions in the Light.

Image at top is of Maat, and below the Queen of Wands from the Thoth Deck.

Winged Pharaoh was first published in 1937.

Arcana V: Magic, Music and Mysticism

Magick, Musick, Textuality | Posted by jmoore
Nov 22 2010

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The fifth installment in John Zorn’s ongoing series anthologizing the writings, reflections, and critical insights of contemporary musicians and composers tackles subjects that are usually brushed aside in academic music journals, namely the occult. It is no secret that musicians, from time immemorial, have approached their art as if they were approaching the sacred. Magic and mysticism are twin strands woven into the fabric of musical history and they continue to excite new developments within the music of the present day. The numinous gets lip service in popular culture when the likes of Madonna parade their studies of Kabbalah, making the pursuit of arcane knowledge more of a fashion statement then an actual path and discipline. The best of independent music however has never shied away from being overtly esoteric, and is not watered down to suit the masses or make it more palatable to undiscerning ears. This book brings together essential writings from those who are comfortably at home in the intersection of magic and music, that liminal zone accessed by shamans and session players alike. As such it is a welcome addition to the library of not only the musical aspirant, but the magical as well. Read the rest on brainwashed…

On the Shelves of the Learned Ones of the Magick Library

Dream, Writing as Magick | Posted by jmoore
Oct 22 2010

Dreamers are readers. At least they will be, when they start tracking down clues and research leads our dreams often give us as homeWork assignments. Egyptian priests who specialized in dreaming were at one time called “The Learned Ones of the Magic Library” (thanks Robert). To gear up towards becoming a Learned One of dreams and of (winged) books, I’m posting this list of the dream books on my shelf. This is by no means meant to be an exhaustive bibliography of the many books available on dreams, but just a list of those books that have helped me the most in my own practice of dreaming.

Foundational Materials:

Conscious Dreaming by Robert Moss. This is Robert’s first book on dreams and lays the ground work for the subsequent developments and breakthroughs in his approach. It is a synthesis of shamanism and contemporary dreamwork that he has termed Active Dreaming. This is a good place to start for learning basic practices like dream re-entry. I’d read other books about dreams and been keeping a dream diary on and off for several years, but this is the book that really opened up my understanding of my own dreams.

The Three “Only” Things: Tapping the Power of Dreams, Cooincidence, and Imagination by Robert Moss. A basic manual for navigating the world by being attentive to dreams & synchronicity while using the power of imagination to become a Way Maker.

Dream Work: Techniques for Discovering the Creative Power in Dreams by Jeremy Taylor. Another “Aha” moment in this book, and a lot of good info for working with dreams in groups and using dreams for social change.

Going Deeper:

Soul Retrieval by Sandra Ingerman. After I had been journaling my dreams for a few years I started noticing a theme where I returned again and again to the sewers. Eventually I had the realization that a piece of myself had gone missing when I was in my teens. She writes that shaman’s “believed that whenever we suffer an emotional or physical trauma a part of our soul flees the body in order to survive the experience. The definition of soul that I am using is soul is our essence, life force, the part of our vitality that keeps us alive and thriving.” By keeping track of your dreams you will be given the opportunity to restore your vitality by reclaiming lost aspects of your soul. Some are even called to do this for others and the culture at large. This book is a vital bit of what Robert Moss calls “paleothic psychology”.

Singing the Soul Back Home: Shamanism In Daily Life by Caitlin Matthews. This is an excellent pan-traditional book exploring the world of shamanism. Well researched, the book is also filled with numerous practical exercises for “Walking Between the Worlds”. Magic is a practical art.

Dreamgates: Exploring the Worlds of Soul, Imagination, and Life Beyond Death by Robert Moss. Fun adventures in the imaginal realms including trips to the House of Time and other collaborative astral locales.

The Dreamers Book of the Dead: A Soul Travelers Guide to Death, Dying, and the Other Side by Robert Moss. It’s inevitable. You might as well start preparing for the transition. Perhaps there are family members and loved ones you need to reconnect with, or who are showing up in your dreams. This book will help you work with these situations.

Dreaming True by Robert Moss. A thorough exploration of dream precognition. Valuable also for an account of how Harriett Tubman used her dreams to help escaped slaves make it from the south to the north on the underground railroad.

The Secret History of Dreaming by Robert Moss. An excellent treatise exploring history through the lens of dreams. How dreams have shaped history. An expansion of the Harriet Tubman material is provided, along with detailed accounts of the role of dreams in the lives of hero and tree-seer Joan of Arc, writer Mark Twain, physicist Wolfgang Pauli (and his deep friendship with Carl Jung), adventurer Winston Churchill and many others.

Dreaming in the Worlds Religions: A Comparative History by Kelly Buckley

The Practice of Dream Healing: bringing ancient Greek mysteries into modern medicine. Join author Edward Tick on a very Aesclepian journey.

Beatnik Dreams

My Education: A Book of Dreams by William S. Burroughs and Book of Dreams by Jack Kerouac are collected dream journals of these two icons and illuminators. In Burroughs case this was his last book to be published before he died. In it are many riveting accounts of his travels to the Land of the Dead (see also The Western Lands) meeting up with friends and colleagues who had passed on before him. Much of Burroughs fiction was also directly inspired by his dreams.

True Fiction:

Winged Pharaoh by Joan Grant. This book is loaded with a plethora of dream teachings from the perspective of an ancient Egyptian priestess. Written by one who had been there.

Dreams Underfoot by Charles De Lint. Many worthwhile themes to explore here, as well as in other Newford books and stories.

The Dreamquest of Unknown Kadath by H.P. Lovecraft. Like many other fiction writers Lovecraft got a lot of his material directly from his dreams. If you like weird fiction his tales will definitely please. This story is instructive in modes of dream travel, of sequential or serial dreams and waking up inside the dream to become an active dreamer as Randolph Carter attempts again and again to reach the city he dreams of before he is snatched away by waking up. This is the longest of stories in his Dream Cycle, but be sure to check out the rest.

Crow and Weasel by Barry Lopez. ’ “Remember only this one thing,” said Badger. “The stories people tell have a way of taking care of them. If stories come to you, care for them. And learn to give them away when they are needed. Sometimes a person needs a story more than food to stay alive. That is why we put these stories in each other’s memory. This is how people care for themselves.”‘ Many of our best stories come from dreams. When we practice writing down or telling our dreams we grow our talent as writers and storytellers.

There are many more. A list like this is always incomplete and reflects my own tastes. My reading list is also incomplete and grows every day, but please add your favorite dream books to the list in the comments section.

At Home in the Do-It-Yourself University

Textuality | Posted by jmoore
Aug 20 2010

I am a textually promiscuous creature. I have strings of one night stands with books, read what I want from them, and quit. If I really like what I find I may hook back up with the book for a second helping. If it is really good, I may go on to have a passionate affair with the text. Whereas in marriage I am monogamous, my booklife has led me into an open and ongoing  polyamorous engagement with the written word. The pursuit of knowledge is enlivened by the thrill of the chase.

secrets_of_a_buccaneer_scholarA few recent titles are helping me make heads and tails of my voluminous readings. The first is by James Marcus Bach, son of Richard Bach (who wrote the ever popular Jonathan Livingston Seagull). His son James is a high school drop out who none the less found his place in the world as an expert in the field of computer software testing. I can relate to James on many levels. It’s a wonder I made it through the tribulations of high school. I didn’t fare much better in college, which I did drop out of, even though I attended one of the most liberal and radical academies in the United States, Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio. I did do a lot of learning while at Antioch, but mostly outside of class: how to use and work at a library (a primary skill that has taken me very far, praise be Herochiel), pirate radio (I’m still on the airwaves to this day, though now on an FCC sanctioned frequency), and getting my feet wet in a more or less professional recording studio; musick has always been one of my passions.

It didn’t take much longer than a year at Antioch to realize that college wasn’t for me. I knew the fields I wanted to pursue: dreams, writing, radio and musick, among others. I knew that I may have to create my own fields. I also knew that I could do a lot of learning on my own. I tended to read the things I found at the library, things I was intensely interested in, made my own notes and wrote my own essays about.  Since I wasn’t doing well in the school, and hated living in the dorms, I knew I should go back home, get a job, get my own place and start working towards my dreams. Secrets of A Buccaneer Scholar: How Self-Education and the Pursuit of Passion CAn Lead to A Lifetime of Success is a gem of a book for all free spirits who feel restricted by the shackles universities tend to throw on the imagination. Granted, at Antioch I could have leveraged the available tools to my advantage if I’d been more mature. Even so I would have put myself in horrible debt. No one should be burdened with an education whose cost is the size of a princely mortgage. Knowledge and wisdom should not come with a caveat of indentured servitude.

Lifelong learners will enjoy this book for its useful tips on self-education. I  especially liked his ideas on creating a personal syllabus. James Bach also gives tips on buccaneering at work, on how to hack your way into desired professional positions, even if credentials, like a college degree, or types of work experience are lacking. I hold it to be true. In life, if something is desired enough, with feeling backed by effort, those dreamed of heights can be reached.

diy_u2 Another excellent book I’ve been dipping into is DIY U: Edupunks, Edupeneurs, and the Coming Transformation of Higher Education by Anaya Kamenetz. The first sections tackles problems like the one I mentioned above: the increasing cost of a college education and the disastrous effects this is having on our society. It already seems evident to me, so I skimmed over this part to the next section where she elaborates on various innovations, solutions, and models that bypass the hallowed halls of higher learning all together. While many of these solutions are in their infancy stages, it is nice to have some alternatives proposed. DIY is the future and we are living in it.

mindperformancehacksThe third book in this trilogy of educational transformation is a 2006 title from O’Reilly. Mind Performance Hacks: Tips & Tools for Overclocking Your Brain, by Ron Hale-Evans is bursting to the brim with seventy-five exercises to set your mind on fire, and give you a little boost on the path towards becoming a Mentat Jedi. Broken down into sections on memory, information processing, clarity, math, mental fitness, and others this is a trusty little guide to keep at hand, useful in those moments when you’re feeling intellectually sluggish. Some of my favorites are “keep a dream journal”, “play board games”, “learn an artificial language”, “consume your information in chunks”, “deck yourself out”, and “stash things in nooks and crannies.” Humans learn by playing games.

I’ll be keeping these around as I continue to develop my own curriculum vitae.