It really is. More so than most people realize. Mystics from any religion make progress because they usually devote every moment of their lives to progressing.
I've been spending a lot of time just organizing my own intentions.
Penczak's has been a wonderful guide with his books thus far. I've read the entire Inner Temple, most of the Outer Temple and some of the Shamanic Temple book.
So that has given me a great overview of what to expect. In addition to reading Penczak I had also read Cunningham, and I've researched a lot of stuff on the web.
Simultaneously with all of this I've been studying spirituality under the guidance of Deepak Chopra (not personally of course), but through his videos and web articles.
So I've been gaining a lot of insight from many different perspectives.
I'm starting to view witchcraft and shamanism as an art form of spirituality that
can be very much in tune with the philosophies of Eastern Mysticism (Zen Buddhism in particular).
So I'm starting down a path of my own. In fact, it might even be safe to say that I'm trailblazing a new path. So much of my focus lately has simply been associated with deciding precisely where I want that path to go and how I should go about carving it out of the jungle of human folklore and mythology.
I'm using concepts of Witchcraft, Shamanism, Zen Buddhism, Feng Shui, Tarot, Astrology, and various herbal and nutritional concepts associated with Charkra tuning.
So it's taking me quite a bit to weave all these threads together into a single tapestry that is coherent.
I'm very happy to report that everything seems to be falling very nicely into place seemlessly.
However, this brings me to comment on the very first exercise that Penczak has his readers perform in the first book on the Inner Temple of Witchcraft.
The first exercise is to write up your intention for a year of study. It's nice that I just happen to get into this at the turn of a new year, although it doesn't need to be started at the beginning of a year.
Anyway I had originally done that exercise using Penczak's example as a guide. Initially I followed his example quite closely suggesting that my intent was to study his year-and-a-day programs simultaneously in his first two books.
However, I'm already embellishing that initial intention to include additional studies.
I will stil use Penczak's book as the main structure of my course, but I will be embellishing it with various other ideas as well.
I have several 3-ring binders that I am using to organize my study. That's how intense it can get.
Penczak also suggests that we write 3 pages in our journal every day.
I haven't even start a journal yet!
I have started a Book of Shadows though, and I will be doing starting a journal pretty soon.
I feel like I'm still in the organizing stages. Almost like a student preparing to go to college. I'm choosing all my subjects, and setting up my study materials first. Once I feel like I'm ready to begin, I start attending classes (i.e. doing exercises dutifully).
As it is right now I've just been dabbling in various exercises to just get a feel for them.
I'm about ready to buckle down into doing more rigidly-scheduled exercises.