The
Touch of Fae [March
2008]
I write this as a favor to a
feline person on Trueform
Within. She expressed envy of a fae-kin's presence and
glamour, and asked for any tips on mimicking that ability to
charm and "light up a room". I can understand this
feeling... and so I'm writing on glamour.
First, an emphatic disclaimer: I am not fae-kin. I have not
studied the lore and legends of glamour. Nor have I
extensively and methodically experimented with it. I write as
one who observes and is good at observing; I write as a
dabbler and casual experimenter. At best, this is
"armchair magic" - theory, mostly untested, and
extrapolation. My observations and experiences are UPG -
unverified personal gnosis - sometimes but not always
corroborated by the experiences and perceptions of others.
Your mileage may vary.
With that in mind, I ask any fae-kin, more experienced
occultists, and people more familiar with the lore to give
your two cents, point out inaccuracies and flawed reasoning,
and add your own experiences.
Let me first attempt to define glamour. The dictionary
definition is "the quality of fascinating, alluring, or
attracting, esp. by a combination of charm and good
looks", or "magic or enchantment; spell;
witchery". Now, most of the definitions of glamour I've
seen in a magical context puts it as a type of magic,
one of illusion, fascination, and attraction. It is a sort of
charm. So let's define glamour as illusion and fascinating
(and by "fascinating" I mean "attracting
intense interest" as in "holding someone spellbound
in fascination" - a sort of mesmerism and magnetism).
I personally divide glamour into two basic types:
"bright" and "dark". This is more of a
reference to how they feel to me, a description of
manifestation, rather than a moral judgment. I don't know if
there are better terms, so these are the ones I use.
I find "bright" glamour to be immediately
noticeable, and having noticed it, I can avoid being affected
by it. Apparently not everyone notices it like that, but I'm
speaking from my own experience here. Bright glamour is
flashing charm, a flame of charisma drawing people near like
moths. The bright fae is shiny, glowing, the center of
attention, impossible to ignore. Sie induces feelings of
infatuation, fascination in all meanings of the word.
Sie is a prism and a fire, entrancing, hypnotic, dancing. This
is the fae-magic so typically described in old songs, the
stuff that leads mortals into faerie holds, never to return.
Of course, here in the hard physical world, it tends more to
lead people into infatuation and obsession, leaving broken
hearts when the fae-kin forgets the temporary romantic catch
for a new shiny plaything. I've watched it happen time and
time again at faire. Glamour plays with the hearts and minds
of people, and I've watched fae-kin do this effortlessly,
unceasingly, automatic manipulation with unthinking ease - and
half the time I think they don't realize what they do, and
don't see the trails of broken hearts in their wake. Morgan
Felidae (NyteMuse on LiveJournal, a Feri practicioner and fae-kin)
noted, "Most fey only actively use very little glamour.
It's more appropriate in a lot of cases to say that fey ARE
glamour." For many fae, using glamour is much like
breathing or circulating blood: a very natural, unconscious
process.
Then there is the "darker" glamour. It is more a
magnetism than a bright charisma. It's almost like velvet
shadows, the enchantment of black velvet and smoky spices
rather than that of dancing fire and moonlight. It draws
people in as well, but with the allure of the forbidden or
mysterious rather than shining charm. It draws the sort of
people addicted to fixing, or pain, or those who secretly
desire to play on the edge of things and sense that edge in
the wielder of shadow-glamour. Jareth the Goblin King from the
movie Labyrinth is a perfect example of the use of this
sort of glamour. It's the "bad boy" allure. It's
also the magnetism of the wounded, that hint of "there's
a softness beneath this cold exterior that you can
maybe reach" or "there's hurt beneath this hardness
that you can heal". It's a far subtler glamour,
but equally entrapping and potent. It's a glamour that I've
seen come seemingly naturally to demon-kin (of varying sorts,
not just Abrahamic) and many vampires as well as certain types
of fae.
The bright glamour draws people in by displaying an excess of
color and light that others yearn to share, to become a
perhaps a little more bright themselves by contact with such
fire. The dark glamour draws with a vacuum, speaking to
peoples' desire to be needed. Yet they both manipulate, use,
and take. I think it is no coincidence that fae and vampires
often overlap; glamour is a most excellent bait to bring one's
food to one's door. Fae are, I think, integrally vampiric in
nature.
Still. The bright glamour is enviable, and that's part of its
lure. It can even inspire hate, in some especially envious
people, even as they often can't seem to resist it. Whether
one should succumb to such envy is debatable... but this is
not quite a piece on morality.
How to learn it or at the very least mimic it? Let's start
with the mundane approaches first - and let's work towards
bright glamour rather than darker glamour, since that's what
the feline person over on Trueform Within seems to want to
mimic.
First: confidence. Or at least the seeming of confidence. The
"bright" fae I've observed, and non-fae who have a
similar sort of bright color, have a certain self-assurance
and seeming lack of shyness that is appealing and attractive.
I doubt that glamour can be even mimicked without this basis
of self-assurance. It doesn't need to be real
confidence; I asked a bright/colorful friend about it once,
and she says most of it is fake, a real sort of "fake it
till you make it".
Getting yourself to show that confidence (however fake it
might be) can take some work. Figure out what makes you feel
more confident or what forces you to be less passive/shy.
Elaborate makeup, different hair cuts and styles, unusual
clothing - if you can manage to have a physical appearance
that is already colorful and remarkable, it might be a little
easier to say "To hell with it - I can't hide like this,
I might as well stop acting like I can escape notice".
Second: physicality. The way one moves, walks, and holds
oneself can completely change how people react to hir. If you
keep a lowered gaze and lowered head, slouch a bit, and keep
to the edges of a hall or room or walkway, you're going to
attract less attention. I used to cultivate this sort of
physicality in an attempt to not be seen during middle school
and high school; I was a shy sort of kid. If you make eye
contact (though not too strong/constant of eye contact, not an
aggressive bold stare, because that'll provoke a different
sort of reaction), smile at least somewhat naturally, keep
your head up, walk with a bit of a spring in your step -
people are going to respond positively to that.
But there's also physicality to make you more magnetic or
attractive, too, other than just the
approachable/invisible/unapproachable body language mentioned
above. Take some dance classes, or martial arts; it'll train a
certain force and grace and direction into your physicality.
Find some person, actor, or character whose magnetism and
charisma you admire and study their body language, how they
move and walk. Try incorporating felinity or wolfishness or
some other animal's movement style into yours and see how that
looks or feels. Nytemuse,
an Unseelie fae, suggested that the "bright" glamour
"can be mimicked by engaging in open expressive movements
that bear a certain amount of grace, so dance or martial arts
is a good start."
Another point from Nytemuse:
"People are
attracted to fun, lightheartedness, joy. The truly
'bright' masters take joy in the simplest things, so that
they radiate no hidden agenda or sense of
manipulation...they don't scream 'predator' or 'puppetmaster'.
They are often truly naive and childlike, and that is what
draws the eye. Go to a park some time and see just how
many people are fascinated by watching a young child play
with a completely mundane object or activity. That
newness, because zie has never seen a butterfly before, or
a soap bubble. It fascinates because it contrasts. Most
adults lose the ability to see the mundane as fantastic,
so they are mesmerized by someone who can, especially
someone they don't expect that from (someone their own
age). That is one of the aspects that makes infants so
terribly alluring, is watching them discover everything
for the first time, and sometimes recalling what that was
like for you all those years ago. To be completely caught
up in what you are doing, not worrying about your job or
taxes or relationship problems, but just completely taken
by the sheer pleasure of the music and dancing...that air
of joy is the flame to which moths are drawn. To us, the
carnal pleasures are the greatest indulgence, so we are
creatures of sensuality. The experience of eating a really
good meal, or listening to a heart-rending aria from an
opera can be like sex, so we allow ourselves to be taken
by the experience of the senses. And that joy, that
willful abandonment, is what creates that sparkle."
This starts to edge into the less mundane ways of imitating,
approximating, or perhaps even using glamour. Taking on the
traits of someone or something else starts to blur into the
metaphysical, depending on your views and how you approach
that sort of shift. Here's where we get into the weird, now...
If you are therian, an animal person, you already have a leg
up on learning to use (or rather mimic) glamour. I have
noticed that animal people have the allure of things untamed.
People have a strange desire to touch, own, and tame the wild
and the exotic. We visit zoos and long to touch the tiger, to
pet the bear, to jess the falcon. This same desire manifests
with therians. There's a hint of wind and woods and half-feral
movement in animal people that awakens the urge to
touch/tame/possess. I see my therian friends attract
possessive clingy suitors (and this happens to me as well) and
be miserable when in relationships with such people. If
they're self-aware and conscientious of boundaries, they get
out of the relationship; a half-wild thing does not cope well
with cages.
But that is tangential. The point is that there's already a
magnetism and allure to animal people. It's not glamour, and
it's got a distinctly different flavor, and doesn't
"light up a room", but learning to control and
amplify that natural magnetic appeal might have a very similar
end result.
Secondly, Empathic projection can imitate glamour, in a way. I
can only explain how I personally project, though; others
might be able to better explain this. I find a way to make
myself feel the emotion I wish to project, either by simply
willing it or finding a stimulus that provokes that emotion in
myself (the second works better, for me). I push energy and
intent into it, let it build, and then push it outward -
either just as a sort of aura about me, or at a particular
individual.
Third, similar to the second: Weaving an aura or an illusion
about you. I've only ever done this for job interviews (and
when I get an interview, I pretty much have always
gotten the job). I sit, center myself, ground, and then build
energy in my center, instilling it with the impressions I want
the interviewer to get of me. "Confident",
"capable", "good for the job" - these sort
of things - thickly flavoring the energy with these
impressions. Then I build that into a shield, almost like a
projection but woven about my body like a second skin. (I
don't know if this makes any sense. I'm not very good at
explaining this sort of thing. But I did say I'd try.) This is
perhaps as close to true glamour as I get, the illusion sort
of glamour. One could probably color this weaving with traits
like "bright/shining/iridescent" or
"intriguing/you want to get to know me/beautiful" or
the like.
The only other way to imitate glamour that I can think of is
through an energetic sort of magnetism. Making oneself a
magnet that draws others to oneself. I've never tried this,
and I'm not entirely sure how it'd be done; theoretically, I
think one would create a pulling sensation within/around
oneself. Rather than just making oneself attractive physically
and charismatically, it'd be more of a "come to me/look
at me" sense.
Nytemuse made a
good point: The way to fascinate is to keep something hidden,
show only a portion of the image and the truth. Illusion mixed
with reality, something that simultaneously confuses and
intrigues. That creates mystery, which intrigues and draws
others to look closer.
According to Rune (stiobhanrune
on LiveJournal, a
self-identified Witch who sometimes teaches glamourie to his
students):
1. Glamoury is not a lie. It
is a coloring of truth, a turning of the facets of reality
so that they scintillate. Or, go hidden. Either way works,
and while the "don't notice me" glamour oft is
held to be unremarkable, it is still quite significant.
2. Glamoury is a trick; it requires a gimmick, a focus in
order to work. One must act in such a way that will
fascinate if one would fascinate. One must act in such a
way as to be subtle, if one would be subtle. So, if you
want to catch attention, draw attention to yourself.
3. Glamoury is like all of the Artes of the Eyes: it
requires a change in one's perspective, one's view. One
doesn't need to paint a person with makeup or brush their
hair, one can simply look upon the person and 'see' them
as beautiful, and then remark upon a feature that others
can focus upon. "You have absolutely brilliant
eyes," things like that usually do the trick.
Incidentally, that's why most famous glamour spells had to
do with social tricks, like Cinderella's entrance to the
ball at the moment when everyone would notice a latecomer.
To attract, draw attention. To be ignored, deflect or
distract attention.
Please note that the ethics of all this are very debatable and
should be thought on before one acts on such things. Also,
this is a lot of projection, illusion, and masking; are you
comfortable with showing an illusion rather than yourself?
With fae-kin, they are that bright; it is naturally
part of them, the illusions enhance rather than falsify. With
those of us who are not so naturally scintillating, it is not
genuine.
A better option might be tying these illusions into a piece of
jewelry or some sort of physical focus. Put on the jewelry and
you put on the illusion; let it be temporary, removable, and
don't wear it all the time. An act can become you; a mask can
become permanent, if you're not careful.
Another option might be figuring out one's natural attractive
elements and style, and enhance those. That's rather more
genuine, real, and probably more effective. So you don't light
up a room - but perhaps you have a shy, wild allure and feline
liquid grace, and by building on those, you can draw
individuals to you as you stalk a crowd's edge. You won't draw
a crowd of admirers, but you might find greater value in the
individuals you attract with your animality. You also might
find it's a different variety and quality of attention and
notice, and it might (for you) be preferable.
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