Traveling
Man
Ancient Purposes
Along the Road
[i] plural of Latin locus for place or location
[ii] Depending upon a
person’s internal “wiring” they might be tactile, visual, or auditory;
smell and taste should not be left out since they are also modes of sensory
input that some people are more sensitive to than others.
So many Experience it; so few
Understand the Experience. Further Light facilitates Further Travel.
“Proficiency”, also known to most Brothers who have gone
through them as “Catechism”, is a requirement in which many Brothers must
participate to progress through the Blue Lodge Degrees, at least, within the
majority of the Jurisdictions in the USA. The Proficiency requirement
does a multitude of things for both the Candidate and the Lodge. Over the
years, the Proficiency requirements exist within fewer and fewer Jurisdictions
due to a host of reasons. It is most unfortunate that those Jurisdictions
eliminating it are not training these Brothers in one of the most important
aspects of Masonic Travel.
-------------------
Freemasonic
Purposes
Given opportunity to explain, the average Brother would say
that Proficiencies have important purposes for the Fraternity. The most
obvious response some Brothers provide is that it reveals how serious a
Candidate is to participate in the Organization. Another response you’ll
readily receive is that it helps Brothers remember what they went through
during the degree.
Those Brothers who are savvy to the needs of the Lodge and
the Organization as a whole shall immediately share that it installs a script
within each Brother. Such installation makes it easier for each of them
to participate in Degree work when new Candidates come through to be Initiated,
Passed or Raised.
All are purposes that serve well the Organization of
Freemasons.
Masonic
Purposes
The purposes for Proficiencies are far more than what may
seem to be obvious to Organizational support upon first glance. One
purpose that I have been sharing for years is that Proficiencies are in
themselves Road Maps that Candidates can and follow to Better themselves.
These Road Maps, once recognized as such, contain specific directions and tasks
that aid toward Making Good Men Better, when followed through upon.
When Candidates Recognize them in this form, for what they
truly are, and seek to Understand what these Road Maps direct them toward, they
can then journey forth using them as guides toward Betterment. It’s truly
a shame that too few Proficiency Instructors do not point this out to
Candidates before, during and after the Proficiencies are engaged in by
them. Candidates would benefit much more by Understanding the basis
behind this effort and perhaps have more incentive to engage in them knowing
the purposes that lay behind them.
Another underlying purpose has nothing to do with the
Catechisms themselves. It has to do with men getting to know one
another. In this sense, the Catechisms are there for Instructors to use
as a tool and vehicle for Brotherly bonding. The catechisms become a
catalyst for each man to become familiar with and to learn about the other, by
focusing upon a task that lessens the awkwardness sometimes experienced by men
initially unfamiliar with each other.
I’ve seen a lot of very good opportunities missed,
deliberately skipped over and even lost because the activity focus was so
strongly upon the Catechism that the men involved faded into the
background.
Doing Proficiencies provide ample time to get to know one
another. This especially in a day and age where the mobility of people is
almost certainly going to interfere with knowing each other much better, and
certainly before having these Brothers Passed and Raised.
Should you be in the position of Instructing
Candidates through these Proficiencies, you might want to step back and look at
it as an opportunity to get to know the Candidates, and for them to get to know you and other members as well. Other members? Sure! Use other members to explain things that come up during Proficiencies, especially when those other members know the topic well and might make for great friendships long term. The more people a candidate gets to know and bond with during this time, the more likely he will have connectedness to Lodge members long term.
Ancient Purposes
There is an ancient purpose that is not often known that
should be Understood by both Instructors and Candidates alike before they
engage in these activities. That ancient purpose has been described in a
whole host of different sources over the years. That purpose was to
develop the Candidates’ ability to remember using an ancient technique referred
to repeatedly by both Plato and his student Aristotle, among many
others. It is currently known by many names: “Method of
Loci[i]”, “The Roman Room” and “The Memory
Palace”, are just a few.
The Technique is truly simple. It requires that you
memorize the layout of a room, home, or even a well-traveled path.
Colors, shapes, sizes, textures and anything that is best suited to the
individual’s method of experience[ii] should be taken
into consideration. Once you have created a location or path within your
mind with which you are familiar, you can then Travel through it.
You might say, “So what? What does that do for
me?” What it does for you is Establish a path that you can Build
upon. In other words, the cultivation of this technique within one’s mind
brings about a structure for recall. Doing so remaps the Parietal Lobes
of the brain and interconnects it with the other lobes as well[iii].
Should you research this Further, you’ll find that the ancients knew a lot
about using the brain more effectively than we might give them credit for
today.
Once this internal path is Established, you then create
specific stop points or loci along the way that you shall remember without
fail. As you Travel through this imaginary path at anytime thereafter,
these stopping points shall allow you to place images that shall remind you of
what it is that you want to recall.
When I first heard this method explained, I thought to
myself, “Yikes! That’s an awful lot of work to memorize something! First
I have to memorize a path, and then I have to memorize images that will trigger
memories of what I want to remember! There’s got to be an easier
way.” I reluctantly tried to use it but gave up because it seemed to not
work quickly enough for me. I resolved in those moments that I would
not pursue it any further, no matter how great it might have worked for those
who perfected it.
Along the Road
I held that opinion for many years. And there was
nothing that seemed to budge me from it. Even though I knew that it was a
technique that was recommended for over 2400 years, I resisted Cultivating
it. My conclusion and choice kept me from Traveling down that Path.
Then something changed for me. I went through my first
Degree as a Freemason and was told immediately afterward that I was required to
memorize about six single spaced sheets of responses to question and requests
from a proficiency Instructor before I was allowed to advance to the next
Degree. I had no idea how I was going to accomplish that task. I
was encouraged by my Instructors. I was told that I was not the only one
faced with this overwhelming task and that many others faced it too and
succeeded. With the help of my Instructor I stepped up and started
to memorize what was asked of me.
As you know from my status as a Master Mason, I was
successful in memorizing what was required of me. I did this three times
over and was supported by my Brothers in doing so. It wasn’t till years
later that I became aware of what actually occurred for me through those
memorization efforts.
Locus
Focus
I had a question put to me by a Brother. The question
was simple.
What does memorizing all these
Proficiencies do for a man?
It was a bit too
simple a question and I should have expected there would be another not so easy
question fired at me very quickly after the first one was put forth. And
I was right. That second question was not so simple.
Wouldn’t a man be better off
understanding what he went through rather than simply memorizing all those
provided responses not knowing what they meant?
Over the years, I’ve responded to the second question with
an unshakably energetic and confident, “Absolutely!” That response went
unchecked for a very long time. That is, until I Recognized the
underlying reason for the memorization. Once I realized that the
basis behind these memorizations was to install a Freemasonic version of a
“Roman Room” in the form of a Masonic Lodge, it all clicked!
Yes! It was very important to
Understand what was being memorized. And to get to the point where
you can Understand what you are memorizing, you have to be able to recall it
and do so without wasting a lot of time trying to remember it!
This led to the following connection: The underlying purpose
behind doing Proficiency is to both honor and engage in an ancient practice
involving teaching Candidates how to remember using the “Method of Loci” used
by humankind since time immemorial.
To be a “Traveling Man”, one must be capable of Traveling
Masterfully within one’s mind, not only through “natural” occurring memory, but
through what the Greeksreferred to as “artificial” memory[iv].
Proficiencies help us toward this end, should we participate in
doing them. When you never have opportunity to Cultivate this important
technique within yourself, your Travel shall be muted by many moments caused by
memory roadblocks and stumbling points. Those Jurisdictions that still
require Mnemonic Cultivation are providing an invaluable supportive service that
Builds Better Travelers, one mind at a time!
Points
to Perpend
1) Does your Jurisdiction require “Method of Loci” training in the form of Proficiencies?
2) Have you used this Training to remember
3) How do you see such Training affecting your Travels?
1) Does your Jurisdiction require “Method of Loci” training in the form of Proficiencies?
2) Have you used this Training to remember
3) How do you see such Training affecting your Travels?
[i] plural of Latin locus for place or location
[iii] The parietal lobe integrates sensory information from different modalities, particularly determining
spatial sense and navigation. For example, it comprises somato-sensory
cortex and the dorsal stream of the visual system. This enables regions of the
parietal cortex to map objects perceived visually into body coordinate
positions. Several portions of the parietal lobe are important in language
processing. Just posterior to the central sulcus lies the postcentral gyrus.
This area of the cortex is responsible for somatosensation.
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parietal_lobe]
[iv] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mnemonic
For
more information related to this and other works, please visit my website.
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