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Shufton wrote:I have a couple pennies here...
Although I agree with much of the above, one aspect has caught my eye.
If a friend wants to learn magic, I do not see any benefit to sitting him/her in front of a video that explains every technique known. Often, when one claims they want to learn, wht they really want is to satisfy curiosity - they want the inside scoop. To perform magic, even one effect, takes a lot of time and serious practise. It can not be accomplished through knowledge. Knowledge is only one facet. Performing magic well can only be accomplished through hard work.
By teaching a single sleight, and perhaps a single effect that employs that sleight, and refusing to go on until that particular effect is perfected, a "friend" will get a dose of what it really means to perform even a "simple" trick. Often, many will quit right then - because they didn't realize there would be work involved, especially in our push-button world.
This holds true, really, for any art. I have known so many people who wish to play an instrument, and when they begin and see how much work is involved, they quit soon.
Does it matter what the notes are if you cannot hold your hand properly? Does it matter the paint if you can not yet hold a brush? Does it matter the "secret" if you have not the tools to execute it?
Folks who really get into magic, have really caught the bug, will put the time in. To simply inundate someone with "secrets" who has not demonstrated enough interest to even do one of them well is a mistake. Some folks will credit themselves with skill, who only posess some rudimentary knowledge. The real knowledge of magic comes from the doing, not the reading or watching.
If you treat your magic as something respectable - even sacred - you will avoid this predicament. If someone wants to learn, start with a self-working card trick, maybe. Can they present it in an interesting way? The revelation of sleights is not only unnecessary, but to some extent wrong - when it does not coincide with something practical - the current effect in question.
A wannabe, who is inundated with information, but does not realize how much work there is, will eventually drop this suposed hobby. The sad thing is, magic might now be permanently ruined for that individual.
There is a reason magic is kept secret - for the benefit of all. Sad how youtube has taken what might be the highest art form, and lowered it for many, all because there is no longer much value put on the "secrets", and even less value put on the work to perfection.
Do we want our magic to be high art? Then we must treat it that way.
Magic is not the secrets. But, of course, no secret, no deception. You can fool someone with a secret they already think they know. But it is reapplied secretly.
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