Actually thats a little bit of a lie, but I will explain.
As a child I loved magic generally but hated card magic. I can only say that even at that age it seemed to leave me cold. In the past year however I have devleoped a real love for card magic again. Ironically it is now the other forms of magic that I dislike....sponge balls and rope!?

Then after grappling with sleights I started once again to find card magic leaving me cold and couldn't work out what it was. Then I read Derren Brown's 'Pure Effect' and 'Absolute Magic' and finally I worked it out! If you perform a trick most people in this day and age know it is exactly that - a trick. If you perform an Ambitious Card Routine, and you think that the audience actually believe the card is jumping around the deck you are probably deluding yourself (unless I perform it really badly!).
Even if they don't know how it is done they can always catagorise it under the rather non-descript title of 'Sleight of Hand'. And that really upsets me! I remember about 6 months performing the 'Biddle Trick' and while I performed it fine, the card appeared rather cheekily face down in the deck like it should, and my friend who was my victim looked at me and said, 'When did you do that?!'.
It was 'sleight of hand' and he knew it. Even though he didn't know how he had already dismissed the experience. And so I completely altered my attitude to card magic. I am now limiting myself to performing effects that do not involve 'Sleight of Hand'. Or so it may seem.
I currently perform a version of Derren's 'Plerephoria' - where the deck is shuffled by an audience member and with my back turned I can reel off the order of the cards. I also perform an effect where I write a card down unseen by the spectator, start to deal cards face down and tell them to stop me at any time - of course stopping on the card I wrote down. It is then reversed, I write down the name of a card and they deal cards face up onto the table and then place one card face down on the table when they like, and it is the card I predicted.
While there is some sleight of hand, they are effects that dont seem to involve it, and I find this far more affecting on the audience because they cant instantly dismiss it as trickery like they could an ACR.
Anyway, my point (if you got this far!) is I just wanted to know if anyone else had a similar approach to performing card material? I'd love to talk to someone with a similar performance ethic, just to bounce ideas off if nothing else.
So, thank for reading this ridiculously long essay, if you want to reply that would be great, if not never mind - I enjoying spouting my nonsense!
Many thanks, Mark