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TheStoner wrote:Is "Ultracinese" REALLY in their all year top ten? Costing £199 and not even released yet? I smell a bit of a rat here!
Lenoir wrote:I think that that is more than enough my friend. If you spend a good few weeks practicing the both of them until you are perfect for performance, you'll forget about the next trick.
The reason people often want the next thing is because part of them still thinks that one item will make them a brilliant magician. The reality is, as ingenious as a method is, it will never make you a good magician. When this reality hits, we often look for the NEXT best thing and then still slightly believe it.
I am not saying you will never be a great magician etc, just that sometimes it is worth looking over what you already know and own and performing and recreating rather than looking for the next idea.
A book like The Complete Course in Magic, I know you said you don't like books and might already have it, provides what I think is enough information to not only learn the fundamentals of magic, but also make a perfectly plausible set for a restaurant worker or close up magician.
Rip up a napkin and restore it right in front of their eyes, tear up a playing card and restore it, find a spectators own bill in a lemon, perform countless coin and card effects...I'm not sure what else you could ask for!
bmat wrote:Chances are you already know enough magic to last you through several lifetimes, although most of it you have probably disregarded for whatever reason.
Rather then try to rekindle/spark your interest by finding more magic effects that you are going to be disapointed in, or on the other hand are going to love but only till you grow bored of it. You can save yourself a lot of time and expense by learning how to perform. Join toastmasters or any place where they teach you how to speak in public. Take a few acting lessons, take part in a comedy work shop.
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