New Worlds Isse: NW065
By: Richard Webster
Some years ago, I read an article about a prison cell that drained
anger from violent and aggressive inmates. It was a standard cell, but
had pink walls. Shortly afterwards, I gave a series of talks at a
high-security prison. One afternoon I asked the guard who was
escorting me if this particular prison had a similar cell.
“Of course,” he told me in a matter-of-fact tone. “The pink
room. It’s very useful.” Before I had time to ask any further
questions, he continued. “You should write a book on it.”
Funnily enough, I had already been thinking along those lines. I had
studied color for many years and enjoyed experimenting with the
subconscious effects color has on us all. For instance, many fast food
restaurants use red in their color schemes, as this encourages people
to eat quickly and leave. When I was in high school I sometimes had
headaches while attending classes in a room that was painted yellow.
Years later, I learned that too much yellow causes agitation and
headaches. A friend of mine owned a factory and had staff that
constantly complained of the cold. When he changed the color scheme
from blue to orange, everyone suddenly felt warmer, and much to my
friend’s delight, became more productive. Color consultants make use
of this information every day.
At one time I lived with someone who perceived colors whenever he
listened to music. The term for this is synesthesia, or color hearing.
I soon became used to hearing music described as “magenta” or
“campfire-smoke gray.” A number of composers, such as Alexander
Scriabin and Jean Sibelius, were synesthetic. Sibelius even asked a
tradesman to repaint his stove in F Major.
As a child I saw auras, and discovered that common phrases, such as
“green with envy” and “red with rage” had a strong basis in
fact. Looking at auras helped me develop color consciousness, but it
wasn’t until I was an adult that I began interpreting the meanings
of the colors. In fact, the ability to see auras was something I
seldom spoke about. This was because a friend made fun of me when I
told him about the beautiful aura I saw around the organist at the
weekly chapel services we attended at school.
At the age of 17 I joined the Theosophical Society and starting
learning about the esoteric and psychological meanings of colors. I
had a keen interest in candle magic at that time too, and this
knowledge proved useful when it came to choosing the right candles for
specific purposes.
This led me to color healing. Friends of mine were working as
color healers, and I learned the healing power of color from watching
them and talking to their patients.
Later still, I taught psychic development classes for several years,
and this forced me to think seriously about colors and their meanings.
Although they probably were not aware of it, the feedback of my
students helped me enormously. In fact, virtually everything in this
book was tested by my students years before I considered writing a
book on the subject.
It was seeing the excitement in my students’ faces when they learned
their own personal colors, based on numerology, that made me write
this book. The three most important colors come from the person’s
Life Path, Expression and Soul Urge numbers, which are derived from
the person’s name and date of birth. They are then converted into
colors.
The Life Path is the most important number, as it describes the
person’s purpose in life. It comes from the person’s full date of
birth reduced to a single digit. Unfortunately, there are two
exceptions. If, during the reduction process, you come across either
an 11 or a 22, you stop reducing at that point. Here are two examples:
10 (month)
26 (day)
1980 (year)
2016
We reduce these to a single digit: 2 + 0 + 1 + 6 = 9
2 (month)
29 (day)
1944 (year)
1975
We reduce this: 1 + 9 + 7 + 5 = 22 (As both 11 and 22 are Master
Numbers, this is not reduced any further.)
Each number relates to a color, which can then be interpreted. The
words in parentheses are lessons that the person should be learning in
this lifetime:
1 — Red (Independence and attainment)
2 — Orange (Cooperation, harmony and diplomacy)
3 — Yellow (Creative self-expression)
4 — Green (Hard work, system and order)
5 — Blue (Constructive use of freedom and variety)
6 — Indigo (Service, and home and family responsibilities)
7 — Violet (Spirituality, intuition
and knowledge)
8 — Pink (Material success)
9 — Bronze (Humanitarianism, spirituality and creativity)
11 — Silver (Idealism and intuition)
22 — Gold (Practicality, charisma and inspiration)
This is just one of three main colors that every person possesses.
Each color possesses its own specific power, quality and meaning. Once
you understand and recognize them, you can harness colors to achieve
your goals. That is what Color Magic for Beginners is about.
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Color
Magic for Beginners
From
our clothes to the color of our bedroom walls, we are surrounded
by colors that influence our mood, energy level, creativity, and
overall well being. Richard Webster offers an astonishing number
of ways to use stimulating reds, soothing blues, and every other
color of the rainbow to our advantage.
Webster begins with an overall picture of each color's major
aspects-its psychological influence, healing qualities,
emotional impact, and magical characteristics. From there,
readers learn a multitude of color-based techniques involving
astrology, the aura, candle magic, chakras, color rituals,
crystals and gemstones, feng shui, flower magic, mandalas,
meditation, numerology, and visualization. Webster demonstrates
how color can be used to attract good luck, heal illness, reduce
stress, create harmony in the home, overcome depression, solve
problems, and magically enhance one's life in a variety of ways.
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