About

Philosophy of Liminal Space

Liminal Temple is named for the threshold.

  • Liminal = the in-between, the crossing, the “no longer / not yet.”
  • Temple = a dedicated space and pattern of attention that makes something holy by how it is held.

Our tradition treats liminal spaces—psychological, social, magical, and bodily—as places of:

  • Life Transitions
    • grief and loss,
    • illness and recovery,
    • relationship changes,
    • vocation shifts and identity changes.
  • States of Consciousness
    • gnosis in magical practice,
    • dream and hypnagogic states,
    • meditative, trance, and ecstatic conditions,
    • embodied flow states in Qigong and movement.
  • Social and Cultural Thresholds
    • belonging vs. outsider-hood,
    • liminal religious identity,
    • queers and neurodivergent experiences of “between worlds.”
  • Spaces Between Paradigms
    • Moving between magical models,
    • navigating faith, doubt, and deconstruction.

Why Liminal Space is “Holy”

We hold, provisionally and humbly, that:

  • Change is a primary site of revelation
    • In thresholds, our old stories no longer fully work
    • New stories have not yet stabilized
    • This instability can make us more open to seeing deeply and differently
  • Mystery dwells in the edges
    • Neither rigid order nor chaos is where we most often encounter the holy
    • Instead, it is the edge between—where systems are sensitive, responsive, and capable of transformation
  • Liminal spaces require tending
    • Without care, thresholds can be traumatizing or disorienting
    • With care, they can be initiatory, healing, and creatively fertile.

This is why Liminal Temple exists: to create and tend containers around these edges.

Chaos Magic and Liminal Philosophy

Chaos Magic provides tools and attitudes that are naturally liminal:

  • Paradigm shifting: moving between different ways of seeing
  • Gnosis: stepping into altered states where the usual narrative breaks down
  • Sigil and ritual work: compressing intention into symbolic acts that bridge inner and outer

Our philosophy integrates this by saying:

  • The edge where paradigms meet and clash is a sacred workshop
  • The space between ordinary consciousness and gnosis is where transformation is seeded
  • The boundary between self and other, self and world, self and “the divine” is porous and worth exploring with care

Care-oriented and Ethical Implications

Because liminal states can be both holy and dangerous:

  • We commit to grounding practices as much as lifting practices:
    • somatic regulation,
    • integration time after rituals,
    • clear exit ramps from intense experiments.
  • We:
    • do not romanticize suffering,
    • do not pressure people to “stay in the liminal” indefinitely,
    • respect no, not yet, and I need a break.

Relationship to Other Streams

This working philosophy:

  • can sit alongside:
    • animist, polytheist, or non-theistic views,
    • contemplative, mystical, or scientific humanist perspectives.
  • is intentionally open-ended:
    • You can understand “the holy” as:
      • gods and spirits,
      • emergent patterns in complex systems,
      • deep psyche,
      • or all of the above.

Our official stance is not to collapse these into one doctrinal package, but to:

  • provide shared language for practice and care,
  • allow members to locate themselves philosophically within that generous frame.