Let’s set the scene: it’s 1959, and a strange, jagged book called Naked Lunch is carving up the American literary landscape like a junk-sick surgeon. The author? William S. Burroughs—a man who never fit the mould, and never wanted to. Burroughs, a Harvard-educated son of a wealthy family who favoured back-alley dealers over dinner parties, traversed life as a haunted flâneur, a rogue archivist of the human psyche, and an agent of chaos, documenting the soul’s descent into addiction, paranoia, and control.
To understand Burroughs is to take a long walk down a dark alley where literature, drugs, magick, and Cold War paranoia bleed into one another. He’s not just a writer—he’s a one-man mythos, equal parts Mephistopheles, cyberpunk oracle, and shadow-shaman of postmodernism.
Early Life: The Making of a Madman Mystic
Born in St. Louis, Missouri, in 1914, William Seward Burroughs came from money. His grandfather invented the adding machine. But young Burroughs was never meant to carry the family name in the polite sense. From an early age, he was drawn to the margins—fascinated by outlaws, guns, and forbidden desires. A sensitive and sharply intelligent boy, he found solace in books, mythology, and the occult. He read Spengler, Crowley, and pulp fiction with equal reverence.
He studied English at Harvard, dabbled in medicine in Vienna, and ultimately failed to find any conventional path that could contain his restless spirit. His sexual identity—as a gay man in a time of harsh repression—further exiled him from the world of clean-cut careers and white-picket respectability.
But Burroughs didn’t want a career. He wanted truth—however dark, diseased, or deranged it might be. And he believed the truth was to be found in altered states, criminal underworlds, and the raw edges of language.
The Beats, the Bullet, and the Book
In the 1940s and 50s, Burroughs linked up with a ragtag crew of seekers and madmen—Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, and Gregory Corso—the so-called Beat Generation. He was the elder statesman of the group, the one who’d actually done all the things the others only wrote about. Junk, hustlers, Mexico City dives, and back-alley hallucinations—Burroughs was the real deal.
But his life took a mythic turn in 1951 when, during a drunken night in Mexico, he shot and killed his wife, Joan Vollmer, in a botched “William Tell” stunt. He later called this moment the event that set him on the path to becoming a writer. It was as if some daimon had to be released through bloodshed—an ancestral curse turned literary destiny.
Naked Lunch and the Cut-Up Revolution
What followed was Naked Lunch (1959)—a book that exploded the novel as a form. Part hallucination, part political screed, part horror show, the text dances between vignettes of drug addiction, grotesque sexuality, interdimensional control systems, and Kafkaesque bureaucracy. It was banned for obscenity, championed by Ginsberg, and eventually canonised as a major postmodern work.
But Burroughs wasn’t finished with form. In collaboration with British artist and fellow mystic Brion Gysin, he began experimenting with the cut-up technique—a literal slicing and rearranging of texts to disrupt linear thought and expose the hidden architecture of language. Inspired by Dada, Surrealism, and the I Ching, Burroughs believed this method could break the control mechanisms embedded in language itself.
For Burroughs, writing wasn’t just art—it was magickal warfare.
The Magus of Control
As his work deepened, Burroughs evolved into something stranger: a fusion of rogue scientist and urban shaman. His books became psychic maps of resistance—The Soft Machine, Nova Express, and The Ticket That Exploded—each more surreal and conspiratorial than the last. In these texts, humanity is under attack by alien forces of control, and the only weapon is language itself.
Burroughs’ worldview is a heady blend of Gnosticism, cyberpunk, junkie wisdom, and paranoid prophecy. He warned us of viral media, AI control systems, and psychic colonisation long before these ideas hit the mainstream.
He also dabbled in chaos magick, practised sigil work, and saw writing as a ritual act. One could say he was the first true technomancer—a mythic figure bridging language, mind, and machine.
Late Life & Legacy: The Godfather of Punk and Cyberpunk
In his later years, Burroughs became an unlikely countercultural icon. He collaborated with Laurie Anderson, Kurt Cobain, and Tom Waits. His skeletal visage—always with a fedora and deadpan voice—haunted music videos and underground art galleries alike.
He died in 1997 in Lawrence, Kansas, a place he chose for its flatness, silence, and simplicity. His final journal entry read, “Love? What is it? Most natural painkiller what there is.”
Even in death, Burroughs left behind a sigil, a code, a whisper to those of us still decoding the dream.
Why Burroughs Still Matters
To read Burroughs is to stare into a cracked mirror and see the control systems flickering behind your reflection. He matters because he didn’t write to soothe or seduce—he wrote to disrupt. He’s the arch-trickster of American letters, the literary equivalent of a virus engineered to crash the system.
If Ginsberg howled and Kerouac wandered, Burroughs interrogated—the machine, the word, the self.
In a time where algorithmic language threatens to replace thought, Burroughs reminds us that words are weapons—and the first war is always for the mind.
He was not here to comfort us. He was here to wake us up.
In mythic praxis, we look not at what a life story says literally but at how it resonates symbolically—how it serves as a script for the soul’s own unfolding.
Burroughs wasn’t just “a writer on drugs.” He was a modern-day Orpheus, descending into the underworld not to retrieve Eurydice but to retrieve the shattered pieces of his own self—dragged through addiction, trauma, and altered states. His journey maps a dark yet essential dimension of the mythic path: the descent into chaos to uncover hidden power.
So let’s unpack this post, not as a literary review, but as an invitation to inner myth-making.
🔮 PROMPTS FOR MYTHIC REFLECTION
Here are some prompts to explore this through your mythic self. Think of each as a portal—pull a chair up to the digital campfire, open your journal, and see what emerges.
✧ The Daimon in the Bullet
“He later called this moment the event that set him on the path to becoming a writer.”
Burroughs killed his wife Joan in a surreal tragedy that he mythologised as a necessary horror—a blood sacrifice that called forth his daimon.
Prompt:
What “wound” or irreversible event in your life marked the beginning of your mythic path? What daemon might have been released through that rupture? If your wound had a voice, what would it write?
✧ Cutting Up the Control System
“He believed this method could break the control mechanisms embedded in language itself.”
The cut-up technique wasn’t just literary trickery—it was chaos magick with scissors. Burroughs saw language as a virus, a system of control. To cut it was to free the psyche.
Prompt:
What words, labels, or phrases have been used to define you—by others or by yourself? What happens when you “cut up” those words and rearrange them into a new spell, a new self? What would your anti-language sound like?
Bonus activity: try a literal cut-up. Take a paragraph from your journal or bio and slice it up. Rearrange the fragments. What unexpected truths emerge?
✧ The Outlaw as Archetype
“Burroughs wandered through life like a haunted flâneur…an agent of chaos documenting the soul’s descent.”
He is a modern-day Trickster-Shaman. He walks outside society not out of rebellion alone, but because that’s where the real data is.
Prompt:
In what ways are you an outlaw of the soul? What parts of yourself live on the margins, in the alleyways of your identity? What sacred knowledge have you gathered from being “outside the system”?
✧ Technomancer Rites
“One could say he was the first true technomancer—a mythic figure bridging language, mind, and machine.”
Burroughs prefigured the future—cyberpunk, AI, media viruses. He wrote of word demons and machine sorcery long before we spoke of algorithms or neural nets.
Prompt:
How do you use technology as part of your mythic path? What digital rituals, artefacts, or symbols are part of your praxis? What spells are you casting when you write, code, or post?
✧ The Mythopoetic Death
“His final journal entry read, ‘Love? What is it? Most natural painkiller what there is.’”
Even at the end, Burroughs didn’t resolve his myth—he whispered it forward.
Prompt:
If your life ended today, what myth would you leave behind? What line, what fragment, what glyph would carry your signature into the void? What would the final incantation of your mythic self be?
🜃 ALCHEMICAL SYNTHESIS
Burroughs is a mythic archetype for the Shadow Magician—the one who doesn’t fear the grotesque, the diseased, or the obscene because he sees the sacred hiding inside it. He walks with demons not to become one but to understand their methods.
As you engage your own mythic praxis, ask:
Where am I being called to descend?
What rituals can I create to cut through illusion?
What is the ‘language virus’ I’ve inherited—and how do I rewrite it?
Your own life might not be as extreme or tragic, but the structures of myth are always there. Burroughs shows us that myth isn’t just ancient—it’s encoded in the modern, the digital, the punk, the paranoid.
🜂 THE CALL
If myth is the soul’s symbolic autobiography, then this post is a mirror—cracked, jagged, luminous. It reflects your potential to not just tell your story, but ritually re-author it. In the lineage of Burroughs, the question becomes:
What myth are you writing with your life, your wounds, your digital traces?
Now go—cut, remix, bleed ink. Let your daimon speak.
I had heard of William Burrows but only as a name. It was good to listen (Siri has really improved ) to a brief of his life story and when I get a little time I will copy and paste some of my daily notes into the cut machine.
Another though provoking post as I sit here alone in a down trodden area of Munich.
I had heard of William Burrows but only as a name. It was good to listen (Siri has really improved ) to a brief of his life story and when I get a little time I will copy and paste some of my daily notes into the cut machine.
Another though provoking post as I sit here alone in a down trodden area of Munich.