When Your Father Is a Magician, What Do You Believe?
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The article explores the author's experience growing up as a magician's child, navigating the line between believing in magic and understanding its secrets, sparking a discussion on the intersection of wonder and skepticism.
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Sep 11, 2025 at 10:28 PM EDT
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Beautiful.
> If a trick fooled me, I made it my job to discover how.
Tangential but that's one of the reasons I actually migrated away from sleight of hand towards juggling. IMHO it's far less stressful when your performance doesn't require fooling the audience.
[1] The New Yorker. “The Real Work: Modern magic and the meaning of life.” by Adam Gopnik July 28, 2008
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2008/03/17/magic-the-real...
a.k.a. https://archive.is/kBpwF
First time as an audience, when someone shows you a performance of a trick. The second time you're amazed, when they show you the method, and you think - how could have I been fooled by this stupid detail? And the third time you're amazed, when you actually learn it, you perform it, of course imperfectly, and it still fools the other people.
Bit of Jungian parapsychology: tell the physician to forget everything he knows prior to undergoing psychoanalysis.
I find this beautiful
> My father taught me to vanish before I learned to appear. Science taught me to appear without vanishing — to stand by evidence, to let truth emerge even when it contradicted the spectacle.
Poetic
I've tried getting into the craft many times, and if I had to boil down the essence of nearly every trick (especially for slight of hand, not necessarily stage magic)... Imagine the stupidest, dumbest, simplest explanation of the trick that you write off as "well certainly they're not doing _that_", and that is what is happening. The real art is that doing that simple thing is hard AF, they have to practice it a thousand times to make it look convincing. I never really got into it because it required too much dedication. And if anything, that makes it more special than something more cerebral.
I feel like a lot of what entertained me about magic also pulled me towards web development. Sites and interactions online seem like magic until you realize they also break down into simple problems, simple components that build upon one another to deliver the trick. That interest in figuring out how things work just never went away I guess!