267 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
267 lines
14 KiB
Plaintext
|
|
/Archive-name: shamanic.visions
|
|
|
|
|
|
/* Written 11:06 am Sep 6, 1989 by visionary in peg:oz.visionary */
|
|
/* ---------- "SHAMANIC VISIONS" ---------- */
|
|
SHAMANIC VISIONS - by Michael Ney - Feb 88.
|
|
(approx 270 lines) Copyright reserved.
|
|
PO Box 566, Milsons Point, 2061. NSW
|
|
|
|
|
|
First published in Southern Crossings - entitled -
|
|
DRUMMING UP VISIONS - Modern Shamanic Initiation.
|
|
|
|
"The drums incessant beat became lost amidst a seemingly resonant
|
|
symphony of voices... an enchantingly mysterious tone lead me through
|
|
into another reality, a dreamtime landscape of the shamanic
|
|
underworld. Perched on a cliff, my `being' perceived the luminous
|
|
valley expanding out before me. Suddenly aware of a presence to my
|
|
right, I turned and confronted the eyes and beak of an eagle... so
|
|
close its warmth was tangible in comparison to the windy updraft. As
|
|
we both alighted with graceful swiftness from the cliff I realised a
|
|
magical transformation had occurred... my eagle wings were
|
|
strong... my sight so keen... my thoughts so strange. We soared
|
|
towards an unknown destination, surveying all below us with a god-like
|
|
perspective... feeling my journey had begun aeons before this present
|
|
reality."
|
|
|
|
Thus read my journal entry, written after a shamanic initiation led by
|
|
Leslie Conton - co-worker/associate of Michael Harner (world renowned
|
|
authority on shamanism). Leslie presented this event at the
|
|
Transpersonal Psychology Conference in Brisbane 1986. She enticed our
|
|
`allies' to dance, our visions to gather strength and power and also
|
|
gave essential background knowledge to this fascinating tradition,
|
|
forming a sound basis for further study.
|
|
|
|
Later I discovered that "birds always denote rising, activation,
|
|
change and vitality. In some traditions birds are symbolic of the
|
|
soul; in others the bird is recognized as an intelligent colloborator
|
|
with man, being the bearer of celestial messages. For the Buryats of
|
|
Siberia, the eagle is the prototype of the shaman. Some Siberian
|
|
peoples directly associate the eagle with the Supreme Being and the
|
|
Creator of Light. Odin was also called Eagle..... Whether for sport or
|
|
spirit, the shaman's ability to fly or the enactment of flight
|
|
bespeaks a sublime metaphysical reality that appears to be a common
|
|
feature of mystical experiences everywhere. All the cosmos is
|
|
accessible when the art of transformation is mastered." - Shaman, The
|
|
Wounded Healer by Joan Halifax.
|
|
|
|
So, that journey, cited above, was my first `conscious' exploration of
|
|
a realm and philosophy which had, in hindsight, affected my
|
|
unconscious reality from an early age. I remember crying as a small
|
|
boy whilst watching a "Deer Dance" performed by a visiting Mexican
|
|
Folklore dance troupe. This perplexed my parents but somehow I felt it
|
|
not at all unusual... a linking to past life memory
|
|
perhaps. Thereafter I was always fascinated by movies with Indians,
|
|
and TV shows like Daniel Boone etc. Also, after recently visiting
|
|
America and participating in sacred ceremonies, I realised a large
|
|
part of my consciousness was deeply rooted in that ancient
|
|
tradition... with a feeling akin to coming "home".
|
|
|
|
Shamanism is currently undergoing an immense revival, involving people
|
|
from many countries and various walks of life. The popularization of
|
|
American Indian teachings and cultural heritage is only a small
|
|
chapter in this overall saga. In fact, the so-called "New Age" may
|
|
largely be a returning to the old and wise, respectful reverence for
|
|
our sacred Mother Earth... sadly now being raped of resources in the
|
|
onslaught of "modern" civilisation.
|
|
|
|
This "new" awakening stems directly from an earlier tribal reality,
|
|
where the shaman was priest, social worker, political advisor and
|
|
healer to a closely interconnected community. In many different
|
|
cultures worldwide the land and all its beings were viewed as part of
|
|
themselves, each with important roles in the unfolding drama of the
|
|
universe. The shaman was honoured for his/her powers to intercede and
|
|
understand the essential nature of this all-connected mystery and
|
|
importantly bring wholeness and healing to the dis-spirited or sick.
|
|
|
|
Michael Harner (author of The Way of the Shaman) has coined the term
|
|
"urban shamanism" for the practise and initiation of western peoples
|
|
into an experiential exploration of shamanic realms. Years of academic
|
|
study and fieldwork among shamanic cultures, including his own
|
|
initiation, eventually led him to the realisation that several
|
|
cross-culturally shared motifs and techniques could perhaps be reduced
|
|
to a core of elements. These could be understood by almost anyone,
|
|
regardless of culture and which could be employed for their own and
|
|
others' benefit.(1)
|
|
|
|
Shamans throughout the world, from Tibet and Mongolia to the Americas,
|
|
have been involved in healing for thousands of years, dating back to
|
|
paleolithic times. Perhaps as old as consciousness itself, shamanism
|
|
is an ancient healing tradition that has reflected the changing
|
|
cultures of the surrounding world throughout the ages. This tradition
|
|
involves healing through personal transformation as well as healing
|
|
our family, community and environment. Central to this is the belief
|
|
that we must heal and honour our mother the Earth, who is viewed as a
|
|
living, conscious organism. Shamans say this sacred female Goddess,
|
|
the earth who nourishes our very existence, must also be nourished
|
|
with our prayers and ceremonies.(2) Recently some medical
|
|
practitioners in America have been researching and using shamanistic
|
|
practises to assist wholistic healing. This is an area that will
|
|
undoubtedly reach out further into society as its effectiveness
|
|
becomes apparent. In particular instances shamanic healing has even
|
|
proven to be "miraculous" ie, Rolling Thunder, (Cherokee Indian
|
|
medicine man) in one reported case, irrefutably reversed Multiple
|
|
Sclerosis. And surely that is not the only case where medical science
|
|
is at a loss to explain the healing phenomena. Rolling Thunder says of
|
|
his work "This is the Great Spirit's way. I only act as an agent for
|
|
the Great Spirit here; the healing comes from the spirit world."(3)
|
|
|
|
An integral part of any shaman's power is a fortifying relationship
|
|
with an ally. Power exists everywhere, all around us, in
|
|
undifferentiated form. Since we need to use the power around us just
|
|
to charge our life force, each of us has some sort of ally in order to
|
|
be alive. The ally or helper acts as an intermediary between that
|
|
formless power and the physical world. Guardian angels, elementals,
|
|
stars, people, plants, birds, animals are mediators between the
|
|
spiritual and the material. In healing the ally acts as a step-down
|
|
transformer, converting raw power to more manageable energetic
|
|
levels. An ally can provide protection from illness or accidents as
|
|
well. A shaman gives back to an ally by inviting it to dance, sing and
|
|
work through his/her physical body. The shaman moves consciously
|
|
through all the layers of manifestation that exist - all times, all
|
|
places, all possibilities. The path is lifelong, what is written here
|
|
is only the beginning, the initiation. The gates beyond are layers of
|
|
consciousness, expanding gradually to include objective eternity. The
|
|
work moves from self, to community, and finally to the planet.(4)
|
|
|
|
There are probably as many different native names for shamanic
|
|
practitioners as there are languages and cultures around the
|
|
world. The Yakut called their shamans `ojuna', the mongolian - `buga
|
|
baga', the Buryats - `udayan', the Tartars - `Kam', the Lakota -
|
|
`wicasa wakan' etc. Sometimes the names refer to particular abilities
|
|
of the shaman such as the Pomo term `Maru' (dreamer) or the copper
|
|
Eskimo word `elik' (one who has eyes). Huichol shamans are called
|
|
mara'akame, masters of the deer (mara), after their principal spirit
|
|
ally.(5)
|
|
|
|
The Wiradjeri aboriginal medicine men have a high god - Baiame. Two
|
|
great quartz crystals extend from his shoulders to the sky above
|
|
him. Baiame sometimes appears to the aborigines in their dreams. He
|
|
causes a sacred waterfall of liquid quartz to pour over their bodies,
|
|
absorbing them totally. They later grow wings replacing their
|
|
arms. Later the dreamer learns to fly and Baiame sings a piece of
|
|
magical quartz into his forehead to enable him to see right into
|
|
things. Subsequently an `inner flame' and a heavenly cord are also
|
|
incorporated into the body of the new shaman. Thus we see the shaman
|
|
acquires new magical powers by encountering the gods as a result of a
|
|
special dream journey. The transformations which follow such an
|
|
encounter are regarded as initiatory.(6)
|
|
|
|
"Simply by using the technique of drumming (sonic driving, a
|
|
monotonous percussion sound), people from time immemorial have been
|
|
able to pass into these realms which are normally reserved for those
|
|
approaching death, or for saints. There is a remarkable similarity
|
|
between the experiences of the shaman and those of people coming back
|
|
from near-death experiences. It's the same terrain, the same kinds of
|
|
experiences. The shaman is known throughout the primitive world as
|
|
`conductor of souls', a person who helps the dying and the dead to
|
|
reunite with their dead family etc." says Michael Harner in an
|
|
interview with Nevill Drury.
|
|
|
|
For the shaman, all that exists in the revealed world has a living
|
|
force within it. This life energy force, like the Polynesian `mana' or
|
|
the Sioux `wakanda', is conceived of as a divine force which permeates
|
|
all. The knowledge that life is power is the realization of the
|
|
shaman. Communion with the purveyors of power is the work of the
|
|
shaman. Mastery of that power: this is the attaimnment of the
|
|
shaman.(7)
|
|
|
|
In Sydney recently, Nevill and myself held two public workshops
|
|
entitled "A Shamanic Initiation" where folk from all walks of life
|
|
were led through to their own personal mythic reality via drum
|
|
journeys and rituals. Nevill has been doing this work privately for a
|
|
number of years now, continually finding the depth of peoples journeys
|
|
to be both exciting and enriching. At our day-long sessions
|
|
participants contacted classic shamanic realms with ease, and gained
|
|
much personal power and satisfying insight from their allies and the
|
|
various events encountered in these realms. We also explored the
|
|
healing essence of shamanism in the "Spirit Canoe" where many of the
|
|
participants were able to both receive and give gifts of power. It is
|
|
truly remarkable how accessible this form of personal transformation
|
|
is, with the added bonus of being painless, non-traumatic and yet ever
|
|
so empowering.
|
|
|
|
Here is a brief journey account from a participant.
|
|
"Unlike meditation, which is a stillness, a silence, the
|
|
shamans vision flight is a movie in my minds eye. I focus on
|
|
commencing the journey through a doorway, then a tunnel, then into the
|
|
Light to reveal a landscape with animal and human characters. Then I
|
|
relax and watch the vision unfold as a cinema of the `right brain'. I
|
|
received extraordinary gifts of personal power. For example I was
|
|
given, by an American Indian, a writing stick and ink made from soot
|
|
and animal grease to write my words with "Clarity, Vision, Accuracy
|
|
and Dynamic". Since then, when I have been committing ideas to paper,
|
|
I have remembered this precious gift which positively affirmed those
|
|
qualities and continues to give me confidence when approaching each
|
|
new task and challenge. I also have flown with a Crow to sacred sites
|
|
around the world ie, Delphi, Maccu Picchi and experienced the
|
|
exhilaration of flight. Wishing to, but not yet able to, visit Ayres
|
|
Rock in person I have now journeyed there, in vision, to sit with my
|
|
hands feeling the rock, absorbing Uluru Earth Energy."
|
|
"I was amazed at how easy it is to start the mind-ball rolling
|
|
and to involve myself in an unfolding visionary tale, aided by the
|
|
drums' enchantment. It was significant to explore the symbols, allies
|
|
and gifts. When visiting my special `Pool of Wisdom' I encountered a
|
|
Tiger. Staring into each others eyes, I truly connected with the raw
|
|
non-urban power of the animal. Approaching my ally he extended his paw
|
|
and dropped in my hand a small, clear Crystal - another precious
|
|
gift. Reaching through to the clarity of the mythical realm, accessed
|
|
by my unconscious mind, I achieve wisdom, healing and self-knowledg
|
|
. Since that initial experience in the workshop I can choose to access
|
|
that state at anytime. A profound Initiation." - from Nina Sunday's
|
|
vision journal - October 88.
|
|
|
|
The clarity and depth of symbolism encountered in journeys such as
|
|
this is not unusual... but, unfortunately, not yet accessed by very
|
|
many in modern society. It is through such journeys and the gathering
|
|
of groups to share their experiences that much of the `tribal old
|
|
ways' will be revealed, linking us to that ancient wisdom of natural
|
|
inter-connection. Thus, I feel shamanism in its many forms can
|
|
significantly contribute to peace and wellbeing, both personal and
|
|
global.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sources:-
|
|
All Graphics from various issues of Shamans Drum magazine.
|
|
(1) Alicia Allen & Dennis Dutton - co-editors of Shaman's Drum magazine.
|
|
Issue No 11.
|
|
(2) Brant Secunda - Article entitled "Journey To The Heart" from
|
|
Shaman's Drum No 2.
|
|
(3) Jim Swan - On Rolling Thunder - Shaman's Drum No 3.
|
|
(4) Natasha Frazier - "Shamanic Survival Skills" from Shaman's Drum
|
|
No 2.
|
|
(5) Timothy White - Managing Editor of Shaman's Drum.
|
|
(6) Nevill Drury - Nature & health magazine. Vol 9 No 2.
|
|
(7) Joan Halifax - Shaman, The Wounded Healer.
|
|
|
|
MICHAEL NEY - Author/Photographer and Editor of `The Crystal
|
|
Visionary' recently co-presented (with Nevill Drury) `A Shamanic
|
|
Initiation'. His other workshop series entitled `The Crystal
|
|
Initiation' has been experienced by numerous groups throughout
|
|
Australia. Over the last few years Michael has been incorporating more
|
|
shamanic and sacred ritual elements in response to an inner calling,
|
|
thus deepening the effect of spiritual initiation for all
|
|
participants. Michael and Nevill will be conducting more Shamanic
|
|
Initiations in 89.
|
|
|
|
Workshop Enquiries: PO Box 566, Milsons Point 2061. NSW.
|
|
Phone (02) 918-6043. or Peg:email "visionary"
|
|
|
|
Tapes:
|
|
Shaman Journey - Nevill Drury, Japetus. ($A17.95 incl post)
|
|
One side drumming only, the other side is enhanced by music.
|
|
Available from Listen Music - PO Box 996 Chatswood 2067 NSW.
|
|
|
|
Further Reading:
|
|
The Way of the Shaman - Michael Harner. Harper & Row 1980
|
|
Shamanism - Mircea Eliade. Princeton University Press 1972
|
|
Vision Quest - Nevill Drury. Prism Press 1984.
|
|
The Shaman and the Magician - Nevill Drury. Arkana 1987.
|
|
Primitive Magic - Ernesto De Martino. Unity Press 1988.
|
|
Shamanism (Compilation) - Shirley Nicholson. Quest 1987.
|
|
Shaman, Wounded Healer - Joan Halifax. Thames & Hudson 1982
|
|
|