138 lines
8.4 KiB
Plaintext
138 lines
8.4 KiB
Plaintext
Some posts about Shamanism from a practitioner's perspective.
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These are some screen dumps I made of two posts I made on the Mysteria BBS
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(Tujunga, CA) regarding some files they had online. I hope this stimulates
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further discussion and thought regarding the "new Shamanism" which has
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unfortunately been turned into just another New Age fad by hucksters who
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may or may not have been trained in The Ways and in any event are profaning
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and abusing them. Read...and think.
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Michelle Chihacou Klein-Hass (White-Puma)
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I did a little poking around in the text files about Shamanism and
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Shamanic consciousness. I must say, I agree with all that was there.
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My teacher, Misha Sacred Wolf (which is a forshortening of a much more
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complex name) is quite disgusted with the "Shamanism for sale" going
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on nowadays in the "new age" movement. With the popularity of the
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Lynn Andrews books (which have all the credibility of the later Carlos
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Casteneda books, which is slim and none) and the much more
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authoritative "Way Of The Shaman", it is almost as hip to say "I am a
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White who has been trained by Native Americans in their Ways, and I
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can train you for X-amount of dollars and X-amount of lessons," as it
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is to say "I channel such-and-such being from (pick one) 1.)Outer
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Space, 2.)from ancient Rome/Babylon/America/Atlantis or 3.) Dolphins."
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The shaman in the Native American tradition is an awesome figure. The
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primary shaman, the one that is looked up to in the tribe and trains
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others in certain parts of his (shamans were usually male) work, is
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BORN to it. A child, usually the most sickly one, is named at birth
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as the successor to the current shaman. He is trained for all his
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childhood, and THEN is tested. In the Chiricahua Apache tradition
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that Misha Sacred Wolf comes from, originally the shaman would have to
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literally jump off a cliff. Literally. This "jumping off" was later
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interpreted as an INNER, rather than a physical trial, often induced
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by the ingestion of Peyotl or Jimson Weed. In these old days, the
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test results were simple, binary, yes or no. If the shaman survives,
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he is the shaman. If he dies, then it's time to train another one.
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With the use of peyotl, the results are not so clear-cut. Insanity,
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personality disassociation, and even possession by the more malevolent
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discarnate entities (known singularly and plurally as Gan'n) were
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distinct possibilities even for the ones who truly "had it". There
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were other shamans and shaman-trained people of Power in the tribe.
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Healers, Midwives, Dancers, even the current Inday (Chief) were given
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some initiation. But there could be only one true (in all senses of
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the word) Shaman of the Tribal band. A shaman would sometimes be paid
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for his teachings, and would be compensated for his work at festivals.
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But the teachings could never be truly bought. I will discuss more
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next post. Enju! (kind of the equivalent of 'so mote it be') Michelle
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Chihacou Klein-Hass
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****
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My only quarrel with the book "The Way Of The Shaman" is the fact that
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the author, whose name escapes me at this time, has reduced the
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shamanic experience to a few basic elements which he claims as
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universals. One of them is the healing method of the Jivaro, which
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entails "sucking" diseases, in the form of spiritual intrusions, out
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of the "patient"'s body. Not all shamanic traditions have that sort
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of healing method. In fact, the healers and shamans of the
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southwestern tribes resemble, more or less, Chinese herbalists or
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Indian (that is, India-n)Ayurvedic doctors, relying quite a bit on a
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very advanced knowledge of helpful herbs. True, you would also have
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times when the disease (usually something mental or psychosomatic)
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would be judged the work of outside influences or of an inner
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imbalance within the spirit itself. The famous "mountain spirit"
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dance of the White Mountain Apaches (incorrectly known as the Gan'n or
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demon dance) was really an exercise in psychology, where the struggle
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between the disturbance (in the form of a Gan'n, or evil discarnate
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spirit) and the shaman and his assistants (in the form of the Mountain
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Spirits, with their brightly colored crowns, symbolic of the di-yin or
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divine energy that they have within and brightly colored loincloths)
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would be made real for the patient. The "mountain spirits" would also
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show up at the girls' puberty ceremonies, where they would be present
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to protect the girl, who would become, symbolically, White Painted
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Woman (sometimes rendered White Shell Woman) the embodyment of the
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Female God-principle, in the ceremony. As the representation of White
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Painted Woman, she would be very vulnerable to attack by discarnate
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entities, so the dancers would dance to purify the perimeter of the
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area where the ceremony would take place. But getting back to the
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healing Ways, most ailments would be treated herbally before any other
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measures were taken.
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In regards to Shamanism and Wicca being inter-related, I would
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have to differ with the positions taken by the writers of those
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articles. Wicca holds much in common with the ancient Ways, and seems
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to suggest a common ancestry in Paleolithic times. The magickal state
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of consciousness is very similar to the shamanic state of
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consciousness, and requires as much force of will. As the Witch uses
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the force of their Will to focus their inner energy towards a certain
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goal, the shaman uses the force of their will to see beyond the
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limitations of the physical world.
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To sum up though, the world of today, where instead of hunting
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for one's dinner one simply goes to the Supermarket and buys their
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dinner pre-packaged and sometimes ready to eat with a minimum of
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preparation, and where one has far more insidious enemies than White-
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eyes and the Gan'n, the traditional Ways need some revision, some
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rethinking. As it was, for Misha to be accepted as what she is by the
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remnant of her band of Chiricahua Teneh, it required much adjustment.
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She is only 1/4 Chiricahua and less than half Native American, and she
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has the green eyes and light hair of her European ancestry. And she
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is female, where traditionally among the Chiricahua a woman's place
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was in the rearing of children and the preparing of food, clothing and
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other necessities for living in harmony with the Earth, and not that
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of the most important figure of any tribal band, exponentially more
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powerful than even the Inday. The Ways hold awesome truths about
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ourselves, the Earth we inhabit, and even our multiverse. But they
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cannot remain static, clinging to days long past on one hand, and
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cannot be bastardised into just another "new age" cafeteria of
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philosophy either. As a very aware friend of mine put it, "this Gem
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needs a new setting." This is the challenge the modern-day Shamanist
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faces, and I think this challenge also faces Wicca, Buddhism,
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Hinduism, Islam, Christianity, Judaism, Sikhism, and whatever system
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of beliefs I didn't mention. We cannot turn back the clock and go
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back to hunting buffalo and gathering acorns. However, we can take
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this path forward into the future.
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"I bring the whirlwind, that you may know each other--WE SHALL RETURN!"
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With those impassioned, powerful words of Wovoka, the Sioux leader of
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the "Ghost Dance" movement of the 1880s, I think I've just about summed it
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all up. ENJU!
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Michelle Chihacou Klein-Hass (White-Puma)
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Again, I hope this stimulates some thought. If you wish to study
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Shamanism, be very careful with whom you study with. Be very suspicious of
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those who charge exorbitant fees, especially with healings. The book "The
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Way Of The Shaman" by Michael Harner is a good introduction to some very
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basic information. The Sun Bear material also holds insights, but also has
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a cultish feel, like the "Bear Tribe" is the only authentic custodian of
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Shamanic knowledge. Avoid the Lynn Andrews books like the plague, and
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tread with care around Carlos Castenada's works, especially the later
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stuff. He IS telling the truth about some things, so I do not suggest
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rejecting his work completely out of hand. I cannot recommend any books in
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regard to my own tradition, because there are really none, and I do not
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intend to write one either, out of deference to the Grandfathers and to
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Usen'. But there ARE authentic teachers out there. You can know them by
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just hanging around them. Fees are the easiest dead giveaway, but attitude
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is important, too. Trust your gut...it's usually right.
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Hi-dicho...this is finished.
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ENJU!
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Michelle Chihacou Klein-Hass (White-Puma)
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