Shamanism
Shamans are often called “seers” or “people who know” in their tribal language because they are involved in a system of knowledge based on first hand experience. Shamanism is not a belief system. It’s based on personal experiments conducted to heal and to get information.
– Michael Harner
Shamanism
Shamans are often called “seers” or “people who know” in their tribal language because they are involved in a system of knowledge based on first hand experience. Shamanism is not a belief system. It’s based on personal experiments conducted to heal and to get information.
– Michael Harner
Shamanic Practices
click for details
Shamanism is the oldest documented spiritual belief system, dating back 40,000 years. It is practiced in every indigenous culture across the planet.
Shamanism isn’t a religion, it is the basis for all religion. (Animism)
Shamanism is an open-source practice rooted in presence, gratitude and the inter-connectivity of all things.
Shamanic Practices
click for details
Shamanism is the oldest documented spiritual belief system, dating back 40,000 years. It is practiced in every indigenous culture across the planet.
Shamanism isn’t a religion, it is the basis for all religion. (Animism)
Shamanism is an open-source practice rooted in presence, gratitude and the inter-connectivity of all things.
World History
“A remarkable similarity is found worldwide among the spiritual healers of hunter-gather, horticultural, and pastoral societies, who use Altered States of Consciosness (ASC) to interact with the spirit world on behalf of their community. These shamans tend to come from “shaman families,” and were selected by the spirits.
Early in life, as part of their training to be shamans, they undertook deliberate activities to enter ASC and develop personal relationships with the spirits. Shamans’ development involves a death-and-rebirth experience and the acquisition of animal allies that provide powers to heal, divine, diagnose and prophesize, assist in hunting, and engage in sorcery to harm others. Charismatic social leaders, shamans hold all-night ceremonies in which the entire community dances, drums, and chants. The central aspect involves the shaman recounting the experiences of an ASC—generally called “soul journey” or “magical flight”—during which an aspect of the shaman departs the body and travels to other places. Shamans are not normally possessed by spirits; rather they control spirits and are believed to be able to fly and transform themselves into animals. Therapeutic processes involve the removal of objects or spirits sent by other shamans through sorcery, and the use of soul journeys to recover lost souls and power animals (aspects of one’s personal powers based on a special relationship with an animal species).
Shaman/Healers
Shaman/healers share many characteristics with shamans, and are found in all types of societies. But they differ from shamans in some important ways. They are subordinated to religious practitioners called priests. They also engage in agricultural rituals and often use mechanical devices such as Tarot cards as means of divination. Shaman/healers tend to have extensive role specialization, in which individual practitioners engage in some tasks, such as divination or healing or agricultural rites, but not others. They are also trained and initiated by professional associations rather than taught by the spirits and validated by the community. Their ASC seldom involve soul journey, but are more like the experiences of meditators and mystics.
Mediums
Some spiritual healers who are often called “shamans” are quite distinct from core shamans. Mediums are predominantly female and are called to their profession in early adulthood when they are possessed by spirits. Mediums engage in spirit-world interactions and healing through ASC, but rather than traveling to visit spirits, they are possessed by them. Possession is a condition interpreted as a spirit taking over the medium’s personality and will. Possession ASC generally involves tremors, convulsions, seizures, and amnesia. Mediums generally do not commit malevolent acts, but rather act against sorcerers, witches, and evil spirits. They worship and make sacrifices to their possessing spirits and superior deities. Like healers, they specialize in treating people who are possessed. Unlike shamans, mediums do not hold a high leadership role; they are often found in complex societies with political hierarchies and more powerful religious practitioners such as priests and healers.
Healers
Healers are almost exclusively male, and generally of high economic status and holding political power. Their professional organizations provide costly training and wield considerable power, enabling healers to be full-time specialists in diagnosis and healing. Healers generally lack the ASC characteristic of shamans, but may nonetheless induce ASC in clients with rituals, spells, and incantations. Exorcism is a principal activity, as are life-cycle activities—naming ceremonies, marriage rituals, and funerals. Healers generally work in collaboration with priests, and have the power to take action against those they determine are sorcerers or witches.
Biology of Shamanism
Shamans, shaman/healers, mediums, and healers—referred to in this issue as “shamanistic healers”—are found worldwide because their activities are based in biological potentials involving ASC, healing, and visual thought processes. ASC is a natural biological response, an “integrative” mode of consciousness involving the synchronization of brain wave patterns across different regions of the brain. I call these ASC conditions integrative because they enhance the merging of processes of lower brain systems (especially the limbic or paleomammalian brain, an “emotional brain”) within the frontal cortex. The synchronized brain wave patterns enhance awareness of lower brain processes—often expressed through visions—heightening awareness of intuitive information and producing a synthesis of emotion and thought.
Shamanism emerged in human evolution because it allowed humans to integrate information from innate brain modules, which allow automatic processing of knowledge of mind, self, others, and the animal world. The experiences of integration occur as out-of-body experiences and through relations with power animals and totems that represent personal and group identity. The responses evoked by shamanic ritual allow humans to integrate a fragmented mind created by the increasing psychological complexity of humans and their increasingly complex social relations.
The biological basis of shamanism makes it a natural paradigm for explaining the mental and behavioral characteristics of the religious experiences and healing resources among traditional and modern peoples.
Contemporary Shamanisms
The contributors to this issue of Cultural Survival Quarterly offer diverse representations of shamanistic practices. They discuss topics ranging from the core shamanism still found among groups such as the Ju/’hoan San, to efforts to recover shamanistic traditions among the Buryat people of the former Soviet Union and contemporary Chinese peasants. For most cultures, core shamanic traditions are at best a memory of the past, a practice of ancestors which no longer has the same power. Or, worse, as Roger Lohmann tells us about the Asabano of New Guinea, shamanic traditions are fading memories of practices that have been replaced by new religions.
But all of the articles attest to shamanistic practices’ continuing role in today’s world. Perhaps the most poignant testimony is the article about the Ju/’hoan San. These Kung-speaking people of the Kalahari Desert are one of the few hunter-gatherer peoples who survived until the end of the second millennium, and anthropological studies of their cultures have provided a wealth of knowledge about aspects of hunter-gatherer lifestyles such as shamanism. But they are also being forced to extinction by more powerful neighbors who encroach upon their traditional territories. Richard Katz, and Megan Biesele ask insightful questions, pointing to the potential for the Ju/’hoan healing dance to provide a crucible for cultural survival and adaptation. May their optimistic message be heard by others around the planet.
Many cultures have maintained vibrant and vital shamanistic traditions, not merely as remainders the past, but as adaptations of the potentials of ASC and spirit-world relations to address contemporary conditions. Susan Rasmussen conveys the vibrant practices of the Tuareg “friends of the Kel Essuf” who rely on spirit relations for divination, diagnosis, and healing. Luis Eduardo Luna tells us how the shamanic ayahuasca traditions of the Amazon basin have developed into worldwide religious traditions and neo-shamanic practices.
But where shamanistic practices disappeared under the onslaught of colonization, capitalization, religious oppression, communization and demonization, the emerging reinventions of shamanism are often of a different pattern of practice than that associated with the core shamans of hunter-gatherer societies. We see in Armenia, Tibet, China, Japan, and other parts of the world the persistence of practices that depend upon ASC. Yet many of the other aspects of shamanism are gone. Soul journeys are replaced by possession, animal allies by rituals for the spirits, soul loss and recovery by depossession and burnt offerings. Often what remains are the sacred places that have been adopted by modern pilgrims.1 But the shamanic traditions are not lost forever. Their resuscitation is possible because they are based in biological human potentials.
Human nature alone is not sufficient for the assurance that shamanism will survive for current and future generations. As Hong Zhang and Constantine Hriskos point out in their article about China, the resurgence and use of these potentials depend on the social and political climate. The deliberate resuscitation of shamanic traditions on a global scale has a champion in organizations such as the Foundation for Shamanic Studies2, founded by anthropologist Michael Harner. The foundation’s programs have appealed to a wide range of people in healing professions who find shamanic practices applicable to their personal lives and work with clients.
Past, Present, and Future
Shamanism is emerging from a long neglect in religious, psychological, and evolutionary studies and increasingly taking its place as an important pinnacle of human achievement. The ancient roots of shamanic practices have been recognized by a new generation of scholars. Studies of the ancient cave art of Europe3 attest to the origination of shamanism some 40,000 years ago in the midst of the emergence of a cultural capacity for symbolism.4
But this ancient basis should not distract us from recognizing the present relevance of shamanistic potentials. Shamanism has been applied in psychology, counseling, nursing, public health, medicine, and substance-abuse rehabilitation.
Our understanding of the functions of shamanism in the past should alert us to its applications in the future. Shamanism has been used for prophecy, to plan how to deal with the future. And shamanism may still serve as a conduit for information about the futures we will have to manage, as illustrated in Hank Wesselman’s engaging books about his shamanic connections with his descendants in the future and their warnings for humanity.
Shamanism emerged long ago in human pre-history because it provided vital social and psychological functions and integrated human psyche, identity, and social groups. Shamanism’s resurgence today appears to reflect a response to similar needs.”
~ excerpt taken from: https://www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/cultural-survival-quarterly/shamanisms-and-survival
World History
“A remarkable similarity is found worldwide among the spiritual healers of hunter-gather, horticultural, and pastoral societies, who use Altered States of Consciousness (ASC) to interact with the spirit world on behalf of their community. These shamans tend to come from “shaman families,” and were selected by the spirits.
Early in life, as part of their training to be shamans, they undertook deliberate activities to enter ASC and develop personal relationships with the spirits. Shamans’ development involves a death-and-rebirth experience and the acquisition of animal allies that provide powers to heal, divine, diagnose and prophesize, assist in hunting, and engage in sorcery to harm others. Charismatic social leaders, shamans hold all-night ceremonies in which the entire community dances, drums, and chants. The central aspect involves the shaman recounting the experiences of an ASC—generally called “soul journey” or “magical flight”—during which an aspect of the shaman departs the body and travels to other places. Shamans are not normally possessed by spirits; rather they control spirits and are believed to be able to fly and transform themselves into animals. Therapeutic processes involve the removal of objects or spirits sent by other shamans through sorcery, and the use of soul journeys to recover lost souls and power animals (aspects of one’s personal powers based on a special relationship with an animal species).
Shaman/Healers
Shaman/healers share many characteristics with shamans, and are found in all types of societies. But they differ from shamans in some important ways. They are subordinated to religious practitioners called priests. They also engage in agricultural rituals and often use mechanical devices such as Tarot cards as means of divination. Shaman/healers tend to have extensive role specialization, in which individual practitioners engage in some tasks, such as divination or healing or agricultural rites, but not others. They are also trained and initiated by professional associations rather than taught by the spirits and validated by the community. Their ASC seldom involve soul journey, but are more like the experiences of meditators and mystics.
Mediums
Some spiritual healers who are often called “shamans” are quite distinct from core shamans. Mediums are predominantly female and are called to their profession in early adulthood when they are possessed by spirits. Mediums engage in spirit-world interactions and healing through ASC, but rather than traveling to visit spirits, they are possessed by them. Possession is a condition interpreted as a spirit taking over the medium’s personality and will. Possession ASC generally involves tremors, convulsions, seizures, and amnesia. Mediums generally do not commit malevolent acts, but rather act against sorcerers, witches, and evil spirits. They worship and make sacrifices to their possessing spirits and superior deities. Like healers, they specialize in treating people who are possessed. Unlike shamans, mediums do not hold a high leadership role; they are often found in complex societies with political hierarchies and more powerful religious practitioners such as priests and healers.
Healers
Healers are almost exclusively male, and generally of high economic status and holding political power. Their professional organizations provide costly training and wield considerable power, enabling healers to be full-time specialists in diagnosis and healing. Healers generally lack the ASC characteristic of shamans, but may nonetheless induce ASC in clients with rituals, spells, and incantations. Exorcism is a principal activity, as are life-cycle activities—naming ceremonies, marriage rituals, and funerals. Healers generally work in collaboration with priests, and have the power to take action against those they determine are sorcerers or witches.
Biology of Shamanism
Shamans, shaman/healers, mediums, and healers—referred to in this issue as “shamanistic healers”—are found worldwide because their activities are based in biological potentials involving ASC, healing, and visual thought processes. ASC is a natural biological response, an “integrative” mode of consciousness involving the synchronization of brain wave patterns across different regions of the brain. I call these ASC conditions integrative because they enhance the merging of processes of lower brain systems (especially the limbic or paleomammalian brain, an “emotional brain”) within the frontal cortex. The synchronized brain wave patterns enhance awareness of lower brain processes—often expressed through visions—heightening awareness of intuitive information and producing a synthesis of emotion and thought.
Shamanism emerged in human evolution because it allowed humans to integrate information from innate brain modules, which allow automatic processing of knowledge of mind, self, others, and the animal world. The experiences of integration occur as out-of-body experiences and through relations with power animals and totems that represent personal and group identity. The responses evoked by shamanic ritual allow humans to integrate a fragmented mind created by the increasing psychological complexity of humans and their increasingly complex social relations.
The biological basis of shamanism makes it a natural paradigm for explaining the mental and behavioral characteristics of the religious experiences and healing resources among traditional and modern peoples.
Contemporary Shamanisms
The contributors to this issue of Cultural Survival Quarterly offer diverse representations of shamanistic practices. They discuss topics ranging from the core shamanism still found among groups such as the Ju/’hoan San, to efforts to recover shamanistic traditions among the Buryat people of the former Soviet Union and contemporary Chinese peasants. For most cultures, core shamanic traditions are at best a memory of the past, a practice of ancestors which no longer has the same power. Or, worse, as Roger Lohmann tells us about the Asabano of New Guinea, shamanic traditions are fading memories of practices that have been replaced by new religions.
But all of the articles attest to shamanistic practices’ continuing role in today’s world. Perhaps the most poignant testimony is the article about the Ju/’hoan San. These Kung-speaking people of the Kalahari Desert are one of the few hunter-gatherer peoples who survived until the end of the second millennium, and anthropological studies of their cultures have provided a wealth of knowledge about aspects of hunter-gatherer lifestyles such as shamanism. But they are also being forced to extinction by more powerful neighbors who encroach upon their traditional territories. Richard Katz, and Megan Biesele ask insightful questions, pointing to the potential for the Ju/’hoan healing dance to provide a crucible for cultural survival and adaptation. May their optimistic message be heard by others around the planet.
Many cultures have maintained vibrant and vital shamanistic traditions, not merely as remainders the past, but as adaptations of the potentials of ASC and spirit-world relations to address contemporary conditions. Susan Rasmussen conveys the vibrant practices of the Tuareg “friends of the Kel Essuf” who rely on spirit relations for divination, diagnosis, and healing. Luis Eduardo Luna tells us how the shamanic ayahuasca traditions of the Amazon basin have developed into worldwide religious traditions and neo-shamanic practices.
But where shamanistic practices disappeared under the onslaught of colonization, capitalization, communization, demonization, and religious oppression, the emerging reinventions of shamanism are often of a different pattern of practice than that associated with the core shamans of hunter-gatherer societies. We see in Armenia, Tibet, China, Japan, and other parts of the world the persistence of practices that depend upon ASC. Yet many of the other aspects of shamanism are gone. Soul journeys are replaced by possession, animal allies by rituals for the spirits, soul loss and recovery by depossession and burnt offerings. Often what remains are the sacred places that have been adopted by modern pilgrims.1 But the shamanic traditions are not lost forever. Their resuscitation is possible because they are based in biological human potentials.
Human nature alone is not sufficient for the assurance that shamanism will survive for current and future generations. As Hong Zhang and Constantine Hriskos point out in their article about China, the resurgence and use of these potentials depend on the social and political climate. The deliberate resuscitation of shamanic traditions on a global scale has a champion in organizations such as the Foundation for Shamanic Studies2, founded by anthropologist Michael Harner. The foundation’s programs have appealed to a wide range of people in healing professions who find shamanic practices applicable to their personal lives and work with clients.
Past, Present, and Future
Shamanism is emerging from a long neglect in religious, psychological, and evolutionary studies and increasingly taking its place as an important pinnacle of human achievement. The ancient roots of shamanic practices have been recognized by a new generation of scholars. Studies of the ancient cave art of Europe3 attest to the origination of shamanism some 40,000 years ago in the midst of the emergence of a cultural capacity for symbolism.4
But this ancient basis should not distract us from recognizing the present relevance of shamanistic potentials. Shamanism has been applied in psychology, counseling, nursing, public health, medicine, and substance-abuse rehabilitation.
Our understanding of the functions of shamanism in the past should alert us to its applications in the future. Shamanism has been used for prophecy, to plan how to deal with the future. And shamanism may still serve as a conduit for information about the futures we will have to manage, as illustrated in Hank Wesselman’s engaging books about his shamanic connections with his descendants in the future and their warnings for humanity.
Shamanism emerged long ago in human pre-history because it provided vital social and psychological functions and integrated human psyche, identity, and social groups. Shamanism’s resurgence today appears to reflect a response to similar needs.”
~ excerpt taken from: https://www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/cultural-survival-quarterly/shamanisms-and-survival
Members of Q’ero that practice healing and religion are shamans called Paqos. They are holy men or women that are capable of healing both external wounds and—most importantly—wounds of the soul.
Members of Q’ero that practice healing and religion are shamans called Paqos. They are holy men or women that are capable of healing both external wounds and—most importantly—wounds of the soul.
The Q’ero
“Who are the Q’ero Inca Shamans (Paqos)?
At the highest altitudes in the Andes Mountains in Peru, live a group of indigenous Indians called the Q’eros. They are the direct descendants of the ancient Incan people who were invaded by the Spanish Conquistadores in the 1500’s. During that time, many of the Incan people were forced into labor in the gold and silver mines by the Spanish, but a few others escaped to the “villages in the clouds” in the refuge of the holy mountains (apus). These people survived and safeguarded much of their sacred knowledge, keeping it intact over the centuries.
Other Incan tribes, who stayed behind, were strongly encouraged to forget their traditions and convert to Western ideologies of the church and other cultural views. The Q’eros have miraculously been able to preserve and orally pass on their sacred Inca healing traditions and ceremonies from one generation to the next. They have successfully been able to keep drawing on the wisdom of the advanced Incan societies that had previously flourished for 1000’s of years. They have also been able to continue developing these advanced techniques in healing, divination, ceremony and kept a strong connection with the spirits of their homeland.
Inca prophecy, to bring back balance in nature and Mother Earth
In recent years, the paqos, or Inca shamans (holy men and women, healers, priests, and specialists in medicine,) have seen their sacred mountain glaciers begin to melt. This was a sign from an ancient prophecy that they should come down from the mountains to share their wisdom with Western civilization. Mother Earth (Pachamama) was in dire need for people to know what to do to bring back the balance in nature and society that has rapidly deteriorated in the past century. This they have willingly done and are now sharing around the world in special schools and workshops where they travel to teach about their rich heritage with open hearts and open arms. Despite the way their ancestors were treated, they do not hold a grudge nor do they hold onto any anger. The reaction of some other indigenous peoples has understandably been to keep their traditions away from those who wish to know about them. But the Q’ero people believe they should share their knowledge and energy because it is crucial for the preservation of life on this planet and our health. Many Westerners have lost touch with nature, in general and lost all meaning in life, along with their peace of mind, wellness, and true purpose as souls. The Q’ero Inca shamans help to teach us how to live in balance and give back to Mother Nature in reciprocity (Ayni) and with each other. The Q’ero do not see themselves as separate from each other as we do in the West. They realize deeply that we are one with nature, with spirit (God), and other people. Nature has so much to teach us, if we only know how to listen, respect. and take time to love. The Q’eros see the divine in all nature and speak to each mountain, rock, plant, river, animal and human with attentiveness and care.
Pampamesayoq and Altomesayoq, the main Inca shamanic paths
Two main paths that the Q’ero Inca shamans follow are called Pampamesayok and Altomesayok. Each one is important and one does not rank over the other. The path of the Pampamesayok is as an Earth healer and one may also specialize in a variety of functions, such as cocoa leaf reader, pulse reader, healer, or one who works with other specific energies. The path of the Altomesayok differs because one must be chosen by the mountains in the form of being hit by lightning three times and surviving. The Altomesayok then works specifically with the mountain energies and stars in his or her own way. But both Pampamesayoks and Altomesayoks work with mountains, earth, and the stars.
In fact, the Q’ero Inca shamans believe that they are descendants of the star nations, particularly from the Pleiades, but also connected to other stars and planets. They teach several healing techniques, give initiations, and explain about this ongoing connection with the Pleiades. They teach a healing technique called the Koto Kanchay(healing with the light of the Pleiades) and also the Koto Kuna Kanchay Karpay (initiation with each Pleiadian star energy).”
– International Spiritual Experience
For 500 years the elders of the Q’ero, indigenous Andean people of south-central Peru, preserved a sacred prophecy of a great change, or “pachacuti,” in which the world would be turned right side up, harmony and order would be restored, and chaos and disorder ended.
The Q’ero are a Quechua speaking tribe whose lands cover some of the highest, most rugged and most isolated terrain in the Andes and their Pacos, or Shamans, are considered the best, most knowledgeable and most powerful of the region. There are currently about three thousand Q’ero living in 6 villages isolated throughout their territory.
The Q’ero
“Who are the Q’ero Inca Shamans(Paqos)?
At the highest altitudes in the Andes Mountains in Peru, live a group of indigenous Indians called the Q’eros. They are the direct descendants of the ancient Incan people who were invaded by the Spanish Conquistadores in the 1500’s. During that time, many of the Incan people were forced into labor in the gold and silver mines by the Spanish, but a few others escaped to the “villages in the clouds” in the refuge of the holy mountains (apus). These people survived and safeguarded much of their sacred knowledge, keeping it intact over the centuries.
Other Incan tribes, who stayed behind, were strongly encouraged to forget their traditions and convert to Western ideologies of the church and other cultural views. The Q’eros have miraculously been able to preserve and orally pass on their sacred Inca healing traditions and ceremonies from one generation to the next. They have successfully been able to keep drawing on the wisdom of the advanced Incan societies that had previously flourished for 1000’s of years. They have also been able to continue developing these advanced techniques in healing, divination, ceremony and kept a strong connection with the spirits of their homeland.
Inca prophecy, to bring back balance in nature and Mother Earth
In recent years, the paqos, or Inca shamans (holy men and women, healers, priests, and specialists in medicine,) have seen their sacred mountain glaciers begin to melt. This was a sign from an ancient prophecy that they should come down from the mountains to share their wisdom with Western civilization. Mother Earth (Pachamama) was in dire need for people to know what to do to bring back the balance in nature and society that has rapidly deteriorated in the past century. This they have willingly done and are now sharing around the world in special schools and workshops where they travel to teach about their rich heritage with open hearts and open arms. Despite the way their ancestors were treated, they do not hold a grudge nor do they hold onto any anger. The reaction of some other indigenous peoples has understandably been to keep their traditions away from those who wish to know about them. But the Q’ero people believe they should share their knowledge and energy because it is crucial for the preservation of life on this planet and our health. Many Westerners have lost touch with nature, in general and lost all meaning in life, along with their peace of mind, wellness, and true purpose as souls. The Q’ero Inca shamans help to teach us how to live in balance and give back to Mother Nature in reciprocity (Ayni) and with each other. The Q’ero do not see themselves as separate from each other as we do in the West. They realize deeply that we are one with nature, with spirit (God), and other people. Nature has so much to teach us, if we only know how to listen, respect. and take time to love. The Q’eros see the divine in all nature and speak to each mountain, rock, plant, river, animal and human with attentiveness and care.
Pampamesayoq and Altomesayoq, the main Inca shamanic paths
Two main paths that the Q’ero Inca shamans follow are called Pampamesayok and Altomesayok. Each one is important and one does not rank over the other. The path of the Pampamesayok is as an Earth healer and one may also specialize in a variety of functions, such as cocoa leaf reader, pulse reader, healer, or one who works with other specific energies. The path of the Altomesayok differs because one must be chosen by the mountains in the form of being hit by lightning three times and surviving. The Altomesayok then works specifically with the mountain energies and stars in his or her own way. But both Pampamesayoks and Altomesayoks work with mountains, earth, and the stars.
In fact, the Q’ero Inca shamans believe that they are descendants of the star nations, particularly from the Pleiades, but also connected to other stars and planets. They teach several healing techniques, give initiations, and explain about this ongoing connection with the Pleiades. They teach a healing technique called the Koto Kanchay(healing with the light of the Pleiades) and also the Koto Kuna Kanchay Karpay (initiation with each Pleiadian star energy).”
– International Spiritual Experience
For 500 years the elders of the Q’ero, indigenous Andrean people of south-central Peru, preserved a sacred prophecy of a great change, or “Pachacuti”, in which the world would be turned right side up, harmony and order would be restored, and chaos disorder ended.
The Q’ero are a Quechua speaking tribe whose lands cover some of the highest, most rugged and most isolated terrain in the Andes and their Pacos, or Shamans, are considered the best, most knowledgeable and most powerful of the region. There are currently about three thousand Q’ero living in 6 villages isolated throughout their territory.
Creating Sacred Space
Sacred space can be opened before a healing session, at home for your meditation practice, or simply to create an atmosphere of peace and protection.
Within sacred space, we leave behind the affairs of ordinary life, the bustling world of meetings and schedules, and prepare to meet with Spirit. Our burdens become lighter, and we can be touched by the hand of Spirit.
Shamans traditionally open Sacred Space by calling upon the archetypes of the Four Directions, (South, West, North and East), the Earth and the Heavens in invocation or prayer. You can create Sacred Space for yourself, using your own words or reciting the prayer below. Like any prayer, It is your intent that is most important, not the actual words. Feel free to make it your own.
When you have finished your healing work or meditation session, sacred space should be closed.
To close the space, follow the same procedure as for the opening, acknowledging the four directions, Mother Earth and Father Sun. Thank the archetypes for being with you — serpent, jaguar, hummingbird, and eagle— and release their energies to return to the four corners of the Earth
Sacred Space allows us to enter our quiet inner world where healing takes place.
A Prayer for Creating Sacred Space*
South
To the winds of the South
Great Serpent
Wrap your coils of light around us
Teach us to shed the past the way you shed your skin
To walk softly on the Earth
Teach us the Beauty Way
West
To the winds of the West
Mother Jaguar
Protect our medicine space
Teach us the way of peace, to live impeccably
Show us the way beyond death
North
To the winds of the North
Hummingbird, Grandmothers and Grandfathers
Ancient Ones
Come and warm your hands by our fires
Whisper to us in the wind
We honor you who have come before us
And you who will come after us, our children’s children
East
To the winds of the East
Great eagle, condor
Come to us from the place of the rising Sun
Keep us under your wing
Show us the mountains we only dare to dream of
Teach us to fly wing to wing with the Great Spirit
Mother Earth
We’ve gathered for the healing of all of your children
The Stone People, the Plant People
The four-legged, the two-legged, the creepy crawlers
The finned, the furred, and the winged ones
All our relations
Father Sun
Father Sun, Grandmother Moon, to the Star Nations
Great Spirit, you who are known by a thousand names
And you who are the unnamable One
Thank you for bringing us together
And allowing us to sing the Song of Life
* From the book Shaman, Healer, Sage by Alberto Villoldo
Creating Sacred Space
Sacred Space allows us to enter our quiet inner world where healing takes place.
A Prayer for Creating Sacred Space*
South
To the winds of the South
Great Serpent
Wrap your coils of light around us.
Teach us to shed the past the way you shed your skin.
To walk softly on the Earth.
Teach us the Beauty Way.
West
To the winds of the West
Mother Jaguar
Protect our medicine space.
Teach us the way of peace, to live impeccably.
Show us the way beyond death.
North
To the winds of the North
Hummingbird, Grandmothers and Grandfathers
Ancient Ones
Come and warm your hands by our fires.
Whisper to us in the wind.
We honor you who have come before us.
And you who will come after us, our children’s children.
East
To the winds of the East
Great eagle, condor
Come to us from the place of the rising Sun.
Keep us under your wing.
Show us the mountains we only dare to dream of.
Teach us to fly wing to wing with the Great Spirit.
Mother Earth
We’ve gathered for the healing of all of your children.
The Stone People, the Plant People. The four-legged, the two-legged, the creepy crawlers. The finned, the furred, and the winged ones.
All our relations
Father Sun
Father Sun, Grandmother Moon, to the Star Nations.
Great Spirit, you who are known by a thousand names. And you who are the unnamable One.
Thank you for bringing us together and allowing us to sing the Song of Life.
* From the book Shaman, Healer, Sage by Alberto Villoldo
Shamanic Journeying
shamanic journeying is a way of communicating with your inner or spirit self and retrieving information. Your inner self is in constant communication with all aspects of your environment, seen and unseen. You need only journey within to find answers to your questions. You should have a question or objective in mind from the start. Shamanic journeying may be undertaken for purposes of divination, for personal healing, to meet one’s power animal or spirit guide, or for any number of other reasons. After the journey, you must then interpret the meaning of your trance experience.
The drum, sometimes called the shamans horse, provides a simple and effective way to induce ecstatic trance states. When a drum is played at an even tempo of three to four beats per second for at least fifteen minutes, most novices report that they can journey successfully even on their first attempt. Transported by the driving beat of the drum; the shamanic traveler journeys to the inner planes of consciousness.
The Shaman’s Universe
According to shamanic cosmology, there are three inner planes of consciousness: the Upper, Middle, and Lower Worlds. Humans did not invent these inner realms; they discovered them. Far from being a human contrivance, these archetypal worlds are inherent in the collective unconscious, the common psychological inheritance of humanity. They are woven into the matrix of the psyche. They are a part of our psyche, a part of us whether we choose to become aware of it or not.
The three realms are linked together by a vertical axis that is commonly referred to as the “World Tree.” The roots of the World Tree touch the Lower World. Its trunk is the Middle World and its branches hold up the Upper World. This central axis exists within each of us. Through the sound of the drum, which is invariably made of wood from the World Tree, the shaman is transported to the axis within and conveyed from plane to plane. As Tuvan musicologist Valentina Suzukei explains, “There is a bridge on these sound waves so you can go from one world to another. In the sound world, a tunnel opens through which we can pass-or the shaman’s spirits come to us. When you stop playing the drum, the bridge disappears.”
Transcending the traditional ideal of reality, once journeying, the shaman is able to draw incredible knowledge and healing power from within the depths of their being. There are three realms, or levels of inner consciousness, the Upper, Middle and Lower Worlds.
Journey Technique
To enter a trance state and support your journey, you will need a drum or a shamanic drumming recording. Shamanic drumming is drumming for the purpose of shamanic journeying. A good shamanic drumming recording should be pulsed at around three to four beats per second. You may also rattle, chant, or sing to induce trance. There is no right or wrong way to journey. Be innovative and try different ways of journeying. Many people need to move, dance, or sing their journeys. My first journeys were supported by listening to a shamanic drumming recording, but now I have stronger journeys when I drum for myself.
For your first journeys, I recommend traveling to the Lower World using the technique taught by Michael Harner. Founder of The Foundation for Shamanic Studies, Harner is widely acknowledged as the world’s foremost authority on experiential and practical shamanism. In his book, The Way of the Shaman, Harner suggests that you visualize an opening into the earth that you remember from sometime in your life. The entrance could be an animal burrow, hollow tree stump, cave and so on. When the journey begins, you’ll go down the hole and a tunnel will appear. The tunnel often appears ribbed and may bend or spiral around. This tunnel-like imagery is related to the central axis that links the three inner planes of consciousness. Enter the tunnel and you will emerge into the Lower World — the realm of power animals, spirit guides and ancestral spirits. It is a beautiful, Earth-like dimension, where we can find lost power, retrieve lost souls and connect with animal and plant spirits.
Engaging the Imaginal Realm
Imagination is our portal to the spirit world. Internal imagery enables us to perceive and connect with the inner realms. If a shaman wants to retrieve information or a lost guardian spirit, “imagining what to look for” is the first step in achieving any result. According to C. Michael Smith, author of Jung and Shamanism in Dialogue, “The shaman’s journey employs the imagination, and the use of myth as inner map gives the shaman a way of imagining non-ordinary reality, so that he or she may move about intentionally in it.”2 By consciously interacting with the inner imagery, the shaman is able to communicate with spirit guides and power animals.
Communication in non-ordinary reality is characteristically archetypal, nonverbal and nonlinear in nature. The images we see during a shamanic journey have a universal, archetypical quality. Imagery from these experiences is a combination of our imagination and information conveyed to us by the spirits. Our imagination gives the journey a “container;” which helps us to understand the messages we receive. It provides us with a way to understand and articulate the experience for ourselves and to others.
Shamanic Journeying
shamanic journeying is a way of communicating with your inner or spirit self and retrieving information. Your inner self is in constant communication with all aspects of your environment, seen and unseen. You need only journey within to find answers to your questions. You should have a question or objective in mind from the start. Shamanic journeying may be undertaken for purposes of divination, for personal healing, to meet one’s power animal or spirit guide, or for any number of other reasons. After the journey, you must then interpret the meaning of your trance experience.
The drum, sometimes called the shamans horse, provides a simple and effective way to induce ecstatic trance states. When a drum is played at an even tempo of three to four beats per second for at least fifteen minutes, most novices report that they can journey successfully even on their first attempt. Transported by the driving beat of the drum; the shamanic traveler journeys to the inner planes of consciousness.
The Shaman’s Universe
According to shamanic cosmology, there are three inner planes of consciousness: the Upper, Middle, and Lower Worlds. Humans did not invent these inner realms; they discovered them. Far from being a human contrivance, these archetypal worlds are inherent in the collective unconscious, the common psychological inheritance of humanity. They are woven into the matrix of the psyche. They are a part of our psyche, a part of us whether we choose to become aware of it or not.
The three realms are linked together by a vertical axis that is commonly referred to as the “World Tree.” The roots of the World Tree touch the Lower World. Its trunk is the Middle World and its branches hold up the Upper World. This central axis exists within each of us. Through the sound of the drum, which is invariably made of wood from the World Tree, the shaman is transported to the axis within and conveyed from plane to plane. As Tuvan musicologist Valentina Suzukei explains, “There is a bridge on these sound waves so you can go from one world to another. In the sound world, a tunnel opens through which we can pass-or the shaman’s spirits come to us. When you stop playing the drum, the bridge disappears.”
Transcending the traditional ideal of reality, once journeying, the shaman is able to draw incredible knowledge and healing power from within the depths of their being. There are three realms, or levels of inner consciousness, the Upper, Middle and Lower Worlds.
Journey Technique
To enter a trance state and support your journey, you will need a drum or a shamanic drumming recording. Shamanic drumming is drumming for the purpose of shamanic journeying. A good shamanic drumming recording should be pulsed at around three to four beats per second. You may also rattle, chant, or sing to induce trance. There is no right or wrong way to journey. Be innovative and try different ways of journeying. Many people need to move, dance, or sing their journeys. My first journeys were supported by listening to a shamanic drumming recording, but now I have stronger journeys when I drum for myself.
For your first journeys, I recommend traveling to the Lower World using the technique taught by Michael Harner. Founder of The Foundation for Shamanic Studies, Harner is widely acknowledged as the world’s foremost authority on experiential and practical shamanism. In his book, The Way of the Shaman, Harner suggests that you visualize an opening into the earth that you remember from sometime in your life. The entrance could be an animal burrow, hollow tree stump, cave and so on. When the journey begins, you’ll go down the hole and a tunnel will appear. The tunnel often appears ribbed and may bend or spiral around. This tunnel-like imagery is related to the central axis that links the three inner planes of consciousness. Enter the tunnel and you will emerge into the Lower World — the realm of power animals, spirit guides and ancestral spirits. It is a beautiful, Earth-like dimension, where we can find lost power, retrieve lost souls and connect with animal and plant spirits.
Engaging the Imaginal Realm
Imagination is our portal to the spirit world. Internal imagery enables us to perceive and connect with the inner realms. If a shaman wants to retrieve information or a lost guardian spirit, “imagining what to look for” is the first step in achieving any result. According to C. Michael Smith, author of Jung and Shamanism in Dialogue, “The shaman’s journey employs the imagination, and the use of myth as inner map gives the shaman a way of imagining non-ordinary reality, so that he or she may move about intentionally in it.”2 By consciously interacting with the inner imagery, the shaman is able to communicate with spirit guides and power animals.
Communication in non-ordinary reality is characteristically archetypal, nonverbal and nonlinear in nature. The images we see during a shamanic journey have a universal, archetypical quality. Imagery from these experiences is a combination of our imagination and information conveyed to us by the spirits. Our imagination gives the journey a “container;” which helps us to understand the messages we receive. It provides us with a way to understand and articulate the experience for ourselves and to others.
Fire Ceremony
Lifting Prayers to Spirit
In addition to training ceremonies, every month, a Fire ceremony is held at the full moon or new moon when the veil between the worlds is thin. We create a place, which is held as a ‘sacred space’, to draw up and then release our limitations that we seem to be facing in life. We release ourselves of our old stories, emotional situations, limiting thoughts about ourselves and the world through ceremony and awareness. By taking these heavy aspects of our lives to the fire, and bestowing them upon burnable objects, we start giving up, embracing and honoring them. We transform our troubles through deeper feeling, wisdom and awareness through ceremony and spirit. By doing this, we open up to heal deeply within the soul so that we can instead be reborn as a new person and the person we want to be.
We open up to our soul and experience a timeless place around the fire. A place for thousands of years has brought people together. A mystical place where brothers and sisters met, loved and shared their stories. We step into timelessness which helps us to perceive change in our lives and understand the lessons it brings. The fire offers us the opportunity for an incredible change that helps us to heal that which was blocking us so that we can renew our lives. It’s a great experience to connect with the fire, giving up and honouring the troubles we carry with us so that we can grow out of old habits, heal our soul and find new values.
The ceremony is held and guided by the shaman, but anyone can participate by opening their hearts and connecting with the fire. The fire shows us the way so that we become friends with it and feel how it burns within us. The fires are usually kept outdoors during dusk so we get connected to mother earth, the great spirit, the stars and the huge change that is happening right now in the universe and within us.
Preparation for a Fire Ceremony
Before the ceremony, you should find a burnable object such as a stick. During the ceremony, this offering to the fire will come to represent the gift for something that you want to honor or the problem you want to be able to let go of.
The offering helps us stay in the energy that is created and to keep meditative focus. Focus on what you want to honour, the gifts you received or what you want manifest. Then bestow your gratitude, manifestations or problems onto your offering by breathing or blowing these intentions or praying onto it several times. Then give your offering and know that your prayers are being carried up to spirit as your offering burns in the fire.
Fire Ceremony
Lifting Prayers to Spirit
In addition to training ceremonies, every month, a Fire ceremony is held at the full moon or new moon when the veil between the worlds is thin. We create a place, which is held as a ‘sacred space’, to draw up and then release our limitations that we seem to be facing in life. We release ourselves of our old stories, emotional situations, limiting thoughts about ourselves and the world through ceremony and awareness. By taking these heavy aspects of our lives to the fire, and bestowing them upon burnable objects, we start giving up, embracing and honoring them. We transform our troubles through deeper feeling, wisdom and awareness through ceremony and spirit. By doing this, we open up to heal deeply within the soul so that we can instead be reborn as a new person and the person we want to be.
We open up to our soul and experience a timeless place around the fire. A place for thousands of years has brought people together. A mystical place where brothers and sisters met, loved and shared their stories. We step into timelessness which helps us to perceive change in our lives and understand the lessons it brings. The fire offers us the opportunity for an incredible change that helps us to heal that which was blocking us so that we can renew our lives. It’s a great experience to connect with the fire, giving up and honouring the troubles we carry with us so that we can grow out of old habits, heal our soul and find new values.
The ceremony is held and guided by the shaman, but anyone can participate by opening their hearts and connecting with the fire. The fire shows us the way so that we become friends with it and feel how it burns within us. The fires are usually kept outdoors during dusk so we get connected to mother earth, the great spirit, the stars and the huge change that is happening right now in the universe and within us.
Preparation for a Fire Ceremony
Before the ceremony, you should find a burnable object such as a stick. During the ceremony, this offering to the fire will come to represent the gift for something that you want to honor or the problem you want to be able to let go of.
The offering helps us stay in the energy that is created and to keep meditative focus. Focus on what you want to honour, the gifts you received or what you want manifest. Then bestow your gratitude, manifestations or problems onto your offering by breathing or blowing these intentions or praying onto it several times. Then give your offering and know that your prayers are being carried up to spirit as your offering burns in the fire.