Paganism & Wicca - What Is Sorcery?

Sorcery is now almost identical with "witchcraft," the term was used to differentiate one kind of magical activity from another. In the fourteenth century, the word "sorcery" was first used in English to apply to astrology and other divinatory arts. 


  • By the sixteenth century, sorcery had expanded to include other types of magic as well. 
  • When the finer points are considered, “witchcraft” refers to folk practices with a focus on botanical magic, while “sorcery” connotes High Magic, which needs knowledge and reading and includes long rituals requiring solitude and leisure. 
  • Sorcerers are mostly males, with the exception of affluent, educated, and self-sufficient women.


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Paganism & Wicca - Who Is A Sorcerer, Or Sorceress?

A Sorcerer(male), and Sorceress(female) are terms now used interchangeably with "wizard," "witch," "enchanter," or "magician." 

  • The term "sorcerer" originally referred to practitioners of sorcery.


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Paganism & Wicca - What Is Sorcellerie ?

 

Sorcellerie is a French word that means "witchcraft."


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Paganism & Wicca - Who Is A Solitary?

Solitary is a self-contained magical practitioner who works alone.


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Paganism & Wicca - What Is Skhur?

Skhur is  a North African word that means "witchcraft" or "sorcery." 


  • Skhur may refer to the art, the practitioner, or both, depending on regional accent and local use. 
  • Skhur is usually said to be driven by envy, jealously, resentment, and/or the desire to settle old scores, which may be viewed as a desire for justice depending on circumstances and views. 
  • Skhur is seldom started by strangers or at random. 
  • Instead, it's more of a passive-aggressive way to settle scores within a family or group. 
  • Skhur is usually started by neighbors or relatives seeking magical fulfillment covertly engaging a skilled magical practitioner with spell-casting and spirit-working abilities. 
  • These experts are also recruited to help people get rid of skhur and recover from its consequences.


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Paganism & Wicca - Who Is A Sibyl?

Sibyl is a kind of prophetess formerly prevalent across the ancient Mediterranean world, sibyl is now loosely used as a synonym for "female seer" or "diviner." 


  • The term is etymologically linked to the words "Cybele" and "cave," since the Sibyls prophesied from caverns. 
  • Cumae, located in modern-day Italy, produced the most renowned Sibyl. 


BOOKS: Sibylline Texts from the Library of the Lost; 

DIVINE WITCH: Cybele, Sibilla


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Paganism & Wicca - What Is A Shikigami Or Shikijin?

 

Shikigami and Shikijin are Japanese spirit familiars that aid sorcerers.


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Paganism & Wicca - Who Is A Siedkona?

Siedkona is a seidh expert lady. 


Related to - Haegtessa and Völva. 




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Paganism & Wicca - What Is A Seidh Or Seir?

 

Seidh, Seir is a kind of Norse oracular technique that involves prophecy via trances and the summoning of spirits. 


  • Women in Scandinavia and Iceland practiced what is known as "ritual trance prophecy," or seir. 
  • The goddess Freya ruled over Seir. 
  • The seeress sits on an elevated seat or platform, where she enters trance with the assistance of ritual helpers, a procedure known as ùtiseta or "sitting out." 
  • Seir became a highly negative word in Christian literature. 
  • The Dutch Witta Wijven, however, continued the practice of "sitting out" until the mid-seventeenth century (wise wives). 
  • The tradition has been resurrected in recent years.  


DIVINE WITCH: Freya, Odin; Völva


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Paganism & Wicca - Who Is A Seer?

Seer literally means "see-er" or "one who sees"; may have the same origins as seir.

  • Seidh, Seir: is a kind of Norse oracular technique that involves prophecy via trances and the summoning of spirits.


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Paganism & Wicca - What Is A Psychic vision or ESP?

Psychic vision or ESP is a kind of second sight.


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Paganism & Wicca - What Is Scrying Or Scry?

Scrying is a divination technique that involves staring into a clear surface. 


Some focus in observing visions and deeper psychical reflections from within the practitioner, the object/time/place of interest/concern, or the collective psyche at large. 


  • Scrying may be done in a crystal ball or a mirror; 
  • It can also be done in a pan of water, ink, or any flat surface. 


MAGICAL ARTS: To Scry for the purpose of Divination 



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Paganism & Wicca - Who Is A Sagae Or Sage?

“Feminine wisdom”; this word properly translates as “wise woman” or “sage woman,” but it was a euphemism for “witch” during the ancient Roman period. 


  • Columella, a Roman writer from the first century CE, urged owners to prohibit their slaves from consulting sagae.


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Paganism & Wicca - Who Is A Rhizotomoki?

Homer and other ancient Greek authors used the word rizotomoki to mean "root-gatherer" or "root-worker."


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Paganism & Wicca - Who Is A Qosem?

Qosem is a Hebrew term that properly means "divider." It is frequently mistranslated as "witch." 

That may seem malicious, as if the qosem's expertise is separating people or creating strife, but this is not the case. 

  • Qosem is a kind of diviner whose name comes from a root term that means "to divide or allocate, particularly lots." 
  • This linguistic use of the word "division" does not transfer well into English; it sounds more menacing than it really is. 
  • The qosem may be thought of as a method of splitting lots similar to how fortune-tellers deal cards.


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Paganism & Wicca - Who Is Psychopomp?

She is an entity, a ghost that acts as a guide between the worlds of the living and the dead, according to Greek mythology. 

Hermes, Hecate, Circe (when she wants to), and a slew of fairies are among the psychopomps. 


Related to -  FAIRIES; 

DIVINE WITCH: Circe, Hecate, Hermes.


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Paganism & Wicca - What Is Pow-Wow?

Pow-Wow is one of the first Algonquian terms that Europeans documented. 


  • A pow-wow was a conjurer, diviner, ceremonial leader, and healer, according to a seventeenth-century European translation. 
  • The word also referred to locations with therapeutic power that were utilized in healing rites and other ceremonials. 


The word is currently used to refer to two different ideas. 


• Pow-wows are Native American ceremonial gatherings dedicated to indigenous customs.

• Pennsylvania Dutch magical and spiritual traditions are known as Pow-Wow. 


The Pennsylvania Dutch were German immigrants to the United States who carried their rich magical traditions with them. 


  • These customs developed when new influences, such as those of nearby Native Americans, were introduced. That impact is reflected in the name. 
  • Pow-Wow artists and sometimes Pow-Wows are the terms used to describe practitioners of the art form, which corresponds to the seventeenth-century meaning of the term. 


There are two types of Pow-Wow.


  • Some Pow-Wows are devoted Christians who see their art as faith healing rather than magic. 
  • Other Pow Wow performers are subtly Pagan (or at least, less devoutly Christian). 


The most violent witchhunts occurred in German territory during the Burning Times, and occultists were among the numerous refugees to the United States, hoping to find shelter and maybe a little more freedom to practice their skills.


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Paganism & Wicca - Who Are Power Doctors?

Power Doctors are traditional magical practitioners from the United States' Ozark Mountains.


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Paganism & Wicca - What Is Pishoguery?

Pishoguery is an Irish evil magic technique that involves the construction of the piseog or pishogue (see previously). 


  • Pishoguery is founded on the idea that there is a finite quantity of wealth on Earth, therefore if one person gets it, it must ultimately come at the cost of another. 
  • Malicious magic was mistaken with ancient rites. 
  • May Day's early morning dew was traditionally collected and sprinkled over crops and animals for plenty and luck. 
  • Because of its ties to banned Paganism, this procedure was ultimately carried out in secret. Surreptitious conduct drew suspicion, and people were accused of stealing luck. 
  • Pishoguery was the response: what began as defensive magic aimed at balancing and redirecting wealth energy devolved into destructive, malevolent magic.


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Paganism & Wicca - What Is Pishogue Or Piseog?

 

A Pishogue or Piseog comes from the Irish Gaelic pisreog, pronounced "pish-rogue"; a diminutive for vagina, but also a charm or enchantment meant to cause damage, akin to "hex" or "spoiling." 


  • Piseogs induce disease, dehydrate cows, and eliminate agricultural and human fecundity. 
  • It's comparable to the Evil Eye, but it's obviously deliberate. 
  • On most people's properties, something organic is allowed to decay. 
  • A rotten egg, decaying meat, or a discarded menstruation cloth, for example, may all be found in a haystack. 
  • The piseog is the item: as it rots, the target's luck, health, fertility, and so on deteriorate. 
  • Shamrocks are said to protect against piseogs as well as glamour (see Glamour). 
  • Keep one on you at all times to keep yourself safe. 

If you think you're being controlled by a piseog, though, the following is an antidote: 


1. Locate the object. 

2. Pour Holy Water on it. 

3. Use a disposable improvised shovel to get rid of it. 

4. In a ditch or distant corner of a field, burn the piseog and this shovel. 

5. Continue to pray, petition, and sprinkle Holy Water. 

Prayers to St Benedict are said to be especially effective. 


The piseog is said to be the origin of the current custom of throwing rotten eggs at neighbors on the night before Halloween.


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Paganism & Wicca - What Is Pharmakon Or Pharmaka?

 

A Pharmakon or Pharmaka is a Greek word may be translated as "magical substance," "medication," "contraceptive," or "poison." 


  • It is the origin of the modern terms "pharmacy," "pharmacist," and "pharmaceutical," but it also meant "witchcraft" in antiquity. 
  • Sorceresses and witches in Greece were known as pharmakides or pharmakeutriai. 
  • Pharmakon may refer to their craft's goods, which could be utilized for either healing or injury. 


Plato said that the Greek word for poisoning had two meanings: 


• Physical things inflict harm 

• Harm caused by "tricks, charms, and enchantments"


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Paganism & Wicca - Who Is A Pharmakis?

Pharmakis is a Greek word that means "herbalist" or "witch."


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Paganism & Wicca - What Is A Path?

Humans have spiritual pathways, but deities have them as well. 


  • Some gods have numerous personalities, guises, and simultaneous incarnations or "paths," as well as multiple personalities, guises, and incarnations. 
  • These are the many ways in which a god appears.


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Paganism & Wicca - What Is Palo? Who Is A Palero?

Palo is a spiritual and mystical Afro-Cuban tradition derived from Nganga. 


  • Palo may include Freemasonry, Roman Catholicism, and Spiritism in addition to its African origins.
  • Palo Mayombe and Palo Monte are two of the many branches. 
  • Palo is deeply founded in necromantic traditions, and the ceremonial construction and upkeep of a cauldron (prenda) holding different objects, including human bones, is essential to its practice. 


The Palero is a practioner of Palo and often refers to a master of the Art. 


  • The palero and the ghost of a deceased person make a contract to create the prenda. 


RELATED MAGICAL ART: Necromancy.


  • Palo refers to ceremonial activities and literally means "stick" (as in a tiny branch). 
  • Deities are often referred to as orishas, like in Santeria, but they are also referred to as nkisi. 
  • It's possible that they'll be syncretized with Roman Catholic saints. 
  • Many nkisi are exclusive to Palo, while others are shared by Santeria and Candomble, but under different names. 
  • As a result, Zarabanda is known as Ogun, the Iron Spirit, whereas Lucifero refers to Elegba as the Trickster. 
  • Palo has been banned many times and has always been a secret organization whose secrets were only known to initiates. 
  • Practitioners have just lately started to share their tradition with others. 


Further Reading: Baba Raul Canizares' The Book of Palo (Original Publications, 2002).


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Paganism & Wicca - What Is Onmyo-Do?

Onmyo-Do is a Japanese mystical tradition with origins in Taoism, astrology, divination, and other ars magicala. 


  • The interaction of the universe's masculine and female energies, or yin and yang, is at the heart of its philosophy. 
  • Onmyo-Do may be defined as the magical mastery of the yin and yang energies, as well as the five elements of the Earth. 
  • Although Western philosophy recognizes four elements: air, earth, fire, water, and metal, Chinese tradition recognizes five: air, earth, fire, water, and metal.


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Paganism & Wicca - What Is Obeah?

British West Indian magical practices inherited from Africa. 


  • The term may refer to either the system or a practitioner, who is also known as an Obeah Man or Obeah Woman. 
  • The term is said to have originated in what is now contemporary Ghana; obayifo is a sorcerer, witch, or wizard in the Twi (Akan) language. 
  • Because colonial authorities realized that Obeah men and women supported and coordinated opposition to slavery, Obeah was often banned. 
  • Obeah, like Hoodoo and the arts of the Cunning Folk, is more concerned with practical magic and less so with spirituality. 
  • This may be due to being under Protestant control, which allowed for less covert maintenance of non-Christian spiritual traditions than Roman Catholicism, which allowed Candomble, Santeria, and Vodou to flourish and develop.


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Shamanic Heart, Altered Perception And Consciousness - Dismemberment, Visions, and Near Death Experiences



    Dismemberment, Visions, and Near Death Experiences are examples of extreme altered states of consciousness. Taking the changing of brain processes a step further, we reach a world of changed states that seem to be beyond our usual state-shifting ability. 

    As viewed by Eliade (1964), Harner (1982), and others, the shamanic trip, or'shaman's flight,' takes him beyond the body into the quantum world of 'All there is.' 

    Shamans, particularly traditional ones, acquire an extraordinary capacity to change their moods in significant ways, as far as I can tell. 


    Dismemberment experiences, visions, and near-death experiences are the closest we can get to imagining and describing such radically changed states. 


    • Shamans who have had extensive training in order to experience and acquaint themselves with such states seem to be able to not only control and operate inside such states, but also to re-experience them at will. 
    • They also seem to recall events that occurred while in such altered states, which is not usually the case when humans enter profound trance states. 
    • The shaman's method of seeing and defining the world and operating within it is informed by these profound trance states, as well as the wisdom and learning that comes from investigating 'All there is' in this way. 
    • As a result, it's crucial to take a quick look at severely altered state events including dismemberments, visions, and near-death experiences. I'll do so based on my own experiences as well as research. 


    Dismemberment 


    For the most of my adult life, I've been engaged in 'altered state experiences.' When I was younger and living in ashrams in India, I started my search for them. 

    Since then, I've practiced Vipassana meditation and mindfulness on and off, attended numerous spiritual groups, seminars, and trainings, apprenticed to shamans in South and North America, and had clinical hypnosis training, which I've taught for many years. 


    I experienced altered state experiences that showed me the critical distinction between imagination and vision. 

    I had moments of utter terror that revealed the depths of the human darkness, as well as ones of utter joy that led to enlightenment. 

    I had an early, terrifying experience of dismemberment and subsequently, a near-death experience. Both of them made an indelible impression on me. 


    • In my mid-twenties, I had a terrifying experience in India. I took part in a Vipassana meditation group for seven days, during which we meditated for 10 hours a day, observed our breath, and practiced awareness. 
    • Meditations were only broken up by the consumption of rice and vegetables, as well as contemplative walks. 
    • After months of eating a limited diet and participating in different spiritual activities to purify my body and mind, I awoke one night and was instantly overwhelmed by an experience that seemed very genuine and began without warning. 
    • I began to shatter into many, many pieces, then reassembled; then I was blasted apart again, then reassembled, and so on. 
    • I'm not sure how long this went on for; it might have been a long time, since light was breaking when I recovered control. 
    • I vividly recall how terrified I was at the time. It was tough for me to think logically. It seemed as though I had lost control of my mind. Whatever was going on with my body was occurring without my being able to stop it. 
    • Parts of me raced across the cosmos at breakneck speed, returning without my being able to feel that I was being reassembled properly. 
    • My legs were in the wrong position; I was missing pieces of myself; I was very cold, then tremendously hot. I was likewise unable to converse. 
    • I recall attempting to get up but falling backwards and laying on my back, unable to move any of my muscles and wanting to get up. 
    • My whole body felt paralyzed. I was still splintering into a thousand pieces visually, and all I could feel was dread. I began to shake at one point. 
    • My heart was racing, and I knew I was having a panic attack somewhere in the back of my mind (I had never had one before). 
    • My arms were trembling as I attempted to move them. Tears streamed down my cheeks, which was the first sign that my face wasn't being torn to shreds as it flew through space. I attempted to take deep breaths and concentrate on recovering my voice in order to wake someone up, but it was in vain. 
    • We were in a dormitory, and after what seemed like an eternity and for no apparent reason, the girl on the bed next to me appeared to feel that something was amiss. 1 She approached me and inquired about my well-being. Still shaking and unable to talk, I shook my head, but realized I was responding properly to her inquiry. 
    • This understanding, along with some very calming visions of light whirls all about me, appeared to gradually bring me back to a more normal state of awareness. 
    • The girl went to fetch the meditation leader, who sat with me for a time, rubbing my right arm softly, explaining, and soothingly talking to me. 
    • My "left brain" was finally engaged, and I was able to respond to questions in monosyllabic form. My heart rate decreased, and the sensation of my body breaking faded away. 
    • I sipped some sweet tea and fell asleep after feeling someone cover me with the saree that had fallen off the bed. I awoke weak and in agony in the afternoon, as if all of my muscles had been stretched and exposed to new activity. 


    This was my first time being in an uncontrollable, profoundly changed condition. I had no prior experience with dismemberment at the time. 

    I just knew this wasn't a "dream" in the traditional sense, but it did get more dreamy as the intensity of the experience waned, with strangely calming light and vibrations whirling about. 

    Nonetheless, I couldn't place it in any perspective at the time, other than to say that something was different thereafter. I grew more confident in myself, and although I became more conscious of the body's fragility and the mind's power, I felt overall stronger and, more significantly, less frightened, more focused, and more grateful of my existence following the experience. 


    Although my experience appears minor in comparison to most stories, I would now categorize it as a dismemberment experience, a symbolic metamorphosis play, as recounted in many mythical traditions. 

    • Dionysus was ripped apart by the Titans in Greek mythology, but his heart was saved by Athena, Goddess of Wisdom. The Egyptian story of Osiris, the king who was dismembered and supernaturally revived to produce his son Horus, depicts this scenario. 
    • The Inuit Indians of the Arctic commemorate Takanakapsaluk, the dismembered goddess whose many unconnected pieces gave shape to all marine animals, while the world itself was formed out of the goddess Tlaltecuhtli's fragmented parts in pre-Aztec mythology. 
    • Siberian shamans viewed dismemberment as an important part of initiation, and is well recognized for bringing "ecstatic trance postures" to our attention. 
    • The archetype's universality, many Westerners who had spontaneous dismemberment visions were always destined to be healers of some kind. 
    • Shamans have frequently been critically ill and have suffered greatly for longer periods of time while undergoing their bio-psychic transformation, which culminates in a dismemberment experience that represents a turning point of change towards a spiritual state of being. 


    Our primal anxieties are triggered by dismemberment experiences. 

    Dismemberment, at its most fundamental level, dismantles our previous identity; it removes the superfluous, the dispossessed, and the disjointed, forcing us to confront the naked core. 

    Knowing who we really are is the remedy for amputation. 

    After a dismemberment experience, our sense of who we are, our self-concept, changes dramatically, and transformational processes of this magnitude, assist us in transforming our consciousness by assisting us in synthesizing the fragmented, separated parts of our psyche into a harmonious whole, regaining that original unity at the core of our being. 

    Because this is the shaman's job, he has to go through it personally.


    Joan Halifax discusses the shaman as a healed healer, a person who has gone through a personal change, recovering the shattered parts of his or her body and mind and integrating various levels of existence, in similar words. 

    Indigenous traditional shamans are known for their ability to integrate the mind, body, and soul with the soul and spirit, the ordinary with the extraordinary, the individual with the community, and nature with the unseen, the historical with the mystical, and the past with the future and present. 



    Visions & Visualization During a Vision Quest


    Here I had my first ‘real' vision, something that was more than just a visualization in a trance. 


    • Of course, visualizations change our condition, but they are usually more powerful when the individual is already in an altered state when they are asked to picture something. 
    • Visualizations may be very stunning when a person is visually oriented and in a profound altered state. 
    • If the individual is not visually oriented, the experience becomes more of a ‘sensing' one.
    • Visualizations seem to be within our control, in the sense that we can make them go away, alter them, or move on from them, and they are always affected and set up by the original purpose, whether they be memories, visual trips, archetypal pictures, or symbols. 


    A vision is unique. 


    • It comes out of nowhere, with no warning, and it has a distinct quality. 
    • It's simply there, and its intensity extends far beyond what can be seen. It made me feel as though I were enchanted. 
    • I couldn't have altered the vision, moved on, or impacted it in any way. It wasn't anything I'saw,' but rather something that took control. 
    • It also came with an insight that wasn't an idea or a picture. 
    • The realization arrived in the form of a feeling of "total knowledge." 


    My life was transformed by the image. I'll never know if the decision I made based on the vision was the correct one or not, but it seemed like I had no option but to act on the insight the vision provided. 

    • I haven't had many visions, but I learnt the difference between a vision and a visualization, and I realized that we can experience much more than we allow ourselves to, and that those types of experiences have a significant effect on how we view the world and ourselves within it. 
    • When I got the opportunity to study with an Ecuadorian shaman, he told me about a vision that had profoundly altered his life. 
    • He saw the vision while meditating and connecting with a spirit at his "power spot," which was a lake at the base of one of the mountains with which he works. 
    • He saw himself instructing the Eagle's people in his vision. Educating the people of the Eagle, in his opinion, meant teaching those from North America. 
    • He had never met anybody from North America at the time of this vision, but he knew he would have to honor the vision when the time came, and, as these things go in the linked world, people started to come to visit him and he began to teach them his healing techniques a few years later.
    • It's fascinating how he handled the location where he had his vision. 
    • He makes pilgrimages there, treating the lake's water as holy and using the herbs and plants that grow there for healing. 
    • When he works, he visualizes and connects with the location of his vision, particularly when he works with non-indigenous people, he leaves offerings for the spirits of the land. 


    Visions are life-changing events. 


    Black Elk, a Lakota, is without a doubt the most well-known shamanic vision.


    • Black Elk Speaks (Neidhardt 1988), a book by Neidhardt that was originally published in 1932 and has since been reprinted many times (with a new Kindle version currently available), is a revelation. 
    • I highly suggest it because it not only depicts the deep insights and foresights that shaped Black Elk into the great visionary, healer, and amazing man that he was, but it also recounts the medicine man and shaman Black Elk's successive visions and the price he paid. 
    • He had his first vision when he was four years old, and during his second vision, when he was approximately nine years old, he was ill for 12 days, unconscious and battling death. 
    • The six grandfathers appeared in his vision, symbolizing the West, South, North, East, Sky, and Earth. Each of them gave him abilities and showed him how the world worked. 
    • He was shown a lot, and he later recounts his "weirdness" to his own people, as well as his inability to put into words the pictures, emotions, and words given to him, which he vividly recalled.
    • There are also accounts of other tribal members recalling the transformation of the nine-year-old boy, who fell sick as a child and grew up to become a grandpa. 


    Black Elk, like all great visionaries, had to act on his visions; he had to endure the agony, as well as the grandeur and wisdom that comes with such deep state shifts, and, as far as I can tell, much of what he predicted came true. 



    Near-Death Experiences 


    NDEs are transformational because they alter our perception of who we are, our self-image, and, in most instances, our view of the world, according to a large body of research.

    • We can't comprehend shamanism without considering the concept of death and rebirth. 
    • NDEs are the closest we can go to imagining their experiences, so I'll go through everything we know about them quickly. 
    • NDEs have been shown to have transformational consequences. 
    • They seem to alter people's self-perceptions, sense of identity, and worldviews. 
    • Shamans who intentionally travel through them will always have a perspective of the world that is beyond ordinary, manifested reality. 

    There is a growing body of people who talk about transcendental experiences of their consciousness travelling into realms that are beyond the boundaries of the body, from Jung's account in his book Memories, Dreams, Reflections (1961) to the accounts collected by Kübler-Ross (1997) and Moody (2001), who compared 150 NDEs. 


    They typically describe exiting the body and entering the light. NDEs are transformative in terms of worldview and attitudes because people often evaluate their life, feel euphoric and serene, and occasionally have spirit beings about them. 


    Van Lommel, a renowned cardiologist at Arnhem's Rijnstate Hospital, is one of the most recent specialists to challenge our understanding of consciousness. 


    • He confronts us with evidence that seems to confirm that consciousness is not encapsulated by the boundaries of the physical brain in his highly acclaimed book Consciousness Beyond Life: The Science of the Near-Death Experience (2010), citing that 18% (62 patients) of 344 cardiac arrest survivors had recollections of events that occurred during the time they were clinically dead. 
    • He also mentions additional findings in a report given to the Royal College of Psychiatrists, such as an American study of 116 survivors, of which 10% had recollections during the time of cardiac arrest. 

    The majority of the patients described NDE-like experiences, such as being aware of being dead, feeling very happy, traveling down a tunnel, interacting with departed relatives, being out of the body, encountering "the light," and/or having a life review. 


    • Van Lommel conducted a two-year and eight-year follow-up research to determine if the "change in attitude toward life and death after an NDE is the consequence of experiencing an NDE or the result of cardiac arrest itself". 
    • The outcomes were as expected: following a time of consolidation, those patients who experienced an NDE exhibited no dread of death, a strong belief in a hereafter, and a shift in their perspective on what matters in life. 
    • Love and compassion for oneself, others, and nature had taken hold, and they displayed heightened intuitive abilities. 
    • Like Raymond Moody and others before him, Van Lommel examines all of the proposed hypotheses, particularly those of a physiological and neurophysiological character, and concludes that the "unproven" premise that consciousness and memory are located in the brain should be addressed. 
    • He also concludes (and I'll return to this point later) that there is a solid case for awareness being experienced in another realm beyond death. 
    • Alternatively, in his words, "the finding that consciousness may be experienced independently of brain activity may possibly cause a major shift in the scientific paradigm of western medicine". 


    Before we can appreciate shamanism, we must first recognize that extreme altered state experiences of this type inform the shamanic state of consciousness, and that the major cognitive shifts that occur during dismemberment experiences, visions, and, especially, NDEs, lead to major shifts in how we see ourselves and the world around us. 

    As research continues, it appears that brain functions can be permanently altered, and that traditional shamans, as well as some contemporary shamanic practitioners, exhibit the characteristics of seekers who practice spiritual approaches, such as caring for others, decreased materialism, lack of fear of death, profoundly different worldviews, and awakenment.


    You may also want to read more about Shamanism here.

    Be sure to check out my writings on religion here.



    Shamanic Heart, Altered Perception And Consciousness - What We Gain Access To When We Are In Alternate States



    When we consciously and deliberately practice altering our states, the information we can access is vast and complex, depending on our intent, the specific practice, the depth we reach, how often we practice, such as when we have a daily spiritual meditative practice, and, if we are skilled, which parts of the brain we deliberately activate. 


    As a result, the following can only give an overview of various states without pretending to be comprehensive. 


    • Within altered state experiences, the lines between what is normal and what is abnormal are blurry. 
    • While the descriptions, classifications, and maps we create are essential for our minds to make sense of such situations, they are ultimately simply maps that depict the territory rather than the land itself. 
    • The subconscious, unconscious, and collective unconscious are all forms of the subconscious mind. 
    • We obviously access personal information that is buried and concealed on various levels of the subconscious and unconscious realms in psychological terminology. 
    • Memories and previous experiences, pictures that follow a cognitive process, connections to a subject, strongly held beliefs, powerful emotions, and so on are all examples of this kind of information. 
    • We have access to these because, as previously said, we engage some regions of our brains while slowing down activity in others. If we, for example, stimulate the hippocampus and amygdala, which are involved in memory storage and emotions, we will feel intense emotions associated with certain memories. 
    • We may begin to re-associate the memory with the emotion and vice versa if the memory is detached, in the sense that it lives cognitively just as an experience without emotional connection, or if the emotionality existing in the form of an anxious reaction without a memory being connected to it. 
    • We may access connections we've made through time that are linked to that memory/experience and those emotions if we go a step farther. 


    In terms of therapy, the next stage would be to consciously integrate by reactivating our normal frontal lobes by, for example, questioning, comprehending, and rationalizing the experiences we experienced in the altered states. 


    • If we take a broader perspective of awareness, we may access regions of the unconscious – for want of a better term – that include data and knowledge that isn't always based on our own experiences. 
    • Those regions, according to Jung (1977), are the collective unconscious, which contains information that has never been in awareness and therefore has never been acquired individually. 
    • Heredity, whether in the form of genetically given information or, if we want to go even farther, the capacity to plug into and access knowledge that exists beyond the limits of our physical brain, is responsible for the content's existence. 


    The collective unconscious, according to Jung, contains pictures, potentials, and predispositions acquired from our ancestors, such as anxieties, attractions, and symbols. 

    It is universal, preexisting, and comparable in all people, and it manifests itself in archetypal form for us to see. 


    • Archetypes are universal images that may be recognized nearly everywhere in the globe - with minor changes. 
    • Archetypes, unlike memory memories of previous experiences, are not completely formed mental images. 
    • We convert them into visible pictures since they are rather "complexes." 
    • We can access the meaning we connect with archetypes when we start working with them, which is pretty universal. 


    Five major archetypes were identified by Jung: 


    1. the Self, the psyche's governing center and a promoter of individuation 

    2. the Shadow, which includes characteristics that the ego does not wish to associate with (e.g. anger, fear, brutality, sexual urges) 

    3. the Anima, a man's feminine mental picture 

    4. the Animus, a woman's male image in her mind 

    5. the Persona, which serves as a mask for the image and characteristics we project to the world. 


    There are many more archetypes. They occur in fairy tales, myths, legends, and folklore all throughout the globe. 

    The infant, the maiden, the hero, the mother, the crone, the wise old man, the wise old woman, the trickster, the mentor, the devil or monster, the redeemer, death, and rebirth are all well-known mythical archetypal themes and characters. 


    In shamanic terminology, both the personal and collective unconscious regions are important. 


    • The imagery of a modern shamanic journey, for example, has psychotherapeutic effects similar to those derived from Jung's concept of active imagination and other techniques, in that it creates a situation in which the client initiates a dialogue with archetypal material from his or her own unconscious. 
    • Most western therapists believe that the internal conversation with various characters encountered during a shamanic trip is a kind of contact with archetypal material that aids individuation. 
    • Traditional shamans would disagree, viewing the elements and events in the individual and communal unconscious as objective, actual occurrences – as a reality on another level.
    • Traditional shamans would also refer to some of those figures as ‘spirits,' seeing and feeling them inside the energy field of ‘All there is,' rather than within the limitations of the brain, a concept that, as I shall demonstrate later, may be more true than we previously thought. 


    It's worth noting that Jung often referred to the collective unconscious as the objective psyche in this context. 

    To put it another way, the proper approach toward inner pictures, happenings, and conversations is to regard them as if they were genuine. 


    • When we get to the level of archetypal imagery, we realize how arbitrary the lines we make may be. 
    • Many therapists, I'm sure, have seen archetypal imagery when clients recount abusive events, particularly sexually abusive ones, especially if they occurred while they were young. 
    • The monster that enters the young kid's bedroom may be based on a nightmare experience, a monster from a TV show the child saw, an image for something completely different, or a description of the child's father who tortured him. 
    • In archetypal form, the tiny infant frequently accumulates frightening memories and experiences that it cannot make sense of. 
    • Although the angel or fairy who soothes the kid is an archetype, it's possible that the child's distress stems from a very genuine event.



    You may also want to read more about Shamanism here.

    Be sure to check out my writings on religion here.