Monday, March 24, 2014

Shamanic Divination

Shamanic divination is the art of seeing and interpreting signs in everything around us. Divination can give you answers to all the questions that you have in your life. Shamanic practitioners use three primary divination techniques: journeying, spirit embodiment, or divination tools. In journeying, the practitioner enters the spirit world to access information directly from the source. Basically, 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. After the journey, you must then interpret the meaning of your trance experience. 

Divination can also be performed using embodiment trance to bring a helping spirit into the practitioner's body. In an embodiment trance, the practitioner asks the spirit helpers to come into ordinary reality, enter the practitioner's body, and impart information through them. The idea is to become like a hollow bone, a conduit for spirit. By becoming an empty vessel for spirit, we can access the invisible sea of information that we bathe in daily, the all-pervading frequencies of consciousness immanent in all phenomena. Drumming is an excellent way to induce divination trance, allowing the practitioner to perceive energetic frequencies in a unique way. The practitioner experiences energies and then interprets them through his or her own symbolic language.

When using a divination tool, the practitioner enters an altered state and allows the patterns in the tool to determine the message from spirit. One of the best known divination tools is the I Ching. The I Ching is a microcosm of all possible human situations. It serves as a dynamic map, whose function is to reveal one's relative position in the cosmos of events. The hexagram texts address the sixty-four archetypal human situations. The commentary of each hexagram reveals the optimal strategy for integrating or harmonizing with the inevitable for a given condition. It provides the appropriate response to your inquiry. It affords a holistic perspective of your current condition and discusses the proper or correct way to address the situation. Consult the I Ching.

Monday, March 17, 2014

2014 Spring Equinox Global Ceremony

The Earth Wisdom Foundation is calling for people everywhere to join together for the 2014 Spring Equinox Global Medicine Wheel Ceremony on March 20 (or your local time). We will have people at Lake Titicaca, Peru, Mt. Shasta, CA, Glastonbury, England and other sites in Europe, India, Australia, Mt. Fuji, Japan, Maui, on the Grand Teton Medicine Wheel, Eagle and Condor Medicine Wheel, Pacific Northwest Medicine Wheel and many other sites.

You can connect to us in spirit from a point on one of the current medicine wheels or from your own sacred site. As we grow into future solstices and equinoxes we will expand the medicine wheel grid connections until we have many sacred sites on the Earth grids united in ceremony.

We are all connected through the Earth's ley lines. When we go to our sacred sites to do ceremony, we can collectively clean and clear old programs from the environment and charge the Earth with peace, love, joy and abundance.

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Edge-Dwelling: A Social Ecology for Our Time

Part 5: Shamans, Midwives, and Hospice Workers

Beyond the edge where what we know and don't know meets lies the Unknown (with a capital U). It's a wild place that stretches the capacity of our human consciousness. This edge space is inhabited by a very particular kind of Edge-Dweller -- those willing to hold the hugeness of even our ability to know, the horizon of human consciousness.

This is the place inhabited by Shamans, Midwives, Hospice Workers (and perhaps others). Midwives hold the edge place between birth and whatever exists or does not exist before. They hold the process of bringing a human into being, welcoming them to their place on this magnificent planet. Hospice Workers hold the edge place between human life and whatever exists or does not exist after our time as humans on Earth is done. Shamans hold and navigate that huge edge space between the human world and that world that exists just beyond the edge of our consciousness -- that some may call the Divine or Holy, Spirit, Mystery or simply our Cosmos. 

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Business Shamanism

Imagine this: You're asked to deliver a memo to your CEO in the boardroom. As you approach you hear the sound of drumming. You cautiously open the door and on the floor, surrounded by burning candles, you behold the CEO and board of directors lying, flat with their eyes closed, being drawn into the rhythmic beat of the drum. Are you hallucinating? No. All is well. Richard Whiteley, bestselling author of The Corporate Shaman, is leading them on a journey to find their power animals. The corporate culture as we have come to know it may never be the same. An MBA graduate of the Harvard Business School, Whiteley is a successful management consultant and urban shaman who uses drumming and shamanic techniques to restore spirit to the business community. 

Daniel Pinchbeck, co-founder of Evolver, a lifestyle community platform that publishes Reality Sandwich, an online magazine centered around spirituality, philosophy and activism, proposes "Business Shamanism" as a new avant-garde art form. According to Pinchbeck, "business shamanism is the repurposing of the tools and instruments of the corporate culture and the mainstream economy to bring about social change, archaic revival, planetary regeneration, deeper initiation. The goal is to build a platform for radical revision, for a fundamental shift in perception and behavior, so that the alternative -- what author Charles Eisenstein calls 'the more beautiful world we know in our hearts is possible' -- manifests in our time."

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Shamanism Without Borders

Shamanism Without Borders is an emerging movement initiated by the Society for Shamanic Practitioners to effectively respond to the world's natural disasters and crises. Even if we can't physically travel to a disaster site, shamanism allows us to work remotely to alleviate suffering. Shamanism literally has no borders except the ones we construct for ourselves. The SSP has now produced a handbook titled, Shamanism Without Borders: A Guide to Shamanic Tending for Trauma and Disasters. In this manual, experienced practitioners explain techniques and principles used by shamans throughout time to deal with trauma and disasters and how these practices are still applied today. The guidebook is just that -- a guidebook, not a blueprint, nor a set of rules and regulations. Every disaster is unique and requires the right action for its uniqueness. The book is simply a collection of philosophies and possibilities that can be a foundation for others to do similar work. The book urges readers to "read between the lines and listen between the words for Spirit to speak and comment."