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Showing posts from January, 2010

Attitudes of the Medicine Wheel

“Are you ready to see the beauty that I see in YOU?” The Medicine Wheel introduces us to four great life attitudes. The question is – are we ready to listen and adopt these attitudes? 1. We should walk and talk with beauty and abundance. 2. We should quest to learn and heal. 3. We should inter-relate, find common ground, find consciousness. 4. We should be glad – appreciate and live in a sacred manner. Fifteen years ago I was in the Maritimes waiting to lecture a group of First Nation people on Indigenous Dreaming and the Medicine Wheel. I remember being in the bathroom, hiding basically in a stall, waiting for the moment where I’d be called to talk to a group of 100+ people. Two ladies came into the washroom and started talking about me. One of them said: “I can’t wait to meet the Dream Lady. I heard she’s really special.” The other replied: “She’s young too and that’s cool.” When I finally came out from my secret nook there was

On the Path of the Shaman.

Often I share stories with friends and students about the phenomenal beauty, magic and eccentricity of the Shaman energy. Some of these stories can be quite entertaining (funny, moving, sad, and extraordinary); but they’re always set in mundane living and they always depict a kind of simplicity that people aren’t used to seeing around the notion of Shaman. It’s like I tell my students: “A Shaman has to blow his or her nose too.” It’s those kinds of stories where the Shaman is depicted as innocent, humble, loving, and childlike-wise that I wish we could see more of in the-up-and-coming books on Shamanism. JP was telling me just this weekend that “people are so used to the stereotypical definition of shaman that they unfortunately rate authenticity according to it.” It would be nice to hear more about the Shaman personality from a daily perspective: the up-close-and-personal so to speak because this way we could truly see Shaman as a whole. A good decade

Shamanic Circle

This weekend I had the pleasure to give an introduction lecture on Sacred Circle Tradition, Indigenous Dreaming and Shamanism to a group of individuals who are just starting to get interested in Shamanism. Most of these people were well read on the topic and although they were novices in the empirical world of Shamanism they were certainly intellectually ready to embark on a journey. During the following two days after the circle, I wondered what that meant “being intellectually ready for a shamanic journey.” Not so long ago, when I started on the Shamanic path, my elders specifically asked that I learn to detach from expectations and let go of my intellectual knowledge of shamanic or Native Spirituality. “You need to be able to be open to mystery and the unknown,” said EC “and you need to be ready to see even if it’s not where you expect shamanism to be.” The mind can often be a hindrance when you’re embarking on a shamanic journey. My husband says that “in most people it’s the over a

Happy New Year 2010

I’ve been stewing with this blog entry for a few days. The Blue Moon of 2009 certainly left many of us with profound impressions and mine are still all tangled up waiting to be expressed. Don’t hold it against me if it takes a few weeks maybe even months to share it all. Like I was telling a friend tonight “it feels like we’ve been under a spell and it is slowly lifting.” Again I don’t want to get too ahead of myself because the Blue Moon influence won’t stop until after the next full moon which is at the end of January. At that point we’ll be starting a new moon cycle, with the Moon of Welcome. Where many of us have been talking about the next cycle being identical to the Western calendar I have to correct the mistake by saying that we’ll be off by one moon. In fact the Moon of Welcome will be in February rather than January. With the Blue Moon of 2009 we’ve actually been robbed of five moons (so to speak) having one cycle interrupted to start a new cycle. Lots o