alt.religion.shamanism FAQ - Introduction to Shamanism
Version 1.3 - 3 June 2003
This is the monthly posting of the alt.religion.shamanism FAQ -
Introduction to Shamanism. This FAQ may be revised from time to time,
new questions asked and answered, and redundant questions and
answers removed, based upon comments and input from the participators
in the newsgroup. Answers are copyright 2002 by the individual
authors.
This FAQ may be freely circulated and posted on individual
web pages as
long as it is not for financial gain.
1. Q: What is
shamanism?
A: Shamanism is primarily a set of spiritual techniques
used to enter
into a trance state called ecstasy in which the shaman
travels
out-of-body to Other Worlds in order to diagnose, heal, learn
the
causes of and solutions to problems, guide souls, etc.
Traditionally
these purposes have included locating or attracting game
for the hunt,
weather control, and mediating between the sacred and
profane
dimensions. In traditional societies a shaman may also perform
divinations, make amulets and charms, neutralize curses, and sometimes
cast curses. (Joseph B Wilson)
The word shamanism describes:
1. The
techniques and beliefs used by a shaman/shamanist in his or her
practice of ecstatic trance and related.
2. A type of religion or
belief system that requires a shaman as a
necessary central figure,
whose actions are considered required for
the health and well being of
the culture/group. The indigenous
shamanic religions of Siberia are
generally used as the standard
yardstick of shamanism to which other
cultures are compared.
(StarrHawke)
2. Q: Is shamanism a religion?
A: No. Shamanism is neither a religion nor a spiritual path. It is a
set of spiritual practices that may be used by anyone no matter what
their religion is. A religion is defined as a set of beliefs, values,
and practices based on the teachings of a spiritual leader or
tradition. The creeds of the various religions that shamanism can be
found in lack any uniformity, only the practices of the shaman are
similar. (Joseph B Wilson)
Shamanism is not a religion in and of
itself, but a label used to
describe a type of religion. It is also
used to describe the
methodology typically associated with a shaman,
used within a
religious/cultural context.
(StarrHawke)
The word
shamanism is loosely used to identify a classification of
religions in
the same way that monotheism, polytheism, pantheism, and
animism are
types of religion, but not religions themselves.
(Joseph B Wilson)
3.
Q: If shamanism is not a religion why is this newsgroup called
alt.religion.shamanism?
A: The topic of alt.religion.shamanism is
shamanism . It is in the
alt.religion hierarchy because shamanism is
found in many different
religious traditions. While shamanism itself
is not a religion, it is
a religious practice. (Joseph B Wilson)
Because the Net Gods decreed it that way. Deal with it. (StarrHawke)
4. Q: Where does the word shaman come from and how does it relate to
shamanism ?
A: The practice, study and experience of the shaman is
not limited to
any single cultural group. The word 'shaman' is from
the language of
the Tungus of Siberia. It is variously 'shaman',
'saman' or 'haman'.
Among the Tungus it is both a noun and a verb. The
Tungus themselves
have no word for 'shamanism'. Shamanism is the
magical practices
that are done by a shaman. It is by no means the
name of their
religion or of anyone's religion. That being said the
general
discussion of native religion is not on topic for
alt.religion.shamanism. That is, as it has been pointed out elsewhere,
a very broad topic. [Adapted from Dean Edwards in the
soc.religion.shamanism FAQ] (Joseph B Wilson)
5. Q: What is on topic
for discussion in alt.religion.shamanism?
A: A great many things. A
few of them include but are not limited to
shamanism in general,
historical shamanism, contemporary shamanism,
traditional shamanism,
non-traditional shamanism, Core shamanism,
neo-shamanism, and
techno-shamanism, their origins, methods,
techniques, and objectives.
Healing techniques, soul retrieval techniques, divination techniques,
other miscellaneous magical operations; becoming a shaman, shamanic
initiation, also the different spirits, power animals, divinities,
landscapes, etc., found in the non-corporeal worlds are particularly
on-topic. (Joseph B Wilson)
6. Q. What is off topic in
alt.religion.shamanism?
A. Religious philosophy in general whether it
be native religion,
neo-Paganism, Christianity, Judaism, Islam,
Buddhism, Hinduism,
Shinto, or any other are particularly
inappropriate. Although it's
entirely appropriate to discuss shamanic
practices found within
different religions, discussion of the
religions and religious
philosophies for their own sake is off topic.
Political issues are
also off topic, as are anything else that is not
directly or
indirectly related to shamanic practice. And, of course,
SPAM. (Joseph
B Wilson)
7. Q: Sometimes we work with a foot in NOR
and OR at the same time.
This is done particularly with healing work
because of the need to
move around and see the spirit of the illness
in the patient whilst
being able to extract it somehow. I also use a
rattle for a light
trance in order to speak with middle world spirits
for example if I'm
working with a place that is spiritually damaged or
I wish to ask for
a teaching. In your opinion, Joseph, is this
shamanism? There is
communication with the spirits, but not a lying
down on the floor,
totally out of it journey. Just curious to see how
far this definition
extends. ( Jo B.... )
A: I've been thinking about
this since you posted, Jo, and I think I
can now safely answer -- I
don't know! I think it would be considered
shamanism in a traditional
culture. I don't think that the deep
trance, the ecstatic journey is
or was used in every instance and that
light trance often served as it
does today.
The problem is that damn word is so difficult to pin down.
According to
Gloria Flaherty (a professor at the University of
Chicago), in
Shamanism and the 18th Century , University of Princeton
Press, the
word shaman comes into the field, including the English
language,
circa 1750. The German scholars working largely (thanks to
Catherine
the Great's patronage) among the Tungus and Altaic people.
The word
comes from these cultures. The Germans rendered it schaman,
and as
they were the most influential of the scholars of the 18th
Century,
the German term took as a common term to cover all the
various
indigenous names for shamans.
In the Tungus language the word
s(h)aman is both a verb and a noun.
Therefore there a shaman is one
who shamans. Or as we would say a
shaman is one who shamanizes. Just
adds to the confusion.
Want more confusion? Apparently the word
migrated to the Tungus
language via Buddhist missionaries and has it's
roots in the Sanskrit
word sramana .
During the 19th and first half
of the 20th century the word was used as
a synonym for any indigenous
occultist and was interchanged with
witch, witch doctor, sorcerer,
wizard, warlock, medicine man,
magician, necromancer, fortune teller,
etc., etc., etc. I suppose it
made life easier for the scholars,
studying among many different
peoples to use a word that immediately
said indigenous magical
practitioner of some sort.
As happens with
words it started to be applied to others. One book I
have by a
respected author, published in 1880 or so, refers to Gypsy
shamans.
Eliade and some others found the way the word was used to be too vague
and therefore tried to identify elements that would make it more
useful. That's a trend that I lend support to.
As Starrhawke pointed
out elsewhere, shamanism doesn't exist. It is
not a real thing, it is
just a label for an abstraction. And I agree
with her that it is a
useful lable. (Joseph B Wilson)
8. Q: Is the study of shamanism
'safe'?
A: Once one has come to realize that there are more
intelligent beings
than just humans, who can be contacted through a
variety of means but
who exist independent of human life, there has to
be the realization
that common sense in dealing with any other living
entity in a
physical way is as important in the Otherworld. Treat any
kind of
spirit with respect, but also in a similar manner as a
stranger met
downtown.As with any unorthodox study, experiences will
not always be
conform what is considered 'normal', as defined by
society. One has to
be prepared to deal with such confrontations.
While it is not the goal of shamanism, self-realization is often a
result. Some aspects of yourself that become conscious are not always
wanted or desired. Especially with shamanism, where there is a good
measure of working along side other beings, it's not always up to the
person to decide how far and how deep it goes.So it's relatively safe,
as long as common sense is strongly present. (Yerune SilverSong)
9.
Q: I bought a rattle and a drum, met Power Animals, know my Totem
animal, chat with the trees and spirits and dream an awful lot. Am I
now a shaman?
A: No. In the shaman's perspective, everyone has such
relations with
certain spirits, not just a shaman. As it's often
healthy for a person
to have good relations with other people besides
her direct family,
it's also healthy to have good relations with those
non-physical
beings. For a person's health it's important to stay
physically fit.
Shamanising in this context provides a way of becoming
or staying
spiritually fit and healthy. A shaman is a specialist in
this, and
with duties and responsibilities that go beyond staying
healthy.
(Yerune SilverSong)
10. Q: How does one become a shaman?
A:
In traditional societies a person may be eligible to become a shaman
because they are descended from shamans, they received a shamanic
call , or they chose that vocation. The most powerful shamans are
considered to be those who became so because of the first two
elements, the least powerful those who sought out the profession.
Regardless of the method of selection shamans are not considered
legitimate unless they have gone through shamanic initiation and
training which takes place both in dreams and visions and in
transmission from elder shamans in the form of ceremonies and
instruction in shamanic techniques, names and functions of spirits,
mythology, the secret language, and so forth. (Joseph B Wilson)
11.
Q: What is Shamanic Initiation?
A: Shamanic Initiation varies from
culture to culture but in
traditional societies usually involves an
intense vision or dream of
being killed and dismembered (and sometimes
eaten) and then
reassembled with a new shamanic body . This dream or
vision is often
considered the call to become a shaman. Before being
accepted by the
community a potential shaman must often also undergo
initiation
ceremonies performed by the elder shamans of the community.
Unlike
modern civilized initiations into Lodges or Covens the
potential
initiate may not survive the ordeal of the initiation
ceremony. In
neo-shamanism the initial Journey to Retrieve a Power
Animal and
instructions on Journeying could be considered an
initiation of sorts.
(Joseph B Wilson)
12. Q: What is Shamanic
Ecstasy?
A: Shamanic Ecstasy is the trance state in which the shaman
journeys to
the other realms of existence. Shamanic Ecstasy is the
altered state
of consciousness a shaman experiences while shamanizing.
(Deermouse)
13. Q: What is Journey/Journeying/Journey of Soul/Soul
Travel?
A: The travel of the shaman's spirit (while in trance) to the
non-physical areas of existence known as the Upper, Lower, and Middle
worlds. (Joseph B Wilson)
14. Q: What is the Lower World?
A: A term
popularized by Michael Harner and associates referring to
that area of
non-physical existence that can be reached by journeying
down into the
earth through a tunnel where wisdom about physical
reality, the body,
helping spirits, and Power Animals can be found. It
also contains the
dark, shadowy realms or hells of most cultures.
(Joseph B Wilson)
15.
Q: What is the Upper World?
A: A term popularized by Michael Harner
and associates referring to
that part of non-physical existence that
can be reached by journeying
upwards by climbing a tree, mountain,
ladder, or any combination.
Usually teachers and wisdom about
emotional, spiritual,.and
philosophical aspects of existence are found
in the upper world. The
First/Great/Celestial Shaman is located here.
It also contains the
traditional heavens of most cultures. (Joseph B
Wilson)
16. Q: What is the Middle World?
A: A term popularized by
Michael Harner and associates referring to
that part of non-physical
existence that that parallels the physical
world we live in. The
non-physical aspects of the world we live in.
(Joseph B Wilson)
17.
Q: What is the Otherworld?
A: The physical world is but one of many
worlds, characterized by the
solid nature of its components in
relation to each other. Everything
not-physical, by this definition,
is considered Otherworld. But it's
not to be considered as a simply
dualistic state of existence, the
physical world, like any other
world, is part of the whole. (Yerune
SilverSong)
18. Q: What is the
Tree of Life, or Axis Mundi?
A: This is a complex symbol representing
the self-centeredness of every
part of the Universe. Every part of
Creation is its own center and
revolves around this. In the same way,
it represents the co-existence
and relation with all these centres
towards each other. The tree
symbolizes the Upper World, in which the
branches reside, the Middle
World where the trunk is located, and the
Lower World where the roots
are. In this way, it shows the
connectedness and integration of a
being across all the worlds.
(Yerune SilverSong)
19. Q: What is a Totem?
A: The word totem entered
the English Language a couple of hundred
years ago. It comes from an
Ojibwa word, nindoodem, which means my
family mark. It most closely
translates to clan. It is a plant,
animal, natural force or material
that is identified with a specific
group or clan, rather like a group
badge with sacred connotations.
(Joseph B Wilson)
20. Q: What is a
Power Animal?
A: Michael Harner defines a power animal as: a spirit
being that not
only protects and serves the shaman, but also becomes
another identity
or alter ego for him. (Michael J. Harner The Way of
the Shaman, 1980,
1990; page 43.)
A power animal is a spirit that
shares a certain quality with the
person. It can be considered to be
both a personification of that
quality as well as an entity that helps
you working with that quality.
In most cases, Power Animals are
spirits who agree to aid you with
specific tasks and quests, and will
leave when that task is completed.
(Yerune SilverSong)
21. Q: What is
a Spirit Helper?
A: This is a term used by Michael Harner to identify
a spirit that is
subordinate to the shaman that assists him or her to
carry out
shamanic responsibilities. He used the term in relation to a
class
of spirits that would be pretty much identical to the familiar
spirits or the medieval magicians and witches. Harner identifies
Spirit Helpers as plant spirits that in their nonordinary form may
take the form of insects, some other zoomorphic, or even inanimate
forms. They are similar to domesticated work animals such as herding
dogs, hunting dogs, plough horses, pack mules, etc; possessions that
must be trained to do your bidding or at best they have no practical
purpose and at worst may be harmful to you. Unlike guardian spirits,
spirit helpers are only possessed by shamans. . a shaman can come to
possess hundreds of spirit helpers .
(Michael Harner, The Way of the
Shaman, Chapter 7) The term Spirit
Helper should not be confused with
generally helpful spirits. (Joseph
B Wilson)
22. Q: What is a
Guardian Spirit?
A: A spirit that protects and assists a shaman (or
other persons) while
journeying, carrying out shamanic
responsibilities or training. This
is not necessarily the same as a
Power Animal. (Joseph B Wilson)
23. Q: What is a Spirit Guide?
A: A
spirit that advises you and guides you in your Higher Purpose A
Spirit
Guide is often an ancestor.
(Joseph B Wilson)
24. Q: What is a
Tutelary Spirit?
A: Technically, a spirit that serves as a guardian or
protector.
Colloquially, a spirit that teaches often by creating
situations for
experience rather than by giving instructions. (Joseph
B Wilson)
25. Q: What is a Nature Spirit?
A: The spirit of any
animal, plant, or mineral. (Joseph B Wilson)
One realm that is closely
related to the physical world, in which
nature expresses itself, is
the Green World. There are realms that can
be considered Kingdoms, the
Plant Kingdom, the Mineral Kingdom and the
Animal Kingdom. There is
also the Elemental Kingdom. This last Kingdom
deals with the structure
of natural forces found in nature, such as
the four elements (air,
fire, water and earth), as well as
manifestations such as clouds,
rain, storms and snow. In some cultures
natural occurances such as
storms are not only manifestations of gods
or spirits, but are the
result of the activity of these Elemental
beings.Together these
Kingdoms form what is sometimes called the Green
World, and a spirit
of that realm is called a Nature Spirit. (Yerune
SilverSong)
26. Q:
What is a Spirit Wife/Husband/Spouse/Lover?
A: A spirit who engages
the shaman in an inner sexual relationship and
may even become the
person's numinous spouse. This is a frequently
encountered motif in
both Siberian Shamanic Tradition and Celtic
Faerie Lore. (Dean Edwards
in the soc.religion.shamanism FAQ)
An entity whose spiritual
significance is expressed through the shaman
or chosen individual.
(For instance, ancient Celtic kings were
wedded to the manifestation
of the forces of the land, often
expressed as a white mare.) (Jilara
in the soc.religion.shamanism FAQ)
27. Q: What recommended books are
available on shamanism?
A: Three basic books on shamanism in general
are:
Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy
by Mircea Eliade
Publisher: Princeton Univ Pr; ISBN: 0691017794; (May 1, 1972)
*The*
classical reference that clearly defined what is and is not
shamanism.
This is not a how-to guide to instant shamanism; it is a
scholarly
read, and may be difficult going, especially for beginners.
Still, it
should be on every practioner's bookshelf. It provides
necessary
grounding in classical shamanism, and is invaluable as a
reference for
understanding aspects of your own experiences. (Metista)
Shamans,
Healers, and Medicine Men
by Holger Kalweit, Michael H Kohn
(Translator)
Publisher: Shambhala Publications; ISBN: 1570626561;
(December 1992)
Similiar to Eliade's book, but a bit more
approachable, this is an
exhaustively researched study of shamanic
traditions around the world.
It's simply filled with accounts of
shamanic theory and methods.
(Starrhawke)
The Way of The Shaman
by
Michael Harner
Publisher: Harper San Francisco; ISBN: 0062503731; 10th
anniv edition
(October 1990)
While Eliade is the father of modern
shamanic scholarship, Harner is
the father of the popular neo-shamanic
movement. Even if you don't use
his methods, or agree with his
commercial endeavors, this book is a
must read, as it established and
defined much of the popular
vocabulary and theory. (Metista)
A
separate list with recommendations for useful books on Siberian,
Central Asian, Finno-Uralic, Arctic, African, North and South
American, South and East Asian, Scandanavian, nontraditional,
contemporary and shamanism and Celtic Otherworld Tradition is found in
the Shamanism General Overview FAQ.
28. Why was this FAQ written?
A:
This FAQ was written to support the USENET newsgroup,
alt.religion.shamanism . Although the Shamanism-General Overview and
the soc.religion.shamanism FAQs written by Dean Edwards for
soc.religion.shamanism
are thorough it was felt that a FAQ written in
less academic language would be
more useful to the participants of
alt.religion.shamanism.