It's probably gibberish, really... this guy is naive and someone told him this and he bought it. There mightve been one odd guy who was schizophrenic\ mentally ill in some way and did this and there's a story about him, who knows, but if there's criticism to be made on "so-called shamans" its that a lot of them are more in it for the money than anything else... that's why these "experiences" are so unbelievably expensive, most of them...
"This guy is naive"?
Don't you think that's a bit rude? You're making an awful lot of assumptions there - from a completely different cultural perspective, it's a bit harsh to label the perspective of a local - and the dark side of these ancient traditions and beliefs he is relating to us as "gibberish".
How many western religious/new age/homeopathic healers - or to look at it from another angle; drug dealers, bar owners and the like - are "more in it for the money than anything else"?
The reason I listed those examples - people involved various faith/spirituality/quackery - or people that offer mind-altering substances - is because western culture does not have any easily comparable cultural equivalent.
I mean, surely some of them might abuse the position of power and trust they are put in, but I don't think it goes as far as trying to syphon souls or any such belief or act...
Do you have more information on this subject, or are you dismissing the whole concept of indigenous spirituality out of your own ignorance?
In stating that shamans are nothing more than money-driven charlatans is a bit rich coming from a Westerner.
Just because our culture is overrun by greedy, deceitful con artists - like "televangelists" or people in positions of authority who carry out terrible acts of abuse (paedophile priests, for example) - doesn't mean that other cultures are similarly lacking in spiritual belief systems or mythology that is respected and taken seriously by some people in South America...and that abuses of power can also occur within these cultural contexts.
Just the fact that these cultures have developed such an elaborate concoction as ayahuasca - containing both a plant source of DMT and another containing an MAOI (making the DMT orally active) is testament to the
incredible indigenous knowledge that has been passed down over thousands of years to the current day. The understanding of the natural world that these cultures demonstrate is somewhat beyond anything westerners can immediately relate to.
Despite the horrific violence and cultural/spiritual suppression that many of these people endured following the colonisation of the Americas - there are still examples of ancient cultures that live on.
It may not fit in with modern western 'rational' thinking - but to suggest that shamans don't believe in their own spirituality is unbelievably narrow minded. Thankfully the colonial missionaries did not succeed in completely destroying all of the ayahuasca traditions, as they are still carried out today. Had they succeeded, our knowledge of DMT might be non-existent.
To dismiss a warning from a member of this forum - from Brazil - and call him 'naive' seems pretty hypocritical to me.
Sure - be cynical or sceptical about belief systems that you don't happen to share, if you wish - but read between the lines, man.
Whatever the specific belief drives these alleged instances of violence, torture or sexual assault - it is part of a wider cultural context that is not just some put-on for the tourists. DMT - and ayahuasca are - to this day - some of the most powerful and incredible mind altering agents known to man.
A culture that has been utilising such powerful tools - such powerful teachers - for a thousands of years is going to have some fairly incomprehensible ways of thinking - at least to people 'naive' of the power of this preparation.
It may not seem to fit with modern understandings of rational, scientific thought - but if you dig a little deeper and note that Dr Rick Strassman's groundbreaking research of DMT in the 1990s involved a quest to find a "spirit molecule" - essentially a chemical that may explain the religious and spiritual experiences of humanity across the globe - not just in the jungles of South America. This was DMT.
Yet Western science still has very limited knowledge of DMT and it's effect on humans.
Our (scientific) historical knowledge of DMT is in it's infancy, whereas shamanic traditions in South America are rooted in this incredible compound.
The ayahuasca ceremonies might bend tradition a bit - but the customs and spirituality are not some phony scam.
To dismiss it as such - and to call a local (who is relaying information to us about
a discussion taking place regarding shamans, brujos - whilst
acknowledging that this may be seen as urban myth or superstition) "naive" is really disrespectful - and, I daresay -"gibberish".