The Shamanic Wisdom of the Huichol
Tom Soloway Pinkson, Ph.D.
Chapter 2
Identity and Purpose*
I asked Dr. William Lamers, who was also on my doctoral committee and knew me
quite well, what kind of people he thought I should work with, and his reply
shocked me: "People that are dying. They are on a vision quest although they
would not articulate it as such. They are seeking a deeper vision for the
meaning of their lives as they prepare to face their death." I was speechless.
Bill went on, "You have been taking people out on vision quests for years now.
I think you would work very well with the dying." I knew intuitively that what
he was saying was right, but I didn't feel capable or confident that I was up
for meeting the demands that working with the dying would entail. I told him I
needed to think about it.
Not long after that, on the July Fourth weekend of 1976, I was driving down a
curvy, country road and ran in to a traffic jam. People were standing by their
cars trying to see what was going on. I got out and walked the quarter of a
mile to where a crowd stood in the middle of the road. I edged in to see what
they were looking at. A young man had been in a motorcycle crash. He lay
unconscious in the road, his boots knocked off by the force of the impact. One
man was holding his head up, another was looking at his chest. I could see
immediately that he was losing life-force energy through the bottom of his
feet. Someone needs to go up there and
block up his feet so he stops losing that energy, I thought, but I
was reluctant to act--I looked like a bum, unshaven and dirty from being in the
woods. How would people react to this shadylooking character coming up to the
fallen cyclist and doing something weird like holding his feet? How would I
react if he died while I was holding him?
I thought about the synchronicity of this accident with the fact that I had been
seeking guidance on what to do about Bill Lamers's feedback to me several weeks
prior. Bill had also asked me to teach a class with him on death and dying and
join with him and a small group of others who had been meeting for several years
in preparation for starting the second hospice program in the United States. I
was flattered but hesitant there, too. Could I handle being in such intimate
contact with dying people? Now I was faced with the possibility of someone
dying right in front of me.
I realized that if I didn't do something about the motorcyclist on the ground,
it wouldn't be done. Let people think
whatever they want of me. I walked over to the prostrate figure.
The two men looked at me curiously. I gestured to them to go on with the
ministrations. Then I bent down and placed my hands against the motorcyclist's
feet. I closed my eyes and imagined my hands were dams, completely closing off
the leaks. To my surprise, I felt very calm, and I knew that even if he died
while I was there, I was doing just what I needed to be doing. Shortly
thereafter, an ambulance arrived. I walked back to my car and continued on my
way. Yes to Bill, to the class, and to the
hospice work.
Yet, the Mystery wasn't finished. Back at the retreat I was attending, I
did a meditation taught to me by a spiritual teacher in the spring of 1974, a
shaman woman who was part Mohawk, part Apache, and part Scottish. It involved
raising and lowering the arms while seated on the earth, maintaining
synchronized breathing, and building up an intensified energy charge. The final
movement releases all the built-up energy into the center of the earth as your
forehead touches the ground in an act of surrender. You remain in this position
as long as you can, then sit upright and continue meditating, allowing the
energy of the earth to enter your body.
After having great success with this meditation previously, I used it whenever I
went on quest or whenever I needed guidance on a big decision in my life. Now,
back at the quest site after my experience with the injured motorcyclist, I
decided to use the meditation to help me integrate the information I had
received about work with the dying. As I reached the point where I placed my
forehead to the earth, a voice boomed up from the depths,
You are supposed to work with people who have
cancer! It was so loud I was shocked. I sat up and looked around.
No one. I knelt back into the meditation position with my head touching the
ground. The voice boomed again. I tried to ignore it. Working with cancer
patients wasn't my plan for my life; I didn't know anything about the process.
I hoped the voice would go away. It didn't. It only got louder and louder.
Finally, I surrendered. "Okay, okay," I said aloud. "I'll do it.
But you will have to show me what to do because I sure as hell don't know."
The voice stopped. I was relieved but mystified. When I got home two days
later, Andrea told me someone had called from Los Angeles and wanted me to call
them back as soon as I got in. "It sounded urgent," she said. I dialed the
number. A woman answered and I identified myself. A chill went through me when
she said, "I hear you work with cancer patients. My brother has a brain tumor
and we want to come up and see you."
You
sure didn't waste any time with that one, Great Spirit! I thought
to myself in amazement.
*This excerpt reprinted with permission of the publisher, Destiny Books. Copyright 2010 Tom Pinkson, All Rights Reserved
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