Author Topic: Shaman - Native American Medicine  (Read 222 times)

Offline Jennifer-

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Shaman - Native American Medicine
« on: April 18, 2009, 03:29:49 AM »
Wuan Geronimo Flores

Wuan Geronimo Flores who can be called a true Shaman, claims to have inherited the gift of his great grandfather, Geronimo: the ability to heal through the movement of energy. Flores has the capacity to speed up his own energy, and to transfer this quickened force into a patient, thereby, helping a person to become spiritually centered, so that their ailments can disappear.

Flores does not need to know the nature of a person’s illness, because symptoms are physical manifestations, and Flores works on a more subtle level. He will look beyond appearances to get to the root of a problem. He says of his work: "The healing, which incorporates Native American and universal [principles], takes place in a sacred space. This is the part of an individual’s home that is special to them, a place they gravitate to, where they feel the most secure and comfortable. We go to that place and the person lies down. Ever since I was a child, one of my talents has been getting people to relax deeply by putting them in a trance-like state. Then there is the actual moving of energy, the speeded up energy from my body going into theirs. All the while I am concentrating on the individual, and that can be achieved through different ways: through chants, prayers, or just through central focusing.

"This is very visual for me. I start seeing a picture of the person. As I concentrate, the image of the person gets transposed, until there are nothing but stars floating in space. I see the exact same body, only now it is made of nothing but stars. I see metallic dots of blue, silver, purple and black filling up the space and raining down on the person. The colors are calming and cooling, almost as if they are utilizing a certain frequency for the person’s relaxation. Once a person has calmed down--they may even fall asleep--the energies that they were holding on to are easily released.

"I will see different things, depending on the person. One man had AIDS, although I didn’t ask him what he had or how he got it. But on an energy level, he looked like a meteorite, an astroid, a cavern. He was submerged in a swamp, with tiny pollens ticking away from the inside. That’s what his body was going against.

"Once that was removed, his body naturally healed itself by reproducing cells that he needed to get rid of the disease. And sure enough, about two weeks later, his cell count went from 4 to 300.

"So, that's what I do. I work as a guide, as a Shaman and I work on a very deep level. My aim is to release energy blockages so that a person’s own energy can take over and restore balance."

Without constant complete silence meditation - samadi - we lose ourselves in the game.  MM

Offline Jennifer-

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Re: Shaman - Native American Medicine
« Reply #1 on: April 18, 2009, 03:31:23 AM »
George Amiotte - Medicine Man

George Amiotte, an Ogalala Lakota from Pine Ridge, became a healing professional after a near death experience as a marine in Viet Nam. Upon his return home George searched for ways to restore his own wounded spirit and for a direction in life, when he was guided by Lakota elders to pursue a career in medicine. This was a tall order to fill as George had only just gotten his GED in the Marine Corps, but he was able to enter and successfully complete a graduate program as a physician’s assistant. At the same time George studied medicine with Lakota elders. He, therefore, has a unique background that combines modern and traditional healing modalities.
 

Amiotte specializes in helping veterans overcome post traumatic stress disorder, a term used to describe combat fatigue. Most of his patients are Native Americans although he sees non-Native people as well. As a guardian of the sun dance, part of George’s work involves the use of the sun dance ceremony in healing. As a result, George has been able to achieve success where standard Veteran’s Administration programs have failed.

When an interested doctor from UCLA visited one ceremony, and was confused by what he saw, George explained to him that healing is more than a physical manifestation. Healing takes place on the physical, mental and spiritual levels, and a medical practitioner needs to consider all three aspects for optimum success. This is something western medicine fails to do.

Amiotte was then invited to see patients with gastrointestinal disorders who weren’t responding to contemporary western medicine. In a year’s time, his four patients responded beautifully to therapy, and the UCLA Medical Society woke up to the advantages of healing from a Native American perspective. George is now a member of a team of doctors that study and incorporate alternative healing methods into their western medical practices.
   George Amiotte

 

In a recent interview, George shared with me his philosophy of working with patients. His approach is to look at an individual on three levels. First, he checks to see that there are no physical problems, such as an organic disease; second, he interviews the patient to assess their state of mind; and, third, George looks at a person’s spirituality. Analyzing these factors helps him to put together an effective healing protocol.

"I don’t have one way of working," George says. "If a Native American wants to be treated by ceremony, I will set one up. That requires setting the stage for the individual to come to an alter, a physical area that is represented by earth, wind, fire, and water. Sometimes we use drum music. We acknowledge the universal laws, natural laws, our ancestors, the earth that we stand on. And we call in the healing aspect of this psychologically, physically, and spiritually.

Although trained as a healer, George acknowledges that healing depends upon God’s will and a patient’s receptivity: "I am a healer. But the reality of healing is in God’s hands. I’m a conduit, a hollow bone, if you will. For a patient to be healed, he or she must be receptive to a higher power. A person needs a relationship to God or a belief in a greater force."

Without constant complete silence meditation - samadi - we lose ourselves in the game.  MM

Offline Jennifer-

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Re: Shaman - Native American Medicine
« Reply #2 on: April 18, 2009, 03:33:18 AM »
John Joseph



    John Joseph, a shaman with the Chinook tribe of the lower Columbia River, and a nurse practitioner in Washington State, helps Viet Nam veterans suffering from post traumatic stress syndrome, with the purification ceremony: "They have lost their spirituality, and this is a good way to help them find it. The lodge is a safe haven. No one can hurt them. Intrusive thoughts, the anxieties of the day, and the problems of living with post traumatic stress are left outside the door. They are able to speak about things that hurt them during the war and about things that hurt them when they came home. They are able to speak about the triggers that interfere with their lives today, even though it is 20 years later. They’re able to speak, cry, yell, regurgitate harmful emotions, and put them in the fire.



    Joseph says that that true healing comes from being able to express oneself in a safe environment: "Everything said in the lodge remains there. Nothing is repeated outside of it. This gives a person a real opportunity to cleanse the heart, and to place things into the fire." He adds that the healing is amplified by being in the presence of the heated stones: "There is stone medicine, Inyan medicine; the sizzling and popping from the water on the stones actually gives a spirit direction. There’s wonderful healing in that."

    "Many vets tell me that they feel considerably better for some period of time after they leave the lodge. Often they will come back and ask, ‘When are we going to do another lodge? I am absolutely stressed to the max.’ We do four, five, or six a year, sometimes more, depending on the number of requests.

    "Once they start to get their spirituality back, their physical appearance changes. They start to keep their hair. They become neater in the way they dress. Their thought patterns become more cohesive, without constant intrusions. They can even think straight, in many cases. Sometimes children tell me that their dads sleep for two days after a sweat lodge, when they only slept two hours before. So, there’s a wonderful release, and a wonderful return of cohesiveness to their lives, after the purification lodge."
Without constant complete silence meditation - samadi - we lose ourselves in the game.  MM

Offline Jennifer-

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Re: Shaman - Native American Medicine
« Reply #3 on: April 18, 2009, 04:20:04 AM »
Without constant complete silence meditation - samadi - we lose ourselves in the game.  MM

tangerine dream

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Re: Shaman - Native American Medicine
« Reply #4 on: April 18, 2009, 08:54:38 AM »
Thank you so much for these stories Jennifer.


This is especially awesome!  What a great gift he is giving these vets.   I am in awe... :'(  :)


    John Joseph, a shaman with the Chinook tribe of the lower Columbia River, and a nurse practitioner in Washington State, helps Viet Nam veterans suffering from post traumatic stress syndrome, with the purification ceremony: "They have lost their spirituality, and this is a good way to help them find it. The lodge is a safe haven. No one can hurt them. Intrusive thoughts, the anxieties of the day, and the problems of living with post traumatic stress are left outside the door. They are able to speak about things that hurt them during the war and about things that hurt them when they came home. They are able to speak about the triggers that interfere with their lives today, even though it is 20 years later. They’re able to speak, cry, yell, regurgitate harmful emotions, and put them in the fire.



 ;D

This fits in nicely with my life right now as well.  One of the people I met, who seems to live in my neighbourhood, is an old Viet Nam Veteran.  He also happens to be First Nations (Indian).  I bumped into him in the grocery store one day and we instantly connected.  He began telling me of his stay in Nam and his life upon his return.  Now he is a great grandfather and is very involved with his family and the community and healing himself, his family and others if he can.  I see him once in a while at work, he comes through the drive through and we have little chats about this and that.   :)

« Last Edit: April 18, 2009, 11:20:44 AM by Celesta »

Offline Jennifer-

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Re: Shaman - Native American Medicine
« Reply #5 on: April 18, 2009, 11:52:08 AM »
Quote
This fits in nicely with my life right now as well.  One of the people I met, who seems to live in my neighbourhood, is an old Viet Nam Veteran.  He also happens to be First Nations (Indian).  I bumped into him in the grocery store one day and we instantly connected.  He began telling me of his stay in Nam and his life upon his return.  Now he is a great grandfather and is very involved with his family and the community and healing himself, his family and others if he can.  I see him once in a while at work, he comes through the drive through and we have little chats about this and that.   Smiley

Love is everywhere when you have eyes to see it and an open heart to feel it.

Namaste'
Without constant complete silence meditation - samadi - we lose ourselves in the game.  MM

 

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