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The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying...Sogyal Rinpoche

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Andrew Harvey

  • Andrew Harvey (Wikipedia)
  • 10 Ways to Become a Sacred Activist...by Andrew Harvey
  • The Direct Path: Creating a Personal Journey to the Divine Using the World's Spiritual Traditions...by Andrew Harvey
    This splendid book is written with the brilliance, insight and passion that we have come to expect from Andrew Harvey, whose own path has not been an easy one.
    Of Anglo-Indian descent, he first came to notice when at the age of only 21, he became the youngest person ever to become a Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford. Yet he gave up what promised to be a glittering academic career to return to India and follow a spiritual path. In some thirty books he has described an emerging view in which spiritual practice leads to an in increasing "divinization" of earthly life. He believes that this is a solution to prejudice, separation and ecological destruction.
    In this book he describes the trauma of breaking with his Indian guru, but how this shattering of his faith led him to have a direct relationship with the Divine. This book is a largely successful attempt to provide a map for the Direct Path to God or the Higher Self. Because he has studied many traditions in extraordinary depth, you will find exercises and techniques culled from a variety of religious and philosophical traditions.
    The principle of the Direct Path is the truth that we all contain sparks of the Divine, and that they also manifest in those around us. This is one of the few books that recognize that not all spiritual teachers live in temples, caves or monasteries. In fact some of the most profound initiates and teachers live largely anonymous lives. In this book Harvey mentions, amongst others, a Tibetan beer seller and a realtor who is also a Kabbalist, apart from some of the more traditional spiritual teachers.
    I am more and more convinced that Andrew Harvey is quite right in saying that we no longer have the time for religious intermediaries, that the days of contemplative withdrawal from society are over, and that the Direct Path is the only viable method for social transformation. One of his most quotable sentences: "Our coma of denial of the sacredness of the world.... Is destroying the planet."
    It is becoming ever more doubtful that the future well-being of our descendents can be assured by technological innovation alone. Unless enough people heed his call to re-claim their Divinity and to act from it, we may have a very rocky road ahead of us.
    This is a rare, reasoned, passionate and enlightened book. Albert Einstein once said that: "You do not really understand something unless you can explain it to your grandmother." On that criterion alone, this book passes with flying colors. I think that anybody interested in improving themselves and the world about them, will be amazed at how well Harvey communicates even quite sophisticated concepts, and takes the time to do so. Sure signs of a true teacher and true master of his subject.
    Is he himself always a paragon of sprititual virtue? I don't know him, but the answer is "probably not." But that should not detract from his message.
    Highly recommended.
    review by Dr. Richard G. Petty
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A. H. Almaas, The Diamond Approach

"To truly find God, truth needs to be found independently from the opinions of others. The truth has to be found in our hearts...A.H.Almaas"
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Native American Spirituality

Asceticism

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Worldview...Native/Non-Native

    "...A native is a man or creature or plant indigenous to a limited geographical are--a space boundary and defined by mountains, rivers or coastline (not by latitudes, longitudes or state and county lines), with its own peculiar mixture of weeds, trees, bugs, birds, flowers, streams, hills, rocks, and critters (including people), its own nuances of rain, wind, and seasonal change. Native intelligence develops through an unspoken or soft-spoken relationship with these interwoven things: it evolves as the native involves himself in his region. A non-native awakens in the morning in a body in a bed in a room in a building on a street in a county in a state in a nation. A native awakes in the center of a little cosmos--or a big one, if his intelligence is vast--and he wears this cosmos like a robe, sensing the barely perceptible shiftings, migrations, moods, and machinations of it creatures, its growing green things, its earth and sky...most often where the earth, air, fire, and water have been least bamboozled by men and machines...." The River Why by David James Duncan
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Eastern Orthodox Christianity

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Hesychasm

"An ancient mystical tradition was lost to the Western world nearly a thousand years ago. Now, at the dawn of the new millennium, this profound yet practical path of transcendence is being rediscovered. Its name is hesychasm, from a Greek root meaning "to be still."
Hesychasm's roots extend back almost two thousand years to the beginnings of the Christian church. Today much of what we know about this spiritual path has been gleaned from the writings of mystics who populated the Middle Eastern deserts in the fourth century. These early ascetics are known as the Desert Fathers.
In the eleventh century, the Christian church split into the Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches. Catholicism rejected hesychasm, which encouraged individual experiences of the divine. As a result, hesychasm disappeared from Western culture but survived because the Orthodox church embraced and preserved this tradition of quiet meditation."...Hesychasm: A Christian Path of Transcendence...By Mitchell B. Liester
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Key Players in Centering Prayer

Guidelines for Centering Prayer

  • Basil Pennington, one of the best known proponents of the centering prayer technique, has delineated the guidelines for centering prayer:
    • Sit comfortably with your eyes closed, relax, and quiet yourself. Be in love and faith to God.
    • Choose a sacred word that best supports your sincere intention to be in the Lord's presence and open to His divine action within you (i.e. "Jesus", "Lord," "God," "Savior," "Abba," "Divine," "Shalom," "Spirit," "Love," etc.).
    • Let that word be gently present as your symbol of your sincere intention to be in the Lord's presence and open to His divine action within you. (Thomas Keating advises that the word remain unspoken....)
    • Whenever you become aware of anything (thoughts, feelings, perceptions, images, associations, etc.), simply return to your sacred word, your anchor.
    Ideally, the prayer will reach the point where the person is not engaged in their thoughts as they arrive on their stream of consciousness. This is the "unknowing" referenced in the 14th century book....Centering prayer (Wikipedia)
  • The Method of Centering Prayer...by Thomas Keating
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Non Conceptual Meditation

Mantra Meditation

Centering Prayer

"Centering Prayer is more akin to the very ancient practice of hesychasm as understood in the Eastern Orthodox Church, in which the participant seeks the presence of God directly (aided by the Jesus Prayer, perhaps) and explicitly rejects discursive thoughts and imagined scenes. (The height of hesychast prayer is spoken of as the vision of the "uncreated light," but this very rare experience is understood as a gift of God, and must not be sought or imagined.)"...Centering Prayer (Wikipedia)
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Bardo Thodol aka Tibetan Book of the Dead

"The Tibetan text describes, and is intended to guide one through, the experiences that the consciousness has after death, during the interval between death and the next rebirth. This interval is known in Tibetan as the bardo. The text also includes chapters on the signs of death, and rituals to undertake when death is closing in, or has taken place. It is the most internationally famous and widespread work of Tibetan Nyingma literature"...Bardo Thodol (Wikipedia)
"The Tibetan...word bardo means literally "intermediate state" - also translated as "transitional state" or "in-between state" or "liminal state".... Used loosely, the term "bardo" refers to the state of existence intermediate between two lives on earth. According to Tibetan tradition, after death and before one's next birth, when one's consciousness is not connected with a physical body, one experiences a variety of phenomena.... The term bardo can also be used metaphorically to describe times when our usual way of life becomes suspended, as, for example, during a period of illness or during a meditation retreat. Such times can prove fruitful for spiritual progress because external constraints diminish. However, they can also present challenges because our less skillful impulses may come to the foreground....Bardo (Wikipedia)"
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RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE AND PHILOSOPHICAL ANALYSIS

Meditation

"Meditation is a practice in which an individual trains the mind and/or induces a mode of consciousness to realize some benefit..."...Meditation (Wikipedia)
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Mysticism

"Mysticism...; from the Greek μυστικός, mystikos, meaning 'an initiate') is the knowledge of, and especially the personal experience of, states of consciousness, or levels of being, or aspects of reality, beyond normal human perception, sometimes including experience of and even communion with a supreme being."...Mysticism (Wikipedia)
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Paths to the Divine

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Contents

Dying, Death and the Afterlife

"I have come to believe that most people have not adequately prepared themselves for death, and for that reason are not adequately prepared for life. For unless we are truly in touch with our entire beings--body, mind, and soul--and with our death, we cannot appreciate the value and brevity of this little bit of life in which we can actively participate.

When you have become sufficiently skilled in the practice of dying, all the other practices will seem relatively easy.

It goes something like this: You close your eyes and imagine that you are on your deathbed. You feel yourself drifting. You don't have the energy to do anything. Your desk is piled high with unanswered letters, bills to be paid, unfinished projects. Either someone else will pick them up for you or they will remain undone. It doesn't matter much. No one will know that the idea you meant to work out never came to expression. No one will feel the poorer for it. Then there are the people in your life. If you loved them well, they will miss you and grieve for you. Over time the poignancy of your absence will fade and only a warm remembrance will be left. There will be those for whom you did not care enough, those you rejected, those with whom there is still some unfinished business. It doesn't matter now. There is nothing you can do about it.

There is only one thing you can do, and that is let go. Let the tasks of the world slip away. Let your very identity slip away. Let your loved ones mourn a little while for you and then go on their way. Let go of everything, your home, your possessions, your feelings and your thoughts.

Allow yourself to float. You begin to feel lighter. You have shed the heavy load you have been carrying. What was the heavy load? It was your sense of self-importance. It was your belief that everything you did had intrinsic importance, therefore you had to do it fully and perfectly no matter what the cost. Or, conversely, it was your belief that your work was so important that you couldn't possibly do it well enough, so the burden you carried was the unfulfilled responsibility. But either way, don't you see how temporal it is, when you are facing your own death? This practice can help you learn to do a little less, and do it more slowly, do it with care, and do it with love."
...Seeing Through the Visible World...by June Singer...pp. 159-160
"But consider: why does my sausage-encased ego insist that it must live in perpetuity in this particular package if life itself is to hold any meaning? Does that seem egocentric, presumptuous, and even arrogant? When Jesus spoke of finding your life by losing it, is this part of what he meant? Or as Shunryu Suzuki observed: “To live in the realm of Buddha nature means to die as a small being, moment after moment.”"...Zen and the Art of Dying
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Anthroposophy

Excerpts from The Psychedelic Experience

The Psychedelic Experience is essentially an Americanized abridged version of The Tibetan Book of the Dead except that transcendency or exploration of the landscape beyond normal perception is experienced through the use of LSD. As noted in Sacred Voyages, entheogens have been used for many centuries for a number of purposes, including religious ritual, soul retrieval, treatment of illnesses, finding and experiencing the Divine.
The Psychedelic Experience
A manual based on the Tibetan Book of the Dead
By
Timothy Leary, Ph.D., Ralph Metzner, Ph.D., & Richard Alpert, Ph.D.
Translated into HTML by Ben Walter, bjw@spiff.gnu.ai.mit.edu

General Introduction
A Tribute to W. Y. Evans-Wentz
A Tribute to Carl G. Jung
A Tribute to Lama Anagarika Govinda
The Tibetan Book Of The Dead

Full Document Here


This edition no longer available at Erowid as it has been privately published and available through amazon.com.
However, the The Psychedelic Experience FAQ is available here.
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2.16 Hypothesis

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health
One of the possible outcomes of thawing the icy plains of the soul, (re)finding one’s own essence, listening to and welcoming the Inner Voice, is that people transform. They transform in the sense that they can fulfill their act of becoming. In our opinion, ayahuasca may be important as a catalyst in this process. The goal of our research is not to convince others of this point of view. Our goal is to tap and report what the results are for those people who use ayahuasca in the setting of the Sacred Voyage for the purpose of experiencing a rite of passage to help them fulfill their act of becoming. Therefore, our hypothesis is:

Ayahuasca, as applied in the setting of the Sacred Voyage, can offer clients who are well prepared a healing and transformational experience with lasting positive effects.
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2.15 The use of ayahuasca

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health
The role ayahuasca has to play in all this is not unambiguous. Ayahuasca is one of life’s great mysteries. Earlier publications on the subject have all focused on mental or religious experiences. This report aims to emphasize the effects ayahuasca may have on the soma. One of our findings in working with ayahuasca is that when clients focus their loving attention on the somatic self, ayahuasca dramatically enhances the results clients achieve in thawing frozen energies.

It seems as though, through the loving kindness and the right intention of the client, ayahuasca allows itself to be guided to those areas where energies have become frozen as a result of suffered trauma. Ayahuasca seems to work towards restoring universal harmony and -in conjunction with the client’s focused loving kindness- works on the thawing of energies and on the transformation process. Many of our clients report experiencing this and describe the process of thawing in great detail. It is worth noting, though, that ayahuasca works so remarkably, that it can hardly be caught in words. What it seems to do, is accelerate the thawing of traumatized energy, while, simultaneously, representing the associated memories, images, visions, feelings, thoughts and emotions. It shows us the complete picture, the reality in which soma and psyche meet.

To toy with Western standards of credibility even further, ayahuasca awakens the Inner Voice, which has been referred to by mystics for centuries.

Ayahuasca is classified as an entheogenous brew, entheogenous meaning ‘revealing the God within’. The word for therapy is derived from the Greek therapeia, which was originally used in the meaning of ‘tending to the Gods’. From this perspective, using ayahuasca in a therapeutic setting would be both to stir the deity within and to serve this divine being. It thaws the frozen plains of the soul, awakening one’s own essence, which may be seen as divine. It stirs the Inner Voice, that may guide us through life; a voice that goes unheard by so many of us, because it merely whispers and is lost in the busy confusion of day-to-day life.

Shaman Don Juanito:
‘“Because money has become the focus of life in your country, many are not following the path that will make them happy. Rebekita, we all have a guiding voice within that leads us through life. These guiding voices are our dreams, messages, and visions. The need to make money stops people from following their dreams. Then people get sick.”

“Don Juanito, are you saying that illness is directly related to not listening to our guiding voice?” I replied excitedly.

“Yes, that is exactly what I am saying. Disease is only a lack of balance in the body. Disease comes when a person fails to listen to their calling.”’

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2.14 Goal

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health
The goal of our work is to help thaw, heal and revive the somatic centre, the seat of our soul. Accomplishing this is a process, in which every step is equally important. We treat whatever issue seems to be vitally important at that particular moment. For this very reason it is essential that our clients develop pure awareness. This is not aimed at any particular goal or outcome but merely at attempting to remain close to whatever issue asserts itself at that point in time. Awareness, in this context, is explained by Hal and Sidra Stone as: ‘The ability to observe life in all its aspects, without judging or forming an opinion about the energetic patterns being observed, and without feeling the need to control what occurs.’

Thawing what we call the ‘frozen plains of the soul’ can only be undertaken as a complete process, in which no step can be skipped. It is a process of transformation and every step, no matter how large or small, is of vital importance. Every time a client successfully employs loving attention from a state of pure awareness, to remain close to whatever issue asserts itself at that particular moment, the process (frozen by fear and trauma) can proceed. The work we do is not based on regression, we do not employs means to return to someone’s past. On the contrary, clients are assisted in developing mindfulness, directing their attention and feeling comfortable in being present here and now. The cognitive self, the adult the person in question has become, gets in touch with the somatic self, an aspect often underdeveloped as a result of trauma experienced while growing up. This is why the somatic essence is often pictured as an Inner Child. Our approach is not based on reliving this Child’s pain through regression, but on tackling the Child’s frozen energy from the adult state of awareness, and attempting to thaw, heal and revive the qualities that are part of the unique essence of this Inner Child. It is not solely about thawing the physically frozen elements, but also about welcoming and accommodating the vulnerable aspects that have come to life. In other words, building a relationship with what Hal and Sidra Stone refer to as the disowned selves. These manifestations of the disowned self are energy patterns that are part of our essence but have not been able to grow up with us, as a result of traumatic occurrences.

Transformation as a goal

The act of fully becoming is a result of the thawing of the frozen somatic energies and accepting and welcoming the energy patterns that come to life. This principle can be seen as the process of transformation.

Robert Stamboliev about transformation: ‘The transformation process is the natural unfolding which takes place at the level of each individual energy pattern, and is suited to the nature of this particular pattern. Transformation is called on as a result of accepting and nourishing the energy patterns as they are. If we do not accept our patterns the way they are, and try to alter them instead, the natural transformation process, the natural unfolding, will become blocked.’
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2.13 Intake

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health
During an intake session of two hours, prospective clients of the Sacred Voyage explain what the theme is that they wish to explore. In this process we approach the core issue at a mental level. Once we have defined the problem we shift to a different approach, to the awareness of, and focusing on the felt sense associated with the issue. The central question in this phase is: ‘Where in your body can you feel what you have just described?’

We can use what the client has described as a ‘handle’. Whatever we know about the problem at hand, the symptom or complaint, is now, through this handle, attached as a name to the associated physical sensation.

This handle will be used as a guideline, as something to help hang onto the felt sense. When this handle is stirred, the client can get in touch with his or her felt sense. Often, a handle consists of a certain negative conviction. These convictions are formed during childhood, often when a child has received insufficient guidance after a traumatic occurrence. This can lead to low self-esteem with the accompanying negative convictions, such as: ‘I’m stupid, nasty, ugly, evil, lazy, worthless, undeserving of love, etcetera’. When such a handle is employed, the frozen, traumatized energy will be stirred and feelings and emotions such as fear, anger or grief may crop up. Also, a sense of relief may reveal itself, often accompanied by a deep sigh, which is associated with the feeling that finally, what is truly inside is given the attention it requires. Loving attention and acknowledgement of this inner reality may cause an energy shift (Gendlin) to occur. This is known to us as ‘thawing of the frozen, traumatized energy’. It entails a shift in the area of focus of the felt sense, towards a different part of the somatic self. Often, the handle is replaced as well.

When the ‘problem area’ in the body has been found and defined, we work with the client to remain in close contact with it, using maitri, which is a Tibetan word meaning unconditional loving kindness towards yourself. The thought behind this is that only loving kindness can thaw the frozen energetic blockades. Only love has this power. As far as we are concerned, the opposite is also true. Fear, (when trauma is involved, fear of dying) has at a certain point been able to freeze the energy, and is still able to do so. Therefore, learning to deal with fear is one of the central pillars of the therapeutic guidance we provide. Our guidance comes straight from the heart and uses maitri and loving attention, the antidote for fear.

Buddhist teacher Thich Nhat Hanh about loving attention: ‘The moment your loving attention starts to tackle your fear, the fear will settle down. “I breathe in and calm both my body and mind.” You can calm your feelings by simply staying with them, like a mother holds her child when it cries. […] Loving attention is no judge, it should be seen more as someone looking after her younger sister, supporting her with care and affection. By concentrating on our breathing we can keep this attention alive and we can become fully acquainted with ourselves.’
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2.12 Focusing

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health
Peter A. Levine: ‘If we, by means of focusing on our felt senses, allow ourselves to acknowledge our thoughts and sensations, and let them take their natural course, they will peak, then decrease and finally dissolve. During this process we may experience the following: trembling, quivering, vibrating, hot flushes, calm full breathing, a steadier heartbeat, perspiration, relaxation of the muscles and an all-encompassing feeling of relief, well-being and security.’

This focusing on the felt sense (Eugene Gendlin), even when it is not used in conjunction with ayahuasca, may be a very effective tool to help dissolve the energetic blockades and to revive the individual essence, making it an important part of the process.
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2.11 The role of the activation cycle

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health
Peter A. Levine about the activation cycle: ‘People long to be challenged by life, and activation provides us with the required energy to take on and conquer these challenges. Deep satisfaction is one of the results of a fully completed activation cycle. The cycle is as follows: activation peaks at the point where we gather our strengths to meet a challenge or a threat. Then it is actively reduced and leaves us relaxed and satisfied. […] Those who have been traumatized, deeply mistrust this cycle, usually with good reason. Victims of trauma associate the cycle with the overwhelming experience of being paralyzed with fear. Because of this fear, the traumatized person will prevent the activation cycle from reaching completion and will remain stuck in a cycle of fear. Victims of trauma must therefore become reacquainted with an elementary law of nature: What goes up, must come down.’

‘Frozen areas indicate the formation of tiny crystals in the cells, immobilizing them. By being aware of this virtually immobile condition or by slowing down further whatever hardly noticeable movement may remain, you are inviting your body to delve more deeply into the story. Through this warmth and attention, the crystals become fluid and are able to leave the cells, allowing the cells their natural movement. […] Through releasing the crystals, the cells do not only release their chemical waste products but also the memories retained therein.’ (Peirsman & Bakker, Cranio Sacral Therapists)

As asserted earlier, we assume that the source of many complaints and symptoms cannot only be found in the subconscious but also in the soma, in the centre of people’s inner life, where each human’s essence is seated. The Sacred Voyage uses ayahuasca not specifically to reach or explore new realms of consciousness. Our method is about finding and remobilizing somatic energy blockades, after which different (higher) states of mind may be reached. This has been described by Dr. Stanislav Grof: ‘…after resolving biographical childhood issues, and the perinatal trauma, individuals would often find themselves in realms of consciousness completely transcendent of time, space, and other parameters of our ordinary world view.’ (Grof, 1985)

Ayahuasca plays a major role in the Sacred Voyage because it has an unexplained but very powerful effect in breaking down energetic blockades.

It is essential to emphasize that our method does not involve shamanistic healing in the traditional sense, in which a shaman removes or heals his client’s ailment. The client’s focus is not on a mental experience aimed at encountering ‘the divine’ in a higher state of consciousness, as would be the case in the setting of the Santo Daime church. This may be a side effect, as is illustrated by Dr. Grof’s earlier quote. Ayahuasca is employed as an aide in breaking down the energetic blockades. Clients applying the method of the Sacred Voyage focus on their own body, on what they experience as energy blockades.
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2.10 Somatic aspects

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health
We assume that a person’s essence is vulnerable and resides in the human body. In our views, the body accommodates the essence, the seat of the soul, between the throat and the lower abdomen, known as the ‘somatic self’(Gilligan 1997). Through upbringing, education and/or traumatic occurrences people can become cut off from their essence. People who experience this, often refer to it as ‘missing something important’, ‘roaming aimlessly’ or ‘not having a place they can call ‘home’. Often, it takes years before these vague notions truly manifest themselves. When life itself still offers enough distraction, or if someone’s self-consciousness has not fully developed, the case may be that the body or the psyche give notice through all manner of symptoms or complaints. We assume that most symptoms are a result of being detached from one’s own essence. In other circumstances life itself will provide the means to bring symptoms to the light, such as the loss of loved ones, disease, loss of livelihood or divorce.

Psychologist Stephen Gilligan writes: ‘Life flows through you, except when it doesn’t.' We feel there’s an enormous truth hidden in this seemingly obvious statement. The first part of the statement can be witnessed when we look at small children. There is an ongoing flow of life going right through them. First they laugh, then they cry; moments later they’re surprised, then angry. There’s a continuous flow of life. Many adults have lost this quality and seem to be cut off from this vital flow. When energetic blockades occur in the body, feelings and emotions can no longer flow freely. Psychiatrist Dr. Stanislav Grof refers to these blockades as COEX (which stands for Condensed System of Experience). Dr. Grof: ‘A COEX system is dynamic constellation of memories (and their associated fantasies) from different periods of someone’s life, with the common denominator of strong emotional charges of a similar nature, intense physical sensations of a similar kind or the fact that they share other important elements.’ Stephen Gilligan refers to the same phenomenon as ‘a whole frozen family of associations’.

Peter A. Levine writes about the stored traumatic life energy: ‘In order to avoid becoming a victim, a threatened man must offload all this energy generated by danger. This leftover energy will not disappear by itself. It remains seated in the body and can force the body to form all manner of symptoms, such as fear, depression, psychosomatic and behavioral problems. Through these symptoms the body attempts to keep a check on all the energy that has not been discharged.’

Most mammals, including humans, have developed the fight, flight or freeze pattern as possible responses in the face of imminent danger. Because, most often, children do not have the first two options at their disposal, traumatic occurrences in their youth are often responded to by freezing, for fear of dying.

For now, it should suffice to mention that we assume, in accordance with the theories of Gilligan, Grof and Levine, that traumatic events tend to cause large quantities of life energy to stop flowing freely, and that both body and mind can display a multitude of symptoms and complaints to control the energy that should ideally have been discharged. This causes people to become detached from their essence.

We assume that events such as birth trauma and other issues that Dr. Stanislav Grof has dubbed ‘childhood biographical issues’ can cause energetic blockades, which may become frozen and of a lasting nature if they are not spotted, acknowledged and guided by significant people surrounding the child during its upbringing (such as parents, relatives, teachers and others involved in raising the child). Some relevant themes that we are confronted with in our practice are social pressure and threats to the ‘social self’, such as bullying, (emotional) neglect, violence, discrimination, hospitalization, abuse, loss of loved ones and other traumatizing experiences.

Our principle is based on the notion that frozen energy flows should be reactivated, to enable the body to discharge the excess energy. Our practice aims to teach people to find the blockades in themselves and ‘thaw’ the flow of life, to break down the energy blockade.
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2.9 Mythological aspects

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health
In different types of shamanism it is assumed that traumatic experiences cause parts of the soul to be split off. When this happens, these parts of the soul are assumed to end up in what is known as the Underworld, or in an alternative parallel reality such as the Upperworld. Unlike conventional Western methods, which remain at the surface of people’s consciousness, shamans have been practicing tried and proven methods for thousands of years, to descend or ascend into these worlds in order to retrieve the lost parts of the soul. The techniques applied for this goal are known as methods of soul retrieval.

In shamanism it is common for the shaman to retrieve the lost parts of his client’s soul. The approach of the Sacred Voyage is to teach people to find and retrieve the traumatized parts of their soul themselves, without the mediation of a shaman or healer. This is a theme described by mythologist Joseph Campbell as the ‘hero’s journey’.

‘The hero’s first task is to retreat from the earthly stage of secondary consequences and travel to those areas of the psyche in which problems originate, where the difficulties are truly situated, and destroy them, fighting the childhood demons of his local culture and struggling towards real, undistorted experience to deal with what Jung has dubbed the ‘archetypical images’.’ (Joseph Campbell)
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2.8 The importance of childhood

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health
Fear of social exclusion must, at a certain point in time, have provided us with some evolutionary benefit, because man has only been able to survive in a group setting. This fear is still with us today, and is particularly strongly present in children. Fear of social rejection has grown out of all proportion (and is, as is illustrated by the Dickerson and Kemeny quote, virtually equivalent to the fear of dying). This is especially true for children and it makes sure that they can easily adapt to the norms of a group, at the expense of their unique personal characteristics.

‘The type of stress that has the strongest effect on the level of stress hormones, which drives up the levels of hydrocortisone, is predominantly present in classrooms in the form of ‘social threats’ like being judged by a teacher or leaving a ‘stupid’ impression with other children. These social fears have a strongly inhibiting effect on the cerebral mechanisms that allow us to learn.’ (Elizuya & Rochlofs)

‘Being evaluated is a threat to the ‘social self’, the way we see ourselves through the eyes of others. This notion of social value and status, and thus, our self-esteem, is derived from the messages we receive from other people about the way they see us. When our reputation is at stake, this may have a remarkably strong biological effect, nearly equal in strength to situations in which our life is threatened.’ (Dickerson & Kemeny)

At school we learn how to adjust and it is there that we develop our cognitive skills. Through an ongoing emphasis on knowledge and learning, children become detached from the feelings that are unique to them and are a part of their inalienable centre. The language of physical sensation is hardly acknowledged at schools, let alone supported in its development.

Of course it is not down to education alone that children can become detached from their essence. Parents and other people involved in the upbringing certainly play a large part as well. More so now than ever in the past, both parents go out to work, which seems to reduce the importance they associate with upbringing. More and more often, and at a younger age, children are taken to child day care centers, where the real needs of a young child cannot be fulfilled sufficiently. As a result, children can become emotionally damaged at an early stage, though often this is not readily apparent because the child will adapt out of fear. Children whose needs are not acknowledged and fulfilled will, at a subconscious level, become imprinted with the message that they do not matter and that their needs are not important. Sometimes these children become troublesome or hard to manage, in other cases they may adapt and become apathetic. In both events, the children become detached from their unique and inalienable centre.

Often, a child’s development is also marred by other traumatic occurrences such as violence, (sexual) abuse, neglect or bullying. Shamans refer to the effect these traumatic events have as soul loss.

Soul loss: ‘Losing crucial parts of ourselves that provide us with life and vitality’ (Sandra Ingerman)
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2.7 Non-Western aspects

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health
In the West, the concept of a unique and inalienable core or centre is a far less salient issue. The Western world is characterised by its focus on the exterior, the image, and on personality (which literally means ‘mask’). The exterior seems to gain more and more ground in Western society, as is illustrated by ever increasing materialism, and seems to grow at the expense of the inner being. For many, identity is not derived from their unique and inalienable centre but from material and social status associated with their education, profession, house, car and other possessions. Western man seems to have been alienated from his personal centre and has shifted his focus to the ‘shopping centre’.

The Dagara concept of an inalienable centre, unique to every individual, is not unheard of in other cultures. In fact, many cultures support a similar idea. Buddhists refer to it as ‘Buddhanature’ and view the abdominal area as the ‘seat of the soul’. In Japan, the abdominal area is known as kikai, the sea of energy, in China it is tan’tien. In all oriental martial arts this centre is emphasised as essential for concentration, power and grace.

In the operational method of the Sacred Voyage, we assume that every human being is born with an individually unique core and that, as we have seen in the Dagara example, throughout their lives, people gradually become alienated from what is most characteristic of them. Our assumption is that this alienation from our essence is a result of upbringing, religion and education. It seems that, as people, we have developed a highly evolved social consciousness that helps us adjust to the norms of our group.

‘Our original true essence is forgotten and replaced by the projections put upon us by family, peers, and authority figures.’ (Sandra Ingerman)
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2.6 Ritual aspects

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health
‘It has always been the primary function of myths and rituals to provide the symbols that further the human spirit, as a counterweight against all those ongoing human fantasies which tend to slow its development. In fact, it is very well possible that the frequent occurrence of neuroses in our society is a result of the disappearance of such an effective spiritual aide. We remain focused on the unbanished imaginings of our childhood and are thus averse to the necessary passages into our adulthood.’ (Joseph Campbell).

Our Western culture lacks such rites of passage to mark the transition into adulthood. We may have rituals such as birthdays, getting a driver’s license, graduating from university, getting your first mortgage, moving away from home or other events that are associated with growing up, but none of these rituals truly mark the moment of leaving adolescence behind and entering adulthood. Adolescents are often caught by surprise by adult life because the associated perks and rights also bring along many obligations and responsibilities which seem to creep up on the person involved. Also, many adolescents (and other, older people) seem to lack a place in society. Schools and universities may offer some kind of community, but the outside world often seems more like a large collection of anonymous individuals.

In primitive societies rites of passage towards ‘becoming’ are intended to release adolescents from the influence of their parents and help them take an independent place in society. The following excerpt shows a good example of such a rite of passage or initiation.

Malidoma Somé, a member of the African Dagara tribe who, as a young boy, was kidnapped by Jesuit priests and raised to become a priest himself, escaped his captors late in his adolescence and returned to his tribe. His people were worried because he had missed the crucial initiation ritual in their culture. Eventually, it was decided that Somé could go through the ritual with the younger boys. Here, he describes the initiation instructions given to him by the person who led the ritual:

‘Somehow, what he told me didn’t sound at all strange to me, or, as I later found out, to any of the others. It was as though he was describing something we already knew, something that we’d never questioned, and had never been able to put into words.

This is what he said: “The place where he stood was the centre. Everyone possesses a centre that he gradually grows away from after birth. Being born is losing touch with your centre, and to develop from being a child to becoming an adult, is like walking away from it. Your centre is both inside as well as outside yourself. It is everywhere. We must realise that it exists, then find it and get in touch with it because without our centre there is no way to tell who we are, where we’ve come from and where we’re going.”

He explained that finding our centre was the goal of the Baor (the initiation ritual). This school specialised in repairing the worn out, the decrepit, results of thirteen rainy years of existence. I was twenty years old. If I’d have stayed at home I would have gone through this seven years ago. I wondered if it would not be too late for me, but then realised it was better late than never.

“Nobody’s centre is like anyone else’s. Find your own centre, not your neighbour’s, not that of your parents or your ancestors but yours, and yours alone.”’

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2.5 Religious aspects

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health
As far back as early Christian mysticism, references have been made to the ‘original image’ or ‘true face’. Charles L. Whitfield described the phenomenon of our essence as follows: ‘Who we are when we feel at our most authentic, real or impassioned.’ Our essence possesses qualities such as spontaneity, vulnerability, creativity and especially vitality. When we are in touch with our essence, we feel alive. From our own essence, we connect with others and we may shape a sense of collective awareness.
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2.4 Shamanistic aspects

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health
Rather than on targeting the negative, our operational method aims to promote the positive, which presents itself in the form of emotions, feelings, thoughts and symptoms. This holistic approach is deeply rooted in the shamanistic traditions and views, as the following excerpt from “The Shaman’s Last Apprentice” illustrates. Shaman Don Juanito:

“Disease is only a wake up call to start living.”

“I don’t understand.”

“Well, you see Rebekita, when we are attached to illness we only focus on disease. We forget to see life as a journey where everything is flowing in motion, so that illness and disease are actually opportunities for growth.”

“I’m still not sure I understand.”

“Disease is the spirit’s way of expressing that it is unhappy and in pain, and that it can no longer be ignored. Most people become distressed by illness, and this only increases suffering because our fear of death causes us to fear disease. We have been taught to believe that death is punishment, and if we are good people we will not get sick, or we will be cured. It is time we start to embrace death and accept it as part of the inevitable experience of life. Illness is a chance to make life changes, to start really living. It gives us the opportunity to remember what is important in our lives, to follow our dreams, to heal old wounds and say goodbye. Illness empowers the spirit to be heard and to show the way to a more fulfilling life, for however long that is.”


Further on in “The Shaman’s Last Apprentice”, the shaman says:

“The Amazonian plant, the Mother of all Medicine, Ayahuasca, will teach you to love and accept yourself. But first you must go deep within to heal your own pain and suffering. True shamans first learn to heal themselves before they can heal others. This is Ayahuasca’s gift.”

In our holistic perspective we embrace this shamanistic approach to the healing of pain and suffering, in which ayahuasca plays a major part. In our views, this approach offers openings to a better life. Instead of emphasising the negative, and attempting to eliminate it (be it with or without the use of medication), which is common in the conventional Western approach to mental health, we welcome the symptoms experienced by our clients, regarding them as an opportunity in fulfilling the act of becoming. This research project will not focus on these symptoms, stressing their possible disappearance, but will emphasise the effects of the ayahuasca experience on certain parameters associated with mental health. These parameters will be defined elsewhere.
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2.3 Therapeutic aspects

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health
In the process of rediscovering and awakening the personal essence, the Sacred Voyage is a rite of passage, which supports people in the act of becoming. Here, the major assumption is made that when people are out of touch with their essence, feelings of discontent, depression and other psychological and somatic symptoms and complaints may arise. Ergo, when people are able to re-establish the contact with this essence, and build a lasting relationship with it, the symptoms and complaints can disappear and the individual can fulfill the act of becoming. When an individual has not fulfilled his or her act of becoming, negative feelings such as depression and melancholy and ‘negative’ emotions such as anger, anxiety and grief may dominate this person’s life. When an individual fulfills the act of becoming, feelings of love, peace and happiness can arise and life can become characterized by meaningfulness and aimed at connecting with others.
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2.2 Defining mental health

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health
Mental health: A quality of fully fledged human existence, being more than a mere absence of psychological and psychiatric disorders and more than a standard measure for assessing the mental health of an individual. (The term quality does not refer to a generic and objective norm for mental health itself, but to the more normative nature of the term mental health.) The operational method of the Sacred Voyage uses Trimbos’s 1959 definition of mental health, being: ‘a quality of human existence’.
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2.1 Background

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health
Over the last few years we have acquired a wealth of experience in the therapeutic guidance of people who have used ayahuasca within the setting of the Sacred Voyage. This experience convinced us that the method on which we report through this medium, is beneficial to people, provided the method is applied under the right conditions. This method has been dubbed ‘the Sacred Voyage’ and is based on the controlled, effective and safe use of the entheogenous brew ayahuasca, which finds its origins in the Amazonian rainforest.

The Sacred Voyage method was developed by Lars Faber and consists of therapeutic, oriental meditative, shamanistic and spiritual/religious elements. The book that accompanies the method and goes by the same name, has the subtitle ‘the pilgrimage to the soul’. The main goal of the Sacred Voyage method is to help people get in contact and develop a lasting relationship with their essence (also known as their true self, inner Child or Divine Child).

Ayahuasca is a brew which originated in the Amazonian region and was first discovered by the rainforest’s native inhabitants. We feel obliged to express our respect and gratitude to the shamans in ‘the world’s breeding ground’ for making ayahuasca available to Westerners. To these shamans, ayahuasca, known to them as the ‘Mother of all Medicine’, is a holy sacrament, serving many purposes. Ayahuasca is used for spiritual initiation rituals, as medication, to induce clairvoyancy, for astral travel and for relaxation.

It has been known for some time that ayahuasca possesses some special medical qualities, as has been testified in earlier publications. As Dr. Charles Grob concluded from his 1993 Hoasca project: ‘“Ayahuasca is perhaps a far more sophisticated and effective way to treat depression than SSRIs [antidepressant drugs],” Grob concludes, adding that the use of SSRIs is ‘a rather crude way’ of doing it. And ayahuasca, he insists, has great potential as a longterm solution.’

One of the articles about the healing properties of ayahuasca, which received worldwide attention, was written for National Geographic by Kira Salak and covers Salak’s personal experience with the brew. She describes how an ayahuasca cleansing ritual helped her accomplish what years of psychotherapy had failed to deliver. A day-long ayahuasca ritual rid her of a heavy depression. Lars Faber experienced a similar feat and has written “The Sacred Voyage” to describe the process he underwent. Later, dozens of other people would report having had similar experiences after using ayahuasca under his therapeutic guidance. ****In spite of the promises associated with ayahuasca, little interest has been shown by the scientific fields of medicine and psychiatry. In this day and age, treating symptoms and prescribing medication like antidepressants seems to be an easier approach than tracking down and actually curing the source of the ailment, even though for shamans, this is ‘all in a day’s work’.

This paper reports on an effect which cannot be measured, explained, proven or replicated in double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled studies, not only because it does not deal solely with average scores but also because it is contingent on highly individual psychological and somatic processes. The common denominator of these processes is that, despite the individually unique path people travel along, the goal is always the same: to find one’s personal essence and fulfill ‘the act of becoming’.

These goals, and their fulfillment, can only be assessed introspectively by the individual in question. However, because the phenomena at hand are often described as healing, transformational and even as peak experiences, the individual contributions to this research seem worth reporting and delving into more deeply.

This report will cover the findings of those who have experienced the use of ayahuasca in the setting of the Sacred Voyage, as well as the conditions under which the therapeutic sessions take place. The main focus will be on the results achieved by clients in the fields of personal growth and emotional well-being. The data used to assess these phenomena have been acquired through both quantitative and qualitative research, targeting clients of the Sacred Voyage therapeutic practice.

The data provided to us by our clients who were willing to share their most intimate and personal processes of awareness with us, have been treated with the utmost integrity. Assuming that the words connected to the experiences of our clients will speak for themselves, we feel strengthened to report in this manner, which we recognize as rather subjective. However, a factor of objectivity in this research is that clients only report in retrospect. It was not until late in 2007 that we decided to approach our clients for their personal and entirely voluntary contribution to this project. We have chosen this retrospective approach to prevent us from influencing or tainting the therapeutic processes and experiences. Our gratitude goes out to those seventy volunteers who have granted us a glimpse of their highly personal developments.
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2 The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health

2.1 Background 11
2.2 Defining mental health 12
2.3 Therapeutic aspects 13
2.4 Shamanistic aspects 13
2.5 Religious aspects 14
2.6 Ritual aspects 14
2.7 Non-Western aspects 15
2.8 The importance of childhood 15
2.9 Mythological aspects 16
2.10 Somatic aspects 17
2.11 Role of the activation cycle 18
2.12 Focusing 19
2.13 Intake 19
2.14 Goal 20
2.15 The use of ayahuasca 21
2.16 Hypothesis

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1 Introduction

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health
Ayahuasca is an entheogenous brew from the Amazonian rainforest and is used by local shamans. It is also used in rituals of the Santo Daime church. This report documents ayahuasca’s use for therapeutic purposes in a standardized setting. In chapter two, we will discuss our holistic view on mental health, which is the starting point for the Sacred Voyage. Chapter three describes the research design, the research sample, the questionnaire and the parameters that are assessed. This is followed by the results of the survey, in chapter four, which presents tables of the quantitative and gives a general impression of the qualitative results, which are given in full in appendix 2. Chapter five discusses the survey results and compares them with findings of earlier studies in this field. Finally, chapter six holds our conclusions and recommendations.
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Forward

The Sacred Voyage: a holotropic perspective on mental health
The first time I drank Ayahuasca is carved into my memory forever. In 1993 I was among the participants of a Santo Daime ritual in the German state of Bavaria. At these Santo Daime meetings Ayahuasca, a bitter tea originating from South America, is drunk. Ayahuasca is famous for its visionary qualities, and for the way it cleanses both body and soul. I had gone to this ceremony after being invited by a psychologist I had met at a San Francisco conference.

I was a bit of a ‘late-bloomer’. After having witnessed a considerable number of friends lose their mind in the sixties and seventies, the results of what was known as a ‘bad trip’, I decided to keep a respectful distance from what were considered to be consciousness-expanding substances. It had become clear to me that these substances could help expand the mind consciousness but it was equally clear that this alleged shortcut to insight could come with some unexpected risks. My experience as a counselor in a therapeutic community for drug addicts had also given me an up close look at the daunting images of the havoc addictive drugs can wreak on human life. However, I do not hold the opinion that all drugs are necessarily harmful.

Unfortunately, the view that drugs are by definition destructive dominates public opinion with a saddening tenacity. This view unjustly ignores the centuries of experience in using harmony-enhancing, consciousness-expanding plants. Unfamiliarity with these favorable aspects is what distorts any debate on the use and merits of entheogenous (‘awakening the deity within’) plants.

I myself have also been confronted with my fair share of incomprehension towards Ayahuasca, especially when I attempted to travel through customs, going from Brazil to The Netherlands, carrying several gallons of Ayahuasca in jerry cans. With sweaty hands I tried to bring Ayahuasca into the country for the Santo Daime religion for the very first time. At the time, Ayahuasca was positively illegal and importing it could mean serving several years in prison. The Justice Department did not know that this brew had a history of millennia of use in religious rituals in the Brazilian Amazon, among other places. They were also unaware that, in Brazil, Ayahuasca plays an essential part in a recognized religion.

But let’s jump back to Germany, where I experienced my first Ayahuasca ritual with some friends. After having sung several songs in an indiscernible tongue (which later turned out to be Brazilian Portuguese), the other participants suddenly burst out in enthusiastic German singing. My first thought was: “Where have I ended up? It’s almost like I’m in the war, surrounded by Bavarians”. At the same time the leader of the ceremony sternly looked my way and said -fortunately in English-: “No, we are not Nazis!” Being taken aback by the fact that my thoughts were apparently out there open to everyone, I suddenly realized one of the alternative names for the Ayahuasca brew I had just taken: ‘telepathine’. The illusion that thoughts are there only for private use suddenly belonged to the realms of history. The experience at this ceremony spurred me on to travel to Spain, where Padrinho Alfredo, the leader of the Santo Daime religion attended a European meeting. I was provided with the opportunity to invite him for a visit to The Netherlands. He accepted my invitation and visited the following year.

In Spain, I witnessed for the first time how important and powerful the ritual setting is for guiding the contents of people’s consciousness, awakened by the Ayahuasca, to their proper destination.

It is well-known that consciousness-expanding substances can release these contents of man’s awareness. However, what should be done with this energy, the emotions and the visions that are released? Without adding structure to the experience, only those truly strong of body and mind may afterwards be able to regain a firm foothold. Repressed trauma, emotional blockades, questions of meaning in life, sickness and health, oneness and harmony, or their opposites; these are all issues that are brought to the surface by consciousness-expanding substances.

In Leiden, Holland, the well known Prof. Dr. Bastiaans gained international reputation for using LSD to have his heavily traumatized patients, WWII concentration camp survivors, relive their memories and deal with them. One of Bastiaans’ colleagues, the Czech psychiatrist Dr. Stanislav Grof performed an incredible feat by managing to document, under a communist regime, the experiences his patients in a psychiatric institution had under the influence of LSD. It was remarkable in its own right that his patients reported near-death experiences, rebirthing, memories of their natural birth, past deaths and reliving a whole range of spiritual and traumatic experiences. The fact that Grof was not only courageous enough to place his patients’ experiences in the foreground, but also rejected the communists’ strictly atheist paradigm is a true litmus test for any entheogenous experience. Courage is absolutely indispensable when stepping into worlds that normally remain closed. By recognizing these transpersonal experiences the traditionally trained psychiatrist placed himself outside the dominant scientific paradigm that only acknowledges a material origin of consciousness.

My personal experiences with the now formally founded and registered Santo Daime church in The Netherlands were by all measures tempestuous. A wide interest for this form of religious experience proved to exist. During a visit to Holland by a group of Brazilians it turned out that the police were also thoroughly interested in our affairs. Police raids of Santo Daime churches throughout Europe, coordinated by Europol, were executed simultaneously. Church leaders were arrested, and it was especially bizarre to find out that I was being taken to a prison holding unit where I had once worked as a consultant for the Justice Department, motivating drug addicts to lead a drug free existence. Civil servants threateningly ensured us they would ‘put us away for years’. Fortunately I had done a lot of preparational work, allowing our fully settled in attorney Adèle van der Plas to swiftly turn up to submit the church statutes and the relevant references to leading academic experts on these specific matters. In the anxiously anticipated trial at an Amsterdam Court the scientific statements proved to be of overriding importance for the legalization of the Dutch Santo Daime church. It cannot be overemphasized that the seal on entheogenous plants, formed by the European drug legislation, can only be broken by the words of science. Most European states followed the Dutch lead and legalized and formally acknowledged the Santo Daime religion, which is now represented in almost every European country. Regular religious meetings are held throughout Europe, sometimes bringing together hundreds of participants.

This introduction is essential to sketch the historical frame of reference from which the Western world traditionally regards alterations of consciousness through the use of entheogenous. The Santo Daime church had the benefit of being able to lean on an ancient South American tradition of using entheogenous plants. The interesting thing about the work of Lars Faber is the direct inspiration he finds in Ayahuasca. From its astral dimension it helps him to find a direction in his work and to define the contents of his writings. This is an interesting development and should, in my view, be subject to the same rights and conditions as those that apply to existing recognized church communities. It goes without saying that people’s actions should be accounted for in processes that deeply affect one’s most intimate and personal levels. Lars has initiated this through sound scientific research. This research is a necessary condition for enabling us to retain the birthright to expand our consciousness through the use of entheogenous plants.

The following research report documents the findings of research conducted by Lars Faber and expert Dr. Maria Groot, research into the experiences of seventy clients of Lars’s Sacred Voyage practice. This solid approach is testimony to the intention to use the Golden Key responsibly. The Golden Key here represents the well-informed use of entheogenous in a religious and therapeutic setting. Lars’s paper is the tangible form of the need for theoretical education in these matters, required, in conjunction with practical experience, to be able to do this important work. Transpersonal psychology recognizes a wider framework than the limited theories in the fields of conventional psychology and psychiatry. Lars’s books have shown him to be well-versed in the transpersonal views, a basic requirement for any therapist aiming to work with the Golden Key. The combination of a strong entheogenous agent and a solid therapeutic approach may prove a promising Key in the right hands, enabling the user to transform a great deal of suffering.

The ‘bad trip’ phenomenon (resulting from too much information, use at an inopportune moment, in the wrong circumstances, and/or without the right guidance) is largely caught out through a phase of sound preparation. Through a structured interview about the potential participant’s medical and psychological condition, many risks are brought down to acceptable proportions. The research shows that even people who underwent negative experiences during their Voyage later regarded these as useful learning opportunities. This goes to show that proper preparation, context for interpretation, surroundings and guidance are of decisive importance for any entheogenous experience.

This report, written by Lars Faber and Dr. Maria Groot, doesn’t merely present the dry statistics that accompany any scientific effort. Rightly so, a lot of space has been reserved for the verbatim accounts of Sacred Voyage participants. Some critical remarks aside, the dominant response reflects how amazement abounds at the possibilities that arise for new perspectives and a new way of living.

The entheogenous path of learning has a lot of potential for harmony and healing for those people out to find them. This work may hand many a person the handles to the meaning of Aldous Huxley’s use of William Blake’s quote in The Doors of Perception: “If the doors of perception were cleansed every thing would appear to man as it is: Infinite” (William Blake, The Marriage of Heaven and Hell). Lars Faber’s use of this quote in his book “The Sacred Voyage” is very significant, as he uses it to indicate the aim of his labors. That the entheogenous experience under the right guidance and the right conditions may help to cast new light on the world is the message of every truly Sacred Voyage.

I hereby wish to express my sincere hope that the brave workers beating this new track will be given all the support that is needed. Support from both the material and the spiritual dimension.

Hans Bogers, co- founder of Santo Daime The Netherlands Wassenaar, July 2008
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