What Do Shamans Do?
Shamans work with the spirit or the soul. They heal illness at the soul level. They gain knowledge and insight from working with the spirits of nature such as rocks, trees, the land, and they gain knowledge from working with the spirits of animals and humans, such as their ancestors. For the shaman, everything is alive and carries information. You can call this spirit, energy, or consciousness.
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In order to communicate with the spirit, or consciousness, of these things, the shaman will shift his or her own state of awareness. Shamans can do this through various means, such as meditation, repetitive sounds such as that of the drum or rattle, or through the help of hallucinogenic plants. The shaman will then “see” through a new set of eyes, they will see what is going on with you on a spiritual level.
The shaman’s practice is also characterized by the soul flight. This is the shift of consciousness that the shaman makes, which allows the free part of his or her soul to leave the body. The shaman can then retrieve information for your healing and growth. They can retrieve healing power, or things that you have lost along the way in living your life. During the soul flight, the shaman is both in the room, and going on this “journey”, so he or she has an awareness of both at the same time.
How Does the Shaman Heal?
The shaman sees illness as a lack of power which has been lost somewhere in your life. In order to heal you, the shaman returns your power to you. She or he may perform a power animal retrieval. A power animal is a protector, similar to a guardian angel, which protects you from harm and helps you with your spiritual growth by lending its power to you.
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The shaman also removes misplaced energy. The negative emotions you may feel, or the negative emotions that another can send at you are seen by the shaman as being stuck or stored in various parts of your body. An example is how stress causes ulcers or back pains. The shaman will re-empower you by removing the energy that does not belong within your body. This is called a shamanic extraction, healing modalities other than shamanism practice this in various forms as well. This energy is not bad, it is just misplaced. Because it does not belong in your body, it is seen as causing illness that then shows itself in a physical way through pain, sickness or emotional difficulties.
In the shamanic system, part of the soul is free to leave the body. Therefore, soul parts of each individual will leave the body in order to protect itself from trauma. This is a positive way to protect the soul. For instance, if someone were in a car accident, part of the soul would leave the body in order to protect itself from the trauma of the impact. The soul does not always know how to return, however, and if it has not returned for some reason, it is referred to as soul loss. That is when the shaman would become involved, to assist with returning this missing piece of yourself. The healer would perform a soul retrieval. In indigenous cultures this was performed quite regularly. In these modern times, a person may go a long time feeling like a part of him or herself has been missing. Soul loss is comparable to the psychological concept of disassociation.
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Other Roles for Shamans
Other activities which shamans have traditionally performed include healing the land. For centuries, shamans have been involved with earth healing by using their ability to communicate with the consciousness of land, bodies of water, and other such natural features of their landscape. Whether by determining why crops would not grow in a certain location, or the reasons for drought, working with growing things, the weather, and the land has been a traditional activity for the shaman. They would also communicate with nature to find plants to heal illnesses. Many South American shamans were responsible for discovering the healing properties of certain plants, which later formed the basis of specific medicines we use in the western health system today.
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In most cultures, even today, a particular shaman will be especially gifted in working in one shamanic activity or another. For instance, a shaman may be more drawn to doing soul retrieval, extraction, de-possession, working with death and dying, or working with the land. Some will specialize in one particular activity; some will be gifted in several areas.
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Effectiveness of Shamans
The effectiveness of a shaman is generally measured by the results he or she is able to achieve. The actual techniques and methods of the shaman are so unique that there is no way to standardize practices or make a comparison. However, a shaman's effectiveness is directly related to his or her relationship to the spirits, and the strength of his or her connection to the spirit world. Unless the shaman is able to call power animals and spiritual aid to help them, they will not be effective. Indeed, that individual could not be called a shaman.
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The teaching of detachment, and letting go of one’s ego is a central lesson for the shaman. If an individual cannot let go of pride and self interest, he or she could not be considered a good healer. Also, such an individual may not be able to enlist the spiritual aid necessary for effective healing. If someone cannot evoke compassion from the spirits, but instead offends with his or her pride, no assistance will be given to that person for the healing work.
Most of the techniques of a shaman are particular to a specific individual or culture. This includes the techniques that modern shamans use today in modern cultures. Whether a rattle or a drum is used is not considered an essential difference in terms of effectiveness. The shaman must do whatever he or she finds most effective to call forth the energy for healing. Whatever the shaman does to shift his consciousness, must only achieve the results of shifting consciousness. The trappings of what the shaman does is comparable to how a star athlete prepares for a game, whether they do calisthenics to prepare, or simply rub their lucky sock, these preparations are just the trappings around the work itself. Once again, it is the results that measure the level of skill.
Shamanic Tools
There can be a wide variety of tools and techniques used by shamans, although certain tools/techniques appear more frequently than others. Percussion instruments such as drums or rattles, plants, water, stones, fires, and singing often accompany shamanic work. What specifically is used will vary with the shaman who must achieve the shift of consciousness, receive information being communicated, and be able to direct the healing by whatever means are most effective for him or her. The same applies to whether the shaman uses hawk medicine or bear medicine. Although all of these things may change the texture or feel of the shamanic work, one is not better than another.
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There are certain techniques or skills that are considered essentially different in shamanic work. Shapeshifting, merging, journeying, and seeing are some of the skills a shaman may or may not possess, as well as the ability to work over a long distance.