Have you ever wondered how to learn from native peoples?
How to access opportunities to study ancient healing methods, secrets
about life and spiritual growth? Indigenous people hold wisdom that has
been passed down for thousands of years. This wisdom has been largely
forgotten in Western culture, and includes how to use the body’s own
being and energy to become whole, healthy and spiritually aware. Those secrets are still out there, ready to be learned by those who are sincere and make the effort. Having backpacked into remote areas to learn such knowledge, John shares 10 tips for how to access that learning yourself.
1. Put down the book.
Indigenous
peoples, in many cases, transmit their wisdom from generation to
generation in the form of oral tradition. Even when knowledge is written
down, oral tradition contextualizes what is written. If you want to
know what they know, you’re going to have to travel to the source and
learn in person.
2. Be sincere.
Native
peoples can sniff out when Westerners visit them as tourists, as
scientists, as ‘drive-by’ spiritual seekers, as journalists, etc. If
you’re wanting to learn their tradition in any true sense, you must be
sincere and have the right intention to use the knowledge the way it was
intended. The sincerity of your heart will open doors to real
teachings, since in many cultures, knowledge is not given to those who
are not personally prepared to be proper stewards of it.
3. Do research.
Although
native traditions have elements in common, they also vary significantly
from one another. Before considering who you might study with, identify
traditions you can easily relate to. For example, don’t visit
high-altitude tribes if you don’t function well at high altitude. Don’t
visit groups who use psychoactive plants as a main ritual if that’s not
your thing. Some groups engage in ascetic, physically-demanding and
sometimes scary exercises. Some have a gentler approach.
4. Respect your elders.
In
this case, it means anyone whose knowledge you are seeking. Many
indigenous societies prize wisdom, and hold their teachers in great
esteem. Teachers themselves often use politeness as a gauge of your
readiness and sincerity. Do not be too forward. Show patience and
restraint. Bring a gift. Defer to whomever the local teachers are in the
way you speak and carry yourself. Know that direct eye contact with
elders, in some cultures, is a sign of disrespect.
5. Merge with them.
In
some places where I studied, I was given information that was not in
any textbooks or anthropological articles on the tribe. You can learn a
great deal from joining a village for a while and studying as one of
them. Real oral traditions may be shared only with those who respect the
tribe’s ways by living as they do, and not necessarily with those who
are there to only study as an outside observer. You may need to learn
their language and culture. And in some cases, you must be prepared to
dedicate significant time among the tribe, as some top shamans do not
accept students for less than a comprehensive training program that can
take years.
6. Identify the real shamans.
In
some areas that have already received interest from the outside, there
may be many claiming or pretending to be the village’s healers or
teachers. They may try to intercept you as you inquire about medicine
men and women in the area. Beware, as these practitioners may not be
skilled or worse. Use the sincerity of your heart, and keep asking
locals to guide you to the people who are at the top of the food chain
as teachers/healers for the community.
7. Find local resources.
Studying
indigenous wisdom begins in your local area or home country. Seek out
professors, shamans, authors or non-profits who have worked with native
people and are already familiar with certain areas. They can often point
you in the right direction, and may have contacts you can draw on. Keep
in mind, these resources may only get you in the door. From there
you’ll have to seek out real teachers on your own.
8. Understand what you offer.
Those
of us who are more a part of modernized society are often viewed as
important and valuable members of the planetary community by native
people. Although they may possess wisdom we have lost and forgotten, and
we may need them to re-teach it to us, they need us as well. We offer a
bridge to the current state of the world. Realize the value you bring
by being willing to learn their tradition, as it gives them an ally
within modernized society that, from their perspective, needs healing
and change to live in harmony with all things.
9. Consciousness is common ground.
If
you are intrigued by the idea of learning native traditions at the
source, but worry you may not have much in common with native people,
remember human consciousness is much the same across cultures. Our minds
share similar qualities irrespective of language and custom. In fact,
you may find the shaman experiences more in common with you than with
many people within his/her own tribe.
10. Be careful.
Keep
in mind traveling in remote areas is dangerous. There is not the same
level of communication to the outside world you may have come to expect.
You may be traveling in areas with bad characters and in cultures who
view you as an unprotected person in terms of the structure of their
society. Affiliate yourself with a respected healer quickly, and keep
your eyes out. Black magic is common in many areas where positive
healing and spiritual arts are practiced.
Indigenous
people have so much to offer those of us who have grown up in
modernized society in terms of what it means to be a human being, the
nature of life, and how to heal and develop our minds through natural
methods. We should take care to learn ancient
traditions and be respectful stewards of them in order to ensure such
knowledge continues to be passed down. By learning native
traditions from the source, person to person, we can help ourselves,
others, and the planet heal by promoting unity and harmony between all
of creation.
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