Ayahuasca is not for everyone. Sometimes the experiences can be
frightening and extremely challenging. If you are the type of person
who likes to keep your boundaries fixed and to stay within the status
quo, then it’s not for you. However, if you are open to dissolving your
personal boundaries to explore more of who and what you are, then an
ayahuasca journey can provide a direct and powerful means to that end.
By
Chris Walton
From the book: ”Incredible You -
Unleashing the Power of Your Beliefs and Intentions to Achieve an
Extraordinary Life” By Chris Walton (From Appendix A:
Discovering How Big You Want To Be.)
Every culture in human history has used some kind of natural
consciousness-altering substance. Th
ey have used them to cement social
relationships, divine the future, call for rain, find animals in the
hunt, and expand vision to access the spiritual realms.
However, the most common use is for healing. By altering consciousness,
shamans claim to travel the inter-dimensional realms to detect what is
wrong with a patient and to find a cure or a helpful remedy. These
consciousness-altering plant ceremonies are still undertaken today in
many parts of the world. In our culture, which shuns the use of
consciousness-altering substances, natural or not, psychedelics are
still used by the ‘underground’. People from all walks of life and for
a host of reasons find it useful to expand their consciousness using
plant-derived natural psychedelics.
In
parts of South America, the most common and powerful
consciousness-expanding plant ‘medicine’ is ayahuasca, a large woody
vine whose scientific name is Banisteriopsi-scaapi. It is made into a
tea with another plant, often Chacruna. The two plants have to be
boiled together to make the resulting ‘tea’, capable of inducing
altered states of consciousness. Over the years the use of ayahuasca
has spread into the western world, and many travelers and seekers have
ventured into the Amazon to participate in ayahuasca ceremonies.
Ayahuasca has also been the subject of many scientific studies, with
clear evidence showing that it increases brain cell growth
(neuro-genesis) and improves serotonin uptake, helping to relieve
depression. It is safe to use, but is not a pleasant experience, as the
ayahuasca tea is bitter and generally tastes disagreeable. However, its
effects can be spectacular.
Most people report extremely heightened states of consciousness, access
to ‘spiritual’ realms and a connection to the deepest aspects of nature
that are not possible in normal waking states of consciousness. In
2006, I went to Brazil to participate in a 17-day ayahuasca retreat,
during which I would take part in six ayahuasca ceremonies.
The setting was on the beautiful Bahia coast. We were a merry band of
about 30 people from all walks of life and from all over the world. As
I got to know these fellow adventurers, I learned that they shared a
common motivation for attending the retreat, which was to heal
themselves on all levels so that they could be happier, more peaceful
and have a deeper understanding of who they really were.
After relaxing for the first day, we participated in the first ceremony
on the second night. We gathered around and watched the shaman bless
the
ayahuasca—which shamans consider to be a plant
spirit with a being-ness all its own—and chant and commune with it in
his own language. One at a time, we went up to the shaman to receive a
cup of the ayahuasca brew. As we drank it, each of us thought of a
specific intention for our inner journey. After we had all ingested the
brew, we reclined under the palm trees, near a central fire pit.
The shaman then began singing special songs called Icaros, which are
sacred songs that guide the participants’ energy, visions and healing
during the ceremony. I had mixed feelings as I began this journey,
feeling both relaxed and excited—and just a little bit nervous. I
focused on the stars I could see shining though the palm trees,
enjoying the warm night. Soon the fire, with its hypnotic flames, drew
my attention. As I relaxed more deeply, the Icaros seemed to be flowing
through every part of my body. I allowed them to work their magic, and
about an hour later, I began to feel huge waves of energy pulsating
through my body. I felt as if I were being bathed in a warm, nurturing
ocean. The waves seemed to be emanating from within me, but at the same
time from far outside of me. It was an indescribable feeling, one I had
never experienced before. A little while later, the energy waves became
stronger, growing ever more intense, until they were overpoweringly
strong.
Suddenly
I began vomiting and rolling around like I was a rag doll being tossed
around by a playful dog. (It is not uncommon to vomit while journeying
with ayahuasca, as it is a purgative.) I was defenseless against these
waves of energy. I felt as if every cell in my body was riding huge
wild rapids. My mind felt like I was on some giant roller-coaster, and
I didn’t know where the next turn or dip was going to be. My physical
boundaries were dissolving into these waves of energy; I was losing my
body and along with it any sense of who I was.
The next three hours were extremely challenging and cathartic, and are
nearly impossible to describe accurately in words. I began seeing an incredible
visual display of interconnectedness among all the trees and plants. Fibres of light radiated from them and everything else around me, so my
entire visual experience became one of a huge matrix of interconnected
spectrums of light. As I
looked at the trees I realized that at the deepest level there was no
separation between me and them. We were energetically connected by
light. I looked at the other participants and realized that at this
deepest level we were all integral parts of an interconnected,
intelligent consciousness.
My physical boundaries were no longer recognizable and my being
continued to expand, until I
merged into this vast matrix of energy, which was intertwined with a
matrix of energy from every being, animal and plant on earth. The
expansion continued further still, until I was part of a larger matrix
of all the planets, solar systems, galaxies and star systems in the
universe. And still it went on, beyond the known universe to regions
unknown. I sensed an infinite multidimensional intelligence behind it
all. There were systems within systems within systems, much like our
DNA within our cells, which are within our organs and tissues, which
are within our bodies, which are combined into societies, and those
into countries, and those into the world, and on and on.
This was the most astonishing experience of my life. I became aware
that consciousness is a field of infinite energy, information and
intelligence—and I, as
Chris
Walton, was a droplet of that consciousness having a physical
experience as Chris Walton, born into a material body on January 19,
1970. I understood that we all are consciousnesses born into physical
bodies with the ultimate goal of realizing our part in the whole and
awakening to the experience of our true self. And I was not only human.
I was the trees, insects, noises, wind, other people, songs, stars—my
consciousness was the consciousness of everything. I was aware that the
consciousness I access in day-to-day life is just a minuscule fraction
of what is available to me—and to each of us. I was bathed in a
supernatural ecstasy, in a state of cosmic unity of consciousness that
continued for hours.
Some time later—time was not important to me—my individual mind started
to reconstruct itself. I found myself trying to analyze my feelings and
experience, trying to make sense of it all. I wanted to put it all in
definable boxes and clear-cut categories. I witnessed my own process,
detached from myself: the mind of Chris was trying to reduce the
experience to separate parts so that his rational self could make sense
of things and say, ‘Ahh! This is what is happening, and it’s okay.’ My
mind was struggling to frame a picture, and to make that picture into
the ‘real reality’.
Yet almost as soon as this process started, I was blasted back out into
the infinite pool of pure interconnected and expanded cosmic
consciousness. This back-and-forth mind movement went on for hours: one
moment I was rationally trying to define and categorize and the next I
was in a state of pure cosmic unity. I finally came to see that I could
learn from this see-sawing of my consciousness. It was like a lesson
being taught me: we reduce the cosmic down to the mundane. That’s what
we do all of our lives, creating limitations through the conditioning
of our minds and losing the reality of how huge and interconnected we
really are with everyone and everything else in the cosmos.
After several more hours of this kind of roller-coaster experience, my
mind settled down and I relaxed into a state of ecstatic bliss. I lay
on the ground for hours, feeling this bliss and marveling at my new
understanding of what I am—and what we all truly are. We are without
any doubt beings who have for some reason decided to materialize on
planet Earth to become creators of our own destinies. We are here to
experience the physical, yet our goal is to awaken and realize that we
are far more than the physical. Every second of every day our beliefs,
thoughts and feelings determine what we are and how we view ourselves.
We have access to a state of being of pure loving awareness within an
unlimited matrix of possibilities, and to engage this infinite field is
our true destiny.
This single experience profoundly changed my life. From that moment on
I have felt a deeper connection to nature and look at people with ‘new
eyes’, knowing that at a core level of reality we are one. This was a
brief account of one of the six ayahuasca ceremonies I participated in.
They were all equally powerful,
deeply insightful and healing on all levels of my being. Yet I learned
that they were also larger than me. The shaman explained that in the
ceremonies three levels of healing traditionally take place: our own
personal healing, a collective group healing because we are all
connected and our individual healing and intentions affect everyone
else, and a global healing since we are all connected in the larger
universal mind.
Ayahuasca is not for everyone. Sometimes the experiences can be
frightening and extremely challenging. If you are the type of person
who likes to keep your boundaries fixed and to stay within the status
quo, then it’s not for you. However, if you are open to dissolving your
personal boundaries to explore more of who and what you are, then an
ayahuasca journey can provide a direct and powerful means to that end.
However, as the shamans say, you do not choose ayahuasca, it chooses
you. It is a plant spirit that must be treated with respect, and it is
best to wait until you ‘feel its call’ before exploring working with it.
No matter how you choose to expand your awareness, doing so can be a
satisfying and even a life-changing experience. A transformative
experience is, in the words of Dr Stanislav Grof, something that “comes
about when you are forced to reconcile your ordinary world view with
insights gained from extraordinary or non-ordinary experiences.”
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