Sedona area resident travels to Peru in search of psychotropic medicines
Never seen before footage and an
insight look into the enchanted
world of psychotropic ritual and
magic as performed by San Pedro
shamans Edward and Otorongo, in
Pisac, Peru, August 2-3, 2008.
by John David Balla
Pisaq. Peru, August 18 2008 -
Less known than its Amazonian
counterpart, Ayahuasca, San
Pedro (named after St. Peter,
who is said to hold the keys to
heaven) has been celebrated and
ritualized for its medicinal and
spiritual properties for over
3,000 years in the high Andes of
Peru and Ecuador.
(To participate in an
authentic San Pedro ceremony,
and for complete spiritual and
archeological tours of Peru, I
highly recommend
Luceros Tour.
They have extraordinary access
to Q'ero elders and can arrange
many "off the beaten path"
expeditions that few tourists,
and even locals, ever see)
Now, with the blessings of San
Pedro shamans Otorongo and
Edwardo, who performed the all
night ceremony, we show what a San Pedro
ceremony is, how it is
conducted, and investigate its
truths and myths.
As you will see in the film,
captions are used liberally to
not only explain the context of
what is happening, but to also
summarize the scientific
evidence, conventional myths, as
well as anecdotal findings and
claims about the psychotropic
cactus, yet leaves the viewers to
form their own conclusions, and
short of that, to gain a new
appreciation for compelling
spiritual practices that fall
outside conventional belief.
As an individual with a history
of alcoholism, at least as it is
understood in conventional and
clinical terms, I was curious to
see if "a cure," which the
plant's advocates claim, has any
merit. Bear in mind, however,
this was not the primary concern
I brought to the ceremony, for I
never considered my "handicap"
to define who I am. After all, I
am yet to meet a diabetic,
cancer survivor, heart attack
victim, amputee, epileptic,
arthritic, hemophiliac, or even
a poor golfer, to define
themselves by what makes
achieving success or well being
more difficult. Recall that
Michael Jordan was cut from his
high-school basketball team,
later to become the best
basketball player in history,
and Franklin Delano Roosevelt
became President of the United
States despite the extreme
stigma of polio.
In this context, we all have one
handicap or another, something
that doesn't preclude becoming
the person we want to be, only
making if more difficult. I
entered the ceremony in this
spirit, to discover the "nocebos"
(belief that I can't do this or
that because of getting a "raw
deal" from some omnipotent,
omniscient force), remove
victimizing underpinnings, and
enter a placebo conscious, one
based on intuitive truth, rather
than wishful thinking.
Rather than a promotion of San
Pedro per se, the film aspires
to be an attestation to the
placebo effect as put in the
context of this writing, and the
vital importance of building a
community of trust through
rituals designed to place no
room for judgement and other
divisions that promote "right
versus wrong" ego-consciousness,
culminating in the blossoming of
heart consciousness, which
indeed, holds the keys to our
own personal utopia, and
paradoxically obliterates the
very notion of self interest.
I for one, have never met a
paradox I didn't like, for it is
the divine's way of exposing the
heretofore mysteries of truth.
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