I said yes but didn't. I remembered on the plane back.
C 2023 Christine Trzyna
Tenderness.
In a harsh world. Is this a rare quality? Are you tender? When or how are you tender? Is someone tender with you? How does it feel?
2018-2023 Christine Trzyna
All Rights Reserved including Internet and International Rights
OK to use this post in not for profit situations. Please credit me. Send me love. It's karma.
Who says I don't know what's happening in music, just because I choose so many oldies for this blog?
Here is my confession. Recently I was gifted a Blue Tooth Speaker. It is small and hooked up to a Chromebook, a couple years old, which seemed to be loosing volume all the time. I'm sure I'm not going deaf, however, at first - for about six weeks - I was condemned to using ear phones. The films I chose to watch on the small screen were sometimes difficult to hear, even with the volume up high. So this Blue Tooth Speaker - an inexpensive Made-in-China brand too - has made all the difference. The tone is warm and tending towards bass while the sound out of the Chromebook is of a higher pitch. Kind of like vinyl records - for all the snaps, crackles, and pops due to use - the sound which was and is WARM. The sound out of CD's is COLD and the sound out of the Chromebook is also COLD. The Blue Tooth Speaker sound feels relaxing upon my ears. Interestingly, the Chromebook registers the volume as mid-range or less as well when it is louder than the 'in-book' settings. Someone told me that as time goes on the sound out of electronics somehow diminishes. Don't know how well this has just been stated but it's here also in case you think you're going deaf.
So, with the new YouTube logarithms - a controversial change - YouTube is throwing up new suggested videos. It's also prompting me to turn history on. I've never had it turned on and won't. The Chromebook (Google) itself is already keeping track and needs clearing.
Are the suggestions much different? I can't tell, but I don't think so. The problem is the horrible interruptive commercials, and if you're looking at music from the 1950's or 1960's and sometimes the 1970's YouTube will assume that you're interested in pharmaceuticals and miracle cures, that you're ill or diseased. In particular DEAFNESS cures even bring up ALZHEIMERS. Disgusting...
So, many of us love songs that never made it onto Billboard's top 100. Also sales of records OVER TIME can still result in Gold or Platinum records. ....
This morning I got the news that the Billboard #1 hit is from a man named OLIVER ANTHONY, who lives on a small landholding in Virginia with his dogs, has never recorded a record or album, has no agent or people promoting him, no recording contracts, and is basically a SELF MADE MAN IN MUSIC. So I hurried to hear the song that got to number one based on the hits to his YouTube station. Here it is...
DNA... the understanding that we all have a biological code. That code identifies us as belonging to a family, bred by parents, grandparents, all our ancestors as well as to ethnicities and r,aces. As author Graham Hancock attempts to understand and explain the nature of consciousness, and therefore the nature of hallucinogenic effects on consciousness, he takes us from the Upper Paleolithic to the Space Age. As we read further into his book Visionary, the author asks us why we humans must connect to and depict supernatural (not worldly) beings. It seems that rock art from many thousands of years ago proves that some humans were involved in making art, depictions of real or extraordinary experiences.
Our DNA code can be uncoded, and now we know what indicators there are when it comes to our eye color, and what diseases we may inherit. But is there some reason to think that DNA also determines our psychic ability?
Does a small percentage of humanity have more sensitivity, intelligence, and intuitive ability?
DMT is not just a substance made from a couple plants that were discovered to create hallucinogens thousands of years ago, perhaps as humans tried various concoctions, but exists all over the world in many plants. It's also in animals and it is naturally in us, in our blood! It is when the amount of DMT is raised that humans begin to have visions - and sensations - that are supernatural. One study in which the participants were given injections and remained in hospital beds, the reportage was the same as that of UFO abductees.
Lourdes (the miracle location in France) and the Virgin Mary as a "little lady."
Bernadette going into trance in the Pyrenees where there was a belief in fairies.
How did DNA come to be in the first place? (Junk DNA is not junk at all!)
Bacteria spread around the universe? Miracle? But if we are talking about coding, language, then what about books? What about Moses or the Prophet Mohommed and the books they were given, such as the Ten Commandments or a perfect Koran? Or Joseph Smith and the Book of Mormon? So many Shamanic Vestiges in the stories that are central to world religions and the depictions and experiences of saints...
A saint performs a healing or has visions... Sebastian, Ursula, Joan of Arc.
Fatima - Ezekial - Lourdes
The Hindu's Soma; just one mushroom candidate fits the description.
As we begin to see Hancock's thesis being braided together, we wonder as he did, what came first? Spiritual ideas or the experience of hallucinogens?
***
This book, which includes Graham Hancock's personal experiences with hallucinogens, is one I will not forget as I continue to give time, as time allows, into my personal inquiry into spirituality that comes with being human. I wonder if years ago when I thought to do a paper on rock art and hallucinogens as my term paper for an anthropology class (which I abandoned as too broad for the assignment time and length) I would have, in my research, ever found any books or graduate student papers that got close to Hancock's thesis.
I also now question what I did find, focusing on the initiation into adulthood rites of Tongva boys versus girls. The girls were supposed to lie on a a structure woven of branches over a pit where tobacco was being burned to be "smoked." They were to show no sign of irritation, to lay still. Perhaps a strong native tobacco plant was given to them instead of the Datura mixture given to the boys, who were said to enter and stay in a special hut dedicated for that purpose. Perhaps the girls were not just proving their womanhood by not being bothered by being smoked, perhaps they were not able to move or disinclined to because they were also having a hallucinogenic experience. Perhaps this was an ingestion through smoke, rather than what appears to be a ritual of making clean or new or renewed. There would have been far more smoke than is used to clear or clean using a simple wand of dry sage.
I also ask myself how the hallucinogenic experience and creativity tie together, for it is true that a number of musicians and artists have remarked that LSD or mushrooms or some other hallucinogen did effect them that way.
If you are a creative, are you using and exercising and expanding your vision naturally without any help from substances?
C 2023 Christine Trzyna
I've rarely been the person who thinks of toe nails and fingernails as jewelry. I've rarely been the person who had the time to do my nails. Or the money to spend. My hands are large and used. So are my feet. I walk extensively. There are better things to be doing than nails.
For a few weeks in high school I tried to grow my fingernails long and polished them up with that traditional pink frosty polish that was allowable on teens by their mothers who also approved pink frosty lipstick. Too much make-up and you'd look like a whore, is what the mothers thought, so there was monitoring of daughters and just how much Maybelline. My pink frosty long nails were tied into being given a real ring - not a class ring or a football ring - from my boyfriend. He told me my nails looked nice. He once took my right hand in his just to look at them. I soon enough gave it up. Polish didn't dry quickly then and it didn't last more than a few days. To me keeping one's nails polished was like proving you were dull enough to sit around, maybe watching TV, while the polish dried. I hated the waiting and always managed to get a dent or smudge. Did all my classmates who had long nails polished have maids hovering? I had to wash dishes and cashier.
And those of us who were artists had paint all over.
Feet jammed in closed toed shoes most of the year, it didn't occur to me to also paint my toe nails because who would see them? Today I think how strange it is to have done only your fingers or only your toes, as if these body parts are so separate and distanced from each other that they have nothing in common and are not part of the same body.
So years went by and then, circa 1998 if I recall, I saw a polish I loved. It was a sheer pastel, holding iridescence of many colors like the inside of a abalone, as if it were from nature, and it cost a dollar. I started doing my short fingernails with it. I also loved that it dried fast and, if I had no time to keep it up, so light that it faded rather than needing to be removed. That was good because even when women in rock and roll and certain actresses were doing magazine covers looking like they hadn't had time to dye their roots or remove chipped polish, I hated their unkempt look that suggested that most of the time they were too drunk or high to let an on-set pro make-up artist or an exclusive salon repair the damage.
A flash back to high school though. In a wood shop class there was one student who had taken to painted his fingernails black with real paint, tempera maybe, that had no shine, and he liked to wave his hands around with it. No doubt his dad feared he was a 'sissy' because we later heard that the man had actually staged a stag party for him and some of our male classmates in which they watched hard core hetero porn. No doubt this was the sort of father who advised 'man-ing up." How truly terrible. Do I think maybe this student was 'really gay?" I do.
I did try, one time, black polish with sheen. An older friend said "Really, Christine, You? Black?"
Well, it felt subversive for five minutes.
Then, several years ago, because I wear sandals so much, I became dedicated to keeping my feet nice, and applying polish to my toenails. The newly invented polish that dried quickly and that stayed unchipped for longer was a large part of my willingness to do it. Still, on my fingernails the same polish was good for maybe three days. I resented the time that it took to focus on upkeep. On my busy days it was one more thing to do.
Earlier this year I was out shopping and I wanted only one color polish, the right shade of plain almost skin-matchy-orangey pink, which would not look like a fashion statement. I found it in a six pack at Ross Dress For Less. I'd been out somewhere when I heard a group of men talking, and one of them said, "Christine has the best feet. If a woman takes good care of her feet, you know she's taking good care of the rest of herself." These men apparently, unknown to us women, were watching feet.
Wow!
Believe me I do not have the best feet. I have medieval feet, like on a statue made hundreds of years ago. I blame the intermarriage of petty nobility, when asked.
But then, around 2000, I had been falsely accused of wearing simple navy blue flat sandals "on purpose" by one of the regulars at an independent coffee house in the Valley. All I cared about was being cool on a hot day. Seeking an explanation for such a comment via one of his friends, a man who carried around a rubber shoulder sack, I was told, "You have good toe cleavage."
Toe cleavage? Ah.... So this was a foot fetish? Or was it?
Which brings us to 2023, August, a time when, according to astrologer, the Lions Gate is open.
I re-met a man I used to see around. I was crossing the street and he had pulled over outside the store after waving and calling my name, so I went over and talked with him. He asked me to come over and have dinner with him. We had some catching up to do, sort-of, as I had not been around for at least eight months and he said he had wondered if he would ever see me again. He made us a good dinner and we talked about this and that - the fate of the independent coffee house where we had seen each other around - not the one in the Valley from years before - certain personalities there. I can't remember how the conversation flowed but around one bend we got onto the trendy topic of transgender-ism, and that a Gay Pride Parade was coming up, and he said "I can only wave the flag for foot fetishism."
Oh, that's why the last time I saw him he had made the comment that the shoes I was wearing, which were simple, black, quasi sneakers, fairly unisex I admit. "Those look like men's shoes, " he said. "What size are they?" When he did, I curled my toes in them. It had taken me a dozen try-ons to find a simple, black, quasi sneaker, fairly unisex, that fit.
He also said that he had never seen me so relaxed or wearing a dress - so feminine. It was true. I rarely wear a dress or skirt if it isn't summer. Whenever he saw me around I was almost always there with things I was working on and wearing my usual pants, top, sweater or hoodie, bundled up. But that day I had been at the pool and was wearing a dress-cover up. He wondered if I dressed as I did so that none of the men at the coffee house would hit on me. Well, actually, some had, in their way, but I dressed (and dress) as I do for warmth and comfort.
Now that he was out of the foot fetish closet, I went on-line to learn more about it. The first time I had bothered. What I read on various websites had various effects on me, from a certain sense of humor, perhaps delight, to troubling and sickening. See, I see feet as part of the body, not necessarily weird or in need of worship, and I would rather spend money on a foot massage than on a pedicure, but I very rarely have. To me a foot massage is akin to acupressure, holistic health, but it's not erotic. Giving one or getting one has nothing to do with dominance or subservience.
Eventually, the man I see around who I had dinner with, asked me if I ever wore high strappy sandals, toe-exposing ones, toe nails polished red. I said no and he said that he would buy me them. I said "No, don't buy me anything." He said, "You won't have to do anything, just stand there." The thought that I would ever just stand there in improbable pumps, totally out of character for me, was ridiculous and hilarious. I can't imagine ever wearing red nail polish, even though it's a classic polish, and, I read, a favorite of men because it reminds them of their mothers! So I asked him when had this started and he said he thought it was with his mother, baths with his mother...
Those pro-fetish web sites that I found, many of them from a not-hetero perspective, advised people that if their "lover" would not go with their fetish then they were selfish lovers, because they were not willing to do whatever turned the other person on. My thoughts and feelings about this are diametrically opposed. I don't think anyone should do anything that they are uncomfortable with and it's selfish of someone who is kinky to expect others to give in to their kink. There is also a slippery slope - a no end to the things that a person might ask, and I imagined that if I had given in to this man's request, he would have enjoyed breaking down one of my boundaries - or barriers - and than there would be something else.
I also felt sorry for him because I think fetishists are people who are objectifying body parts or objects (i.e. shoes, socks, stockings) and I truly wonder if they can be with the real person, plain and naked. I feel sorry for him to be obsessed with feet and shoes and toe polish and to approach women from the feet up rather than the head down.
At the same time I also thought about the advice mostly women get about how it is our responsibility - especially once in a committed relationship - to satisfy someone else - for the rest of our lives. Even when the so-called partner is doing little to nothing of the usual to satisfy us. It's a good reason to be independent and not have a man in your life.
But, this is a Talking to Stranger's post. So here goes.
Soon after the Gay Pride Parade, which I did not attend... I was walking along one morning, humming as I do, in a good mood, when suddenly a young, maybe 18ish, man, beautiful and with flowing hair, skateboarded over to me.
"Mam, " he said, I noticed your nail polish. That pink chrome - is it chrome? It goes perfectly with that top you're wearing!" I was wearing a rather flamboyant summer top with hints of charcoal and pink, grey and flashes of neon yellow.
I stopped.
"Where did you get that polish?"
I said, "Oh it was in an inexpensive six pack that I bought at Ross Dress For Less," but I don't think much of the brand. I guess it's sort of chrome but there was one surprise in the six pack. There was what looked like a garish gold flecked polish that I never thought I would wear. But I tried it and it was mostly clear with just sparks of gold that caught the sunlight. It's the perfect polish for the beach or pool."
He smiled. "I never thought about buying polish at Ross..." He looked dreamy. "Where did you get your mani-pedi?"
"I did it myself. Why? Are you going to school to be a manicurist?"
"No, I work at a hotel." He indicated not far away.
"Well, maybe you could..."
He pulled out his cell phone. On it he showed me that he had photographed dozens of women's feet with different colors of nail polish. He didn't have to ask.
"I don't want you taking pictures of my feet."
He did not and we parted."
I thought, Jesus, it must be the Lion's Gate.
Later I thought that if he continued to be hyper interested in feet, he might do himself in, refusing to see the whole person, the variants of beauty, and reject perfectly wonderful persons romantically and sexually because to comply for them would be unnatural.
And there is this. Feminists don't want to be entirely sex objects or objects at all. Not even one part of us.
I can't find my nail polish remover.
C 2023 Christine Trzyna
Note: For the record I've known gay men who hated the whole exhibitionist outrageous aspect of Gay Pride Parades which they feel miscast all gay people as undignified buffoons who ought not be taken seriously as professionals. However, perhaps there is something to be said about playing with stereotypes and having a good sense of humor about oneself. I did attend one Gay Pride parade in West Hollywood years ago and laughed out loud at the Dykes on Bikes with Spikes.
Note: This is not an advert for Maybelline or Ross Dress For Less.
BEINGS
ARE THERE BEINGS THAT ACTUALLY CARE ABOUT US in the hallucinogenic experience? Or are at least sentient if yet invisible to us in ordinary perception, who are AWARE we exist? In a 2001 science experiment what was reported by subjects given the same essential chemical in Ayahuasca, a new idea was brought forth. What if what was happening was that the chemical was sort of rewiring the brain so that we could see what really exists rather than interpreting and making it all up?
I'll tell you right now, regarding the experiences reported by Amazonian natives who use a snuff with DMT, the reportage gets close to what some UFO abductees report. Such as the implantation of crystals (or what is perceived to be a crystal) but can also be quite violent such as experiencing being beheaded. (And this is why you should never ever take such a substance without supervision by a shaman or elder, or someone who remains in this world while you go off somewhere, and can watch you and prevent you from hurting yourself.)
WHAT IS REALLY GOING ON WITH OUR BODIES AND MINDS?
Reported is that one human in eight reports at least an hour in which they did not know where they were or what they did. (i.e. missing time. My long ago friendly associate Arthur Kane told me that he and his wife experienced this).
One in five woke up paralyzed at least once. (This has happened to me.)
One in twelve saw unusual lights or orbs in a room.
(A couple years ago I was shown a film, taken by a security camera, that was the most convincing orb film I have ever seen. It's held privately and is not on the internet. Security alarms had gone off at that location two nights in a row and the filming was by the installed camera, no humans around. Multiple orbs were moving as if dancing back and forth - like in a square dance if you can imagine that - while one went up and back to the camera eye itself. There is outside lighting at the location, but the place is locked up, up from car-level in front, and fenced in, so the concern there was a break in or perhaps a raccoon or other wildlife inside. None was spotted. There was no sign of damage or creatures. These orbs could not have been made by, say, headlights or flashlights.)
Author Graham Hancock states that he did not believe in nuts and bolts spaceships or aliens with physical bodies going into this aspect of visionary experience, research, or reportage. He states that having completed his investigation he still does not believe in nuts and bolts spaceships or aliens with physical bodies, calling his beliefs hardened.
I have not and do not consider myself to be a UFO abductee. However, I do know that people who experience sleep paralysis do sometimes believe this experience is that aliens have sort of stunned them and is the beginning of an abduction. Science suggests that the mind has woken before the body and it only seems like its been a while since one could move.)
Hancock brings up the reportage of John E. Mack, who was almost kicked out of academia when he decided to work with UFO abductee's. (He was a professor at Harvard, and a psychiatrist, and had a good lawyer work for him when he was threatened with loosing his position at that college.)
IS THE UFO ABDUCTEE EXPERIENCE also a CULTURAL INTERPRETATION?
Why, for instance, does a shaman experience beings counting his bones, with one extra rib being the qualification of being a shaman? (Why are shamans with six fingers depicted in ancient Magyar images of shamans? We know that extra fingers or toes happen in humans and is considered a genetic mutation, as are extra teeth.)
John Mack's work with the UFO ABDUCTEE's showed that they were not "crazy" or lunatic fringe people.
BEING FLOATED OUT OF THE WORLD...
The question I have here is... is it lucid dreaming? Is it astral travel? WHY would HUMANS who ARE NOT using a hallucinogenic substance, have an experience that they remember well after waking up or returning to their bodies that is also reported by shamans?
Australian aborigines climbing a rope into the sky where they can talk to the star people. Beams of light that pull humans to UFO's?
(This is why finding a crashed UFO or shooting one down out of the sky becomes important, because a vision does not prove the physical existence)
Hancock himself having had the experience of what might be called a Grey while under the influence of Ayahuasca... Finding rock art that depicts what might be considered to be aliens or ancient astronauts... Abductees saying that their first visions of the aliens were animals... (I recall Whitley Strieber, perhaps the most famous UFO abductee, stating that owls were the "screen image" the aliens were using and he experienced a fear upon seeing owl images.)
SPIRIT HELPERS or familiars?
Stories of shamans being raised to be shamans before birth. Stories of origins in the stars. Celestial wives. Having many children by extra-terrestrials? Or humans pulling spirits down from the sky to remain here...
Insect People.
Houses of smoke?
What we used to call incubi and succubi...
Fairy...
Changelings.... switched with human babies... UFO abductee mothers being shown babies and told to nurse.
Corrigans
Crop circles as fairy rings?
Hollow hills. Indian mounds?
PORTHOLES.... springs, wells, caves...
It's been years since I encountered a book like this one and it contained far more entwined subjects than I could have imagined as I read it on Hoopla. It was one of those I could not put down, or in this case, stop hitting the forward button on.
More coming...
C 2023 Christine Trzyna
Back in pre-college and college days, anthropology of religion was of great interest to me. I studied belief systems, seeking commonality among religions at first, and was fascinated with what might be considered pagan or primitive. The Greeks, The Romans, the Egyptians... Native Americans... Among the many books I encountered, sought, and read that had to do with what and why people believe(d) as they do, I read around the subject of rock art. Rock Art, as well as the hallucinations and visions that our ancestors had thousands of years ago, is the subject of the book VIsionary, by Graham Hancock.
I learned through reading and in anthropology classes that rock art was generally thought to be the work of shamans or the work of hunters who, perhaps, imagined the success of the hunt before they went out to kill, as a kind of psychological pre-hunt ritual, perhaps the essence of positive thinking. If they were hunting cattle, then they might create images of the cattle or men with the heads of cattle (pre-cattle aurochs). Bison. Horses.
Another notion that's promoted is that the underlying theme of cave drawings is abundance and fertility. Rather than the hunt, this might be about the wish for animals who are being domesticated to be fruitful and multiply.
Some rock art is elegant and sophisticated. We often think that our ancient ancestors were too stuck in survival mode to have the time to create art or become sensitive artists. (Rather I think most of their art did not survive weather and time and a cave is a sheltered environment that better preserved the art.) Some rock art is rudimentary. Thanks to carbon 14 dating, an idea of when humans created this art, which often features half animal humans, has evolved and been accepted by academic science.
While my study of rock art did brush up with the use of hallucinogens by people who did not keep written records or print books but remembered their origin stories and spiritual beliefs through story telling and being taught by previous generations, I myself never sought the experience. Friends from long ago did try LSD, reporting in some frightening experiences, such as visions that their house was on fire.
I learned that there were also symbols such as spirals, ladders, star-like motifs, and so on that were found on rocks in various places around the world which seemed to show a possibly universal rather than culturally-bound experiences. These motifs coexist with images of the half-animal humans in some places.
What you see under the influence - what they saw - was supposed to be cultural or rooted in a conscious belief system. Thus, if a particular animal was local and hunted, supplying necessary protein in a diet, and thus a desired animal that one might also be grateful to, it would feature in the rock art. Thus a Christian who ventures to the spirit world is expected to see Jesus or angels, while a Hindu might meet with Krishna or Vishnu... that's the general idea. (NDE's - Near Death Experiences seem to play out the religious-cultural expectations of encounter.)
But what about all those images of lion-like creatures where lions did not exist? Were those animals that once lived in that part of the world but are extinct?
If the substance is Datura, which grows wild in Southern California, will that result in the vision of a different animal or half animal - half human than if a person is under the influence of Ayahuasca, a brew from plants the Brazilian rain forest? (With Ayahuasa Tourism being what it is, I wonder if these plants will become crops in California.) Why would an animal that is not native to Europe, such as a lion or big cat, or a stag deer, have become such an Icon in Europe, I ask, as it appears in the family crests and armory of many families from medieval times.)
In Visionary by Graham Hancock, an "out of the box" thinker and earnest non-academic researcher, who has been pilloried by them, we learn that the use of hallucinogens inspired the rock art of half-human animals. It turns out that these half -human animals, supposed to be cultural, may just be what shamans and other users of hallucinogens see while under the influence of a brew and that the hallucinogenic experience is universal.
Hancock, who has used Ayahuasca in supervised situations many times, and says snake images are universal with it, says yes, it is the substance that moves a user towards a certain repertoire of visions. (This is the latest, trendy hallucinogen and is being tried by Westerners far from the Amazon where it originates.)
Noteworthy: In some rock art settings the imagine of hand appears, which is thought to be like the signature of the artist. These hands are either painted on, or the person put their hand on the wall and dabbed around them or even spit paint. In some rock art the natural forms of the stone are integrated into the art as if the rock form suggested the image. Rock art sometimes suggests that the artist is imagining the animal or chimera of coming out of the rock or going in and out of the rock itself.
The book is plentiful with images of rock art at various locations including Europe - France and Spain - and South Africa.
Hancock goes on to detail how it was that academics fought for professional prominence and their theories starting in the late 1800's (that era that was the beginning of anthropology, starting with the gentleman world travelers) and the "Frightening Power of Preconceived Ideas." While it can be understood, by me, that so many were inventing anthropology and it's sister that goes hand in hand, archeaology, just like psychology, that there has been trial and error as well as tremendous mistakes, the question is if today's professionals in those fields are willing to go past what might be called the canon.
ART FOR ART's SAKE or HUNTING MAGIC?
MUSHROOMS, WATER LILLY, MORNING GLORY SEEDS, PEYOTE CACTUS, FUNGUS ERGOT...
Why, I ask, is there a human need to have out of this world experiences? Is it because we wish to be reminded of the world we left before we came here? Or are we just bored with life as it is? Imagination and creativity is what's needed to progress or to deal with or extinguish the problems of life caused by change. Do we imagine creatures that do not exist on earth while under the influence or did these creatures once exist, perhaps created through some superior intelligence mixing the DNA? While on Ayahuasca, Hancock saw a butterfly turn into a serpent, a serpent turn into a jaguar, and a huge insect with human features.
TRANCE: SLEEP DISTURBANCES and DEFICIT, DEHYDRATION... DRUMMING (I think also mantra, and rocking the body while chanting or praying), certain music, bells... forms of dance..)
ARE THESE IMAGES HARDWIRED INTO OUR BRAINS or NERVOUS SYSTEMS?
The neuropsychologists call these entopic phenomena, phosphenes, or form constants.
WHAT ARE OR WERE THE POWERS OF A SHAMAN that are considered super-natural? Controlling the weather, in particular making it rain, so that the crops will prosper and animals and humans will be able to eat. Ability to locate animals to hunt. Being able to also check on family and friends - to understand their whereabouts, if they are alive, and if they are OK, understanding plants in particular knowing how to make healing botonicals, to control and alter consciousness.
FIRST with HALLUCINOGEN VISION are the motifs, the geometric shapes. grids, zig zags, dots, eye-shapes, which seem to show up in ancient rock art all over the world.
NEXT are the animals and people, larger shapes... Snakes, jaguars, as well as monsters. At this point the user is moving into what is perceived as the spirit world.
FINALLY the icons, such as human-type spirits. Ancestors. Reports of communications with the recent ancestors, such as parents and grandparents.
In some cases, AFTER-IMAGES, which we commonly call flash-backs, as if projected on a wall or ceiling.
and MEMORIES of the experience.
PREHISTORIC HUMANS were wired just like us and we, them.
........
Datura also called Jimsonweed or Loco Weed was used throughout the region it grew which includes most of present day California. While under the influence, the shamans saw helpers they called mountain dwarfs, water babies, and rock babies...
VISION QUESTING... In my post about Taisha Abelar, I mentioned that her book was suggested and loaned to me by a young friend, CB. CB, in attempting to determine what she wished to do career-wise, went on a vision quest. I'm not sure if she was part Native American, if someone who was or is Native American set this experience up for her, or where it was done as at the time some Westerners, without fear of accusations of cultural theft, were interested in various tribal beliefs and such opportunities existed without either. She reported, if I recall, that about three days into it, just when she was thinking of becoming a midwife, she saw a shooting star.
***
Hancock suggests that AFTER a visionary experience, the art's painted or carved memories of that vision on the rocks.
***
Bodily Sensations : Prickling. "Hairs" extending out. Less or more fingers and toes.
Prickling of body all over or a particular area of the body. Insects gnawing or crawling under the skin - as how the human perceives a bodily hallucination.
More coming up...
C 2023 Christine Trzyna