Awit 34: Pagpuri Dahil sa Kabutihan ng
Diyos
Katha ni David nang siya'y palayasin ni Abimelec matapos
magkunwang nasisiraan siya ng bait. What a
Shaman Sees in A Mental Hospital
The Shamanic View of
Mental Illness
1 Sa lahat ng pagkakataon si Yahweh ay aking pupurihin;
pagpupuri ko sa kanya'y hindi ko papatigilin.
2 Aking pupurihin kanyang mga gawa,
kayong naaapi, makinig, matuwa!
3 Ang kadakilaan niya ay ihayag,
at ang ngalan niya'y purihin ng lahat!
4 Ang aking dalangi'y dininig ng Diyos,
inalis niya sa akin ang lahat kong takot.
5 Nagalak ang aping umasa sa kanya,
pagkat di nabigo ang pag-asa nila.
6 Tumatawag sa Diyos ang walang pag-asa,
sila'y iniligtas sa hirap at dusa.
7 Anghel ang siyang bantay sa may takot sa Diyos,
sa mga panganib, sila'y kinukupkop.
8 Tingnan mo at lasapin ang kabutihan ni Yahweh;
mapalad ang mga taong nananalig sa kanya.
9 Matakot kay Yahweh, kayo na kanyang bayan,
nang makamtan ninyo ang lahat ng bagay.
10 Kahit mga leon ay nagugutom din,
sila'y nagkukulang sa hustong pagkain;
ngunit ang sinumang kay Yahweh ay sumunod,
mabubuting bagay, sa kanya'y di mauudlot.
11 Lapit, ako'y dinggin mga kaibigan, at kayo ngayo'y aking tuturuan na si Yahweh ay dapat sundi't igalang.
12 Sinong may gusto ng mahabang buhay;
sinong may nais ng masaganang buhay?
13 Dila mo'y pigilan sa paghabi ng kasamaan.
14 Mabuti ang gawi't masama'y layuan
pagsikapang kamtin ang kapayapaan.
15 Mga mata ni Yahweh, sa mat'wid nakatuon,
sa kanilang pagdaing, lagi siyang tumutugon.
16 Sa mga masasama, siya'y tumatalikod,
at sa alaala, sila'y mawawala.
17 Agad dinirinig daing ng matuwid;
inililigtas sila sa mga panganib.
18 Tumutulong siya sa nasisiphayo;
ang walang pag-asa'y hindi binibigo.
19 Ang taong matuwid, may suliranin man,
sa tulong ni Yahweh, agad maiibsan.
20 Kukupkupin siya nang lubus-lubusan,
kahit isang buto'y hindi mababali.
21 Ngunit ang masama, ay kasamaan din
sa taglay na buhay ang siyang kikitil.
22 Mga lingkod niya'y kanyang ililigtas,
sa nagpapasakop, siya ang mag-iingat!
What a Shaman Sees in A Mental Hospital
The Shamanic View of
Mental Illness
In the shamanic view,
mental illness signals “the birth of a healer,” explains Malidoma
Patrice Somé. Thus, mental disorders are spiritual emergencies, spiritual
crises, and need to be regarded as such to aid the healer in being born.
What those in the West
view as mental illness, the Dagara people regard as “good news from the other
world.” The person going through the crisis has been chosen as a medium for a
message to the community that needs to be communicated from the spirit realm. “Mental
disorder, behavioral disorder of all kinds, signal the fact that two obviously
incompatible energies have merged into the same field,” says Dr. Somé.
These disturbances result when the person does not get assistance in dealing
with the presence of the energy from the spirit realm.
One of the things Dr.
Somé encountered when he first came to the United States in 1980 for graduate
study was how this country deals with mental illness. When a fellow student was
sent to a mental institute due to “nervous depression,” Dr. Somé went to visit
him.
“I was so shocked.
That was the first time I was brought face to face with what is done here to
people exhibiting the same symptoms I’ve seen in my village.” What struck Dr. Somé was that the attention
given to such symptoms was based on pathology, on the idea that the condition
is something that needs to stop. This was in complete opposition to the way his
culture views such a situation. As he looked around the stark ward at the
patients, some in straitjackets, some zoned out on medications, others
screaming, he observed to himself, “So this is how the healers who are
attempting to be born are treated in this culture. What a loss! What a loss
that a person who is finally being aligned with a power from the other world is
just being wasted.”
Another way to say
this, which may make more sense to the Western mind, is that we in the West are
not trained in how to deal or even taught to acknowledge the existence of
psychic phenomena, the spiritual world. In fact, psychic abilities are
denigrated. When energies from the spiritual world emerge in a Western psyche,
that individual is completely unequipped to integrate them or even recognize
what is happening. The result can be terrifying. Without the proper context for
and assistance in dealing with the breakthrough from another level of reality,
for all practical purposes, the person is insane. Heavy dosing with
anti-psychotic drugs compounds the problem and prevents the integration that
could lead to soul development and growth in the individual who has received
these energies.
On the mental ward, Dr
Somé saw a lot of “beings” hanging around the patients, “entities”
that are invisible to most people but that shamans and psychics are able to
see. “They were causing the crisis in these people,” he says. It
appeared to him that these beings were trying to get the medications and their
effects out of the bodies of the people the beings were trying to merge with,
and were increasing the patients’ pain in the process. “The beings were
acting almost like some kind of excavator in the energy field of people. They
were really fierce about that. The people they were doing that to were just
screaming and yelling,” he said. He couldn’t stay in that environment and
had to leave.
In the Dagara
tradition, the community helps the person reconcile the energies of both
worlds–”the world of the spirit that he or she is merged with, and the
village and community.” That person is able then to serve as a bridge
between the worlds and help the living with information and healing they need.
Thus, the spiritual crisis ends with the birth of another healer. “The other
world’s relationship with our world is one of sponsorship,” Dr. Somé
explains. “More often than not, the knowledge and skills that arise from
this kind of merger are a knowledge or a skill that is provided directly from
the other world.”
The beings who were
increasing the pain of the inmates on the mental hospital ward were actually
attempting to merge with the inmates in order to get messages through to this
world. The people they had chosen to merge with were getting no assistance in
learning how to be a bridge between the worlds and the beings’ attempts to
merge were thwarted. The result was the sustaining of the initial disorder of
energy and the aborting of the birth of a healer.
“The Western culture has
consistently ignored the birth of the healer,” states Dr. Somé. “Consequently,
there will be a tendency from the other world to keep trying as many people as
possible in an attempt to get somebody’s attention. They have to try harder.” The spirits are drawn to people whose senses
have not been anesthetized. “The sensitivity is pretty much read as an
invitation to come in,” he notes.
Those who develop
so-called mental disorders are those who are sensitive, which is viewed in
Western culture as oversensitivity. Indigenous cultures don’t see it that way
and, as a result, sensitive people don’t experience themselves as overly
sensitive. In the West, “it is the overload of the culture they’re in that is
just wrecking them,” observes Dr. Somé. The frenetic pace, the bombardment of
the senses, and the violent energy that characterize Western culture can
overwhelm sensitive people.
Schizophrenia
and Foreign Energy
With schizophrenia,
there is a special “receptivity to a flow of images and information, which
cannot be controlled,” stated Dr. Somé. “When this kind of rush occurs
at a time that is not personally chosen, and particularly when it comes with
images that are scary and contradictory, the person goes into a frenzy.”
What is required in
this situation is first to separate the person’s energy from the extraneous
foreign energies, by using shamanic practice (what is known as a “sweep”)
to clear the latter out of the individual’s aura. With the clearing of their
energy field, the person no longer picks up a flood of information and so no
longer has a reason to be scared and disturbed, explains Dr. Somé.
Then it is possible to
help the person align with the energy of the spirit being attempting to come
through from the other world and give birth to the healer. The blockage of that
emergence is what creates problems. “The energy of the healer is a
high-voltage energy,” he observes. “When it is blocked, it just burns up
the person. It’s like a short-circuit. Fuses are blowing. This is why it can be
really scary, and I understand why this culture prefers to confine these
people. Here they are yelling and screaming, and they’re put into a
straitjacket. That’s a sad image.” Again, the shamanic approach is to work
on aligning the energies so there is no blockage, “fuses” aren’t blowing, and
the person can become the healer they are meant to be.
It needs to be noted
at this point, however, that not all of the spirit beings that enter a person’s
energetic field are there for the purposes of promoting healing. There are
negative energies as well, which are undesirable presences in the aura. In
those cases, the shamanic approach is to remove them from the aura, rather than
work to align the discordant energies
Alex:
Crazy in the USA, Healer in Africa
To test his belief
that the shamanic view of mental illness holds true in the Western world as
well as in indigenous cultures, Dr. Somé took a mental patient back to Africa
with him, to his village. “I was prompted by my own curiosity to find out
whether there’s truth in the universality that mental illness could be
connected with an alignment with a being from another world,” says Dr.
Somé.
Alex was an
18-year-old American who had suffered a psychotic break when he was 14. He had
hallucinations, was suicidal, and went through cycles of dangerously severe
depression. He was in a mental hospital and had been given a lot of drugs, but
nothing was helping. “The parents had done everything–unsuccessfully,”
says Dr. Somé. “They didn’t know what else to do.”
With their permission,
Dr. Somé took their son to Africa. “After eight months there, Alex had
become quite normal, Dr. Somé reports. He was even able to participate with
healers in the business of healing; sitting with them all day long and helping
them, assisting them in what they were doing with their clients . . . . He
spent about four years in my village.” Alex stayed by choice, not because
he needed more healing. He felt, “much safer in the village than in
America.”
To bring his energy
and that of the being from the spiritual realm into alignment, Alex went
through a shamanic ritual designed for that purpose, although it was slightly
different from the one used with the Dagara people. “He wasn’t born in the
village, so something else applied. But the result was similar, even though the
ritual was not literally the same,” explains Dr. Somé. The fact that
aligning the energy worked to heal Alex demonstrated to Dr. Somé that the
connection between other beings and mental illness is indeed universal.
After the ritual, Alex
began to share the messages that the spirit being had for this world.
Unfortunately, the people he was talking to didn’t speak English (Dr. Somé was
away at that point). The whole experience led, however, to Alex’s going to
college to study psychology. He returned to the United States after four years
because “he discovered that all the things that he needed to do had been
done, and he could then move on with his life.”
The last that Dr. Somé
heard was that Alex was in graduate school in psychology at Harvard. No one had
thought he would ever be able to complete undergraduate studies, much less get
an advanced degree.
Dr. Somé sums up what
Alex’s mental illness was all about: “He was reaching out. It was an
emergency call. His job and his purpose was to be a healer. He said no one was
paying attention to that.”
After seeing how well
the shamanic approach worked for Alex, Dr. Somé concluded that spirit beings
are just as much an issue in the West as in his community in Africa. “Yet the
question still remains, the answer to this problem must be found here, instead
of having to go all the way overseas to seek the answer. There has to be a way
in which a little bit of attention beyond the pathology of this whole
experience leads to the possibility of coming up with the proper ritual to help
people.
Longing
for Spiritual Connection
A common thread that
Dr. Somé has noticed in “mental” disorders in the West is “a very
ancient ancestral energy that has been placed in stasis, that finally is coming
out in the person.” His job then is to trace it back, to go back in time to
discover what that spirit is. In most cases, the spirit is connected to nature,
especially with mountains or big rivers, he says.
In the case of
mountains, as an example to explain the phenomenon, “it’s a spirit of the
mountain that is walking side by side with the person and, as a result,
creating a time-space distortion that is affecting the person caught in it.”
What is needed is a merger or alignment of the two energies, “so the person
and the mountain spirit become one.” Again, the shaman conducts a specific
ritual to bring about this alignment.
Dr. Somé believes that
he encounters this situation so often in the United States because “most of
the fabric of this country is made up of the energy of the machine, and the
result of that is the disconnection and the severing of the past. You can run
from the past, but you can’t hide from it.” The ancestral spirit of the
natural world comes visiting. “It’s not so much what the spirit wants as it
is what the person wants,” he says. “The spirit sees in us a call for
something grand, something that will make life meaningful, and so the spirit is
responding to that.”
That call, which we
don’t even know we are making, reflects “a strong longing for a profound
connection, a connection that transcends materialism and possession of things
and moves into a tangible cosmic dimension. Most of this longing is
unconscious, but for spirits, conscious or unconscious doesn’t make any
difference.” They respond to either.
As part of the ritual
to merge the mountain and human energy, those who are receiving the “mountain
energy” are sent to a mountain area of their choice, where they pick up a
stone that calls to them. They bring that stone back for the rest of the ritual
and then keep it as a companion; some even carry it around with them. “The
presence of the stone does a lot in tuning the perceptive ability of the
person,” notes Dr. Somé. “They receive all kinds of information that
they can make use of, so it’s like they get some tangible guidance from the
other world as to how to live their life.”
When it is the “river
energy,” those being called go to the river and, after speaking to the
river spirit, find a water stone to bring back for the same kind of ritual as
with the mountain spirit.
“People think
something extraordinary must be done in an extraordinary situation like this,” he says. That’s not usually the case.
Sometimes it is as simple as carrying a stone.
A
Sacred Ritual Approach to Mental Illness
One of the gifts a
shaman can bring to the Western world is to help people rediscover ritual,
which is so sadly lacking. “The abandonment of ritual can be devastating.
From the spiritual view, ritual is inevitable and necessary if one is to live,”
Dr. Somé writes in Ritual: Power, Healing, and Community. “To say that
ritual is needed in the industrialized world is an understatement. We have seen
in my own people that it is probably impossible to live a sane life without
it.”
Dr. Somé did not feel
that the rituals from his traditional village could simply be transferred to
the West, so over his years of shamanic work here, he has designed rituals that
meet the very different needs of this culture. Although the rituals change
according to the individual or the group involved, he finds that there is a
need for certain rituals in general.
One of these involves
helping people discover that their distress is coming from the fact that they
are “called by beings from the other world to cooperate with them in doing
healing work.” Ritual allows them to move out of the distress and accept
that calling.
Another ritual need
relates to initiation. In indigenous cultures all over the world, young people
are initiated into adulthood when they reach a certain age. The lack of such
initiation in the West is part of the crisis that people are in here, says Dr.
Somé. He urges communities to bring together “the creative juices of people
who have had this kind of experience, in an attempt to come up with some kind
of an alternative ritual that would at least begin to put a dent in this kind
of crisis.”
Another ritual that
repeatedly speaks to the needs of those coming to him for help entails making a
bonfire, and then putting into the bonfire “items that are symbolic of
issues carried inside the individuals . . . It might be the issues of anger and
frustration against an ancestor who has left a legacy of murder and enslavement
or anything, things that the descendant has to live with,” he explains.
“If these are approached as things that are blocking the human imagination, the
person’s life purpose, and even the person’s view of life as something that can
improve, then it makes sense to begin thinking in terms of how to turn that
blockage into a roadway that can lead to something more creative and more
fulfilling.”
The example of issues
with an ancestors touches on rituals designed by Dr. Somé that address a
serious dysfunction in Western society and in the process “trigger
enlightenment” in participants. These are ancestral rituals, and the
dysfunction they are aimed at is the mass turning-of-the-back on ancestors.
Some of the spirits trying to come through, as described earlier, may be “ancestors
who want to merge with a descendant in an attempt to heal what they weren’t
able to do while in their physical body.”
“Unless the
relationship between the living and the dead is in balance, chaos ensues,” he says. “The Dagara believe that, if such
an imbalance exists, it is the duty of the living to heal their ancestors. If
these ancestors are not healed, their sick energy will haunt the souls and
psyches of those who are responsible for helping them.” The rituals focus
on healing the relationship with our ancestors, both specific issues of an
individual ancestor and the larger cultural issues contained in our past. Dr.
Somé has seen extraordinary healing occur at these rituals.
Taking a sacred ritual
approach to mental illness rather than regarding the person as a pathological
case gives the person affected–and indeed the community at large–the
opportunity to begin looking at it from that vantage point too, which leads to “a
whole plethora of opportunities and ritual initiative that can be very, very
beneficial to everyone present,” states. Dr. Somé.
Excerpted from: The Natural Medicine Guide to
Schizophrenia, or The Natural Medicine Guide to Bi-polar Disorder, pages
178-189, Stephanie Marohn (featuring Malidoma Patrice Somé).
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