Source: http://forums.ayahuasca.com/viewtopic.php?f=28&t=13575
This article is from around 2007, and the original link is dead in that forum post is dead, so I feel happy posting this in its entirety. Good thing I remembered this, thanks to Stan's post prompting me. Thanks Stan!
This article is from around 2007, and the original link is dead in that forum post is dead, so I feel happy posting this in its entirety. Good thing I remembered this, thanks to Stan's post prompting me. Thanks Stan!
Quote:PLANT SENTIENCE AS SEEN THROUGH
AN SHAMANIC AMAZONIAN WORLDVIEW
by Kevin Furnas
Invariably when we think of amazonian shamanism,
images arise of the forest itself with its endless
array of twisting vines and exotic plants whose
primordial character exudes a sense of reality more
akin to myth than the concrete existence of our more
modern world. Alexander Von Humboldt broke open the
trail with his early exploratory expeditions at the
start of the 19th century which in turn inspired
Schultz and the ensuing ranks of plant researchers who
came to make up the growing field of ethnobotany.
Intrepid botanists and anthropologists paddled down
uncharted rivers and hacked their way through virgin
forest in the name of science and with the ultimate
goal of one day being able to understand this
mysterious new frontier.
Quote:Kevin Furnas #559-63-9501
kevinfurnas@yahoo.com
Kevin Furnas was born in San Francisco and has spent
many years exploring and learning from various
cultures around the world. He underwent shamanic
initiation at Sachamama Ethnobotanical Gardens outside
of Iquitos, Peru and spent 20 months dieting with
various plants, trees and stones. He currently resides
in Cuzco, Peru where he is in the midst of studying
the Andean system, performing ceremonies, and writing
a series of books on the diet process. He can be
reached via e-mail at kevinfurnas@yahoo.com or else
at K'uichi Wasi, d-4, camino capacnan, urb.jardin del
inca, Cuzco, Peru where ceremonies are conducted in
the traditional manner on a voluntary basis via
donations.
“Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves.”
~ Carl Jung
(This post was last modified: 2018-11-12, 06:53 AM by Laird.)
~ Carl Jung