2021-01-19 - The Healing Wisdom of Africa by Malidoma Patrice Somé ================================================================== This is an important book that gives a valuable perspective on healing. It contains thought-provoking reflections on Western culture. I was surprised by the familiarity of the indigenous perspectives. I have heard similar sentiments from other writers and ritual leaders came from Asia, India, and North America. This book clearly expresses its ideas. I get the feeling that the author has invested a lot of life force into making friends with the enemy and building bridges. I liked the point about individuality versus individualism. Much is said about individualism and the hazards of getting stuck in our problems. The author repeatedly emphasizes that the key is to escape isolation. Confronted with polarities, we need to find positive activities that we can do together. In other words, the more energy we invest into having fun, the less energy we will invest in fighting. I also liked the point about doing work out of fullness, focusing on fulfilment rather than prosperity. In other words, doing your work in such a way that it charges you up rather than draining your energy. Below are salient quotes. > Everyone is gifted. This means that everyone has something to > give. Sometimes we are the last people to recognize our own gifts. > So many people in the modern world, caught between their > commitment to survival and their intuitive allegiance to a genuine > life purpose, find themselves forced to sacrifice their purpose to > make a living... Their very livelihood undermines their reason for > being. > In the West people usually translate the problem into some type > of either/or duality, where someone is right and someone [else] is > wrong, someone is a winner and someone [else] is a loser. Conflict > becomes an opportunity for instant polarization. Wherever polarity > exists, there is a state of competitiveness that does not serve to > meet the needs in a community, since it tends to separate rather > than unite. > Indigenous societies conceded the existence of conflict but view > it as something of importance and of interest to the community. > The conflict is some sort of message to the entire community--but > expressed through the individuals embroiled in the conflict. > The purpose is not so much the desire to get the job done but to > raise enough energy for people to feel nourished by what they do. > You are nourished first, and then the work flows out of your > fullness. Below are excerpts and [notes] for my own future reference. Introduction ============ School, to us, was a place where we learned to reject whatever native culture we had acquired as children and to fill its place with Western ideas and practices. This foreign culture was presented as high culture par excellence, the acquisition of which constituted a blessing. Going to school was thus a radical act involving the sacrifice of one's indigenous self. For the white Catholic missionaries who were building a Christian empire, such a project was necessary for survival, a consequence of the decline of Christian faith in Europe. Consequently, they created a diaspora of struggling people adrift in the vast sea of cultural anonymity. This gave rise to what has now entered the canon of nationalistic literature known as négritude, spearheaded by figures such as Léopold Sédar Senghor, former president of Sénégal, and now a member of the French academy. Négritude is the owning of being black in the face of white rejection of blacks. Literacy was literally beaten into us, and to avoid pain we had to quickly master European languages. The grave problem related to this manner of education is that its fanaticism breeds fanaticism in the student. You can't beat someone into enlightenment without fearing that this violence will be returned to you someday. Exposure to the magical can be as dangerous to a person as exposure to high levels of radiation. Without proper protection one runs the risk of losing one's self to the very world that radiates these energies. In the West, one can find indigenous cultural elements embedded in American culture if one knows where to look for them. The widespread fascination with antiquities, adventure travel, and tribal artifacts reveals a culture hungry to connect with indigenous roots. I remember a conversation in which a student, bemused by the fact that I came all the way from Africa to study at a prestigious school in America, asked if Africans preferred to sleep in trees. When i told him that, in fact, the American ambassador slept in the biggest tree in the capital, he became visibly upset with me and walked away. [I truly appreciate this story. *grin*] I noticed that some people, particularly those who were most enthralled by the game of consumerism, found mention of indigenous wisdom especially irritating and sometimes would lash out at me, just as a child entranced by a Nintendo game reacts with tantrums to any disturbance. ... Time and time again, I have been faced with angry questions like, "If Africans are so full of wisdom, why are they shooting each other? Why can't they stop famine?" I ask in response, "Where do these weapons come from?" Colonialism weakens a native people by, among other things, sapping its economy and creating scarcity. Everyone knows that scarcity results in the loss of human dignity. A person whose identity has been violated becomes subject to control. If a gun is then given to such a person to use as a way of restoring his sense of dignity, chances are he will use it. My people are frustrated by the lack of credibility they experience from the modern world, and many have lost hope that anything but the gun will be heard. This book is a response to and a reaction against such thinking. This book will probably challenge your beliefs. I do not expect that you will come to agree with me on every point. But perhaps you can understand how the beliefs in this book form a coherent system for understanding the world. At the very least, the beliefs deserve a respect and reverence they seldom receive. You will find instead some ways of looking at the human being and at society that you may not have considered before. My goal is not to convert you to an indigenous point of view, but to offer and recommend that view as a potential enrichment to your present life. It is possible that we have been brought together at this time because we have profound truths to teach each other. Chapter 1: Healing, Ritual, and Community ========================================= What the indigenous world offers to the modern world centers around the understanding of the concepts of healing, ritual, and community. Healing is central, because it was learned very early that human beings are vulnerable to physiological and biological breakdown, and that this general instability touches all aspects of their existence. They have also learned that the natural environment in which they live is made up of subtle invisible things that, if manipulated in certain ways, can affect the conditions that they intend to heal. Ritual is the technology that allows the manipulation of these subtle energies. Community is important because there is an understanding that human beings are collectively oriented. The general health and well-being of an individual are connected to a community, and are not something that can be maintained alone or in a vacuum. Ritual in the indigenous world is something aimed at producing healing, and the loss of such healing in the modern world might be responsible for the loss of community that we see. The problems experienced in the West, from the pain of isolation to the stress of hyperactivity, are brought on by the loss of community. When we talk of ritual here we are talking about something much deeper [than the ceremonies found in certain organized religions.] We are talking about the weaving of individual persons and gifts into a community that interacts with the forces of the natural world. We are talking about a gathering of people with a clear healing vision and a trusting intent toward the forces of the invisible world. The indigenous understanding is that the material and physical problems that a person encounters are important only because they are an energetic message sent to this visible world. Therefore, people go to that unseen energetic place to try to repair whatever damage or disturbances are being done there, knowing that if things are healed there, things will be healed here. Ritual is the principle tool used to approach that unseen world in a way that will rearrange the structure of the physical world and bring about material transformation. That we connect with unseen realities, the realities made visible in our symbols, is crucial to the well-being of our psyches. A person who walks through a ritual and ends up feeling charged and invigorated is a blessed recipient of healing waves of energy that no one can see but everyone can benefit from. The full head of a person blessed in this manner overflows into the needy souls of others... I finally decided that I needed at least to justify why indigenous people do ritual grieving, even if I failed to make it apply to modern people. So I spoke about grief as a cleansing practice that purifies the psyche just as a bath purifies the body. I stated the dangers of unexpressed grief, quoting an elder who once said that a man who can't cry is a social time bomb. I sent them to find each an object among the trees that represented the loss they needed to grieve. This much they did without resistance. What was it that urged these people to search for healing? My sense is that the West's need for it is rooted in crises of personal identity and purpose. Our own confirmation or acknowledgment of ourselves is not enough. The need to be acknowledged by the society is so primal that if it does not happen in the village, town, or neighborhood, people will go out searching for it. [In other words, they need to feel a sense of belonging.] A crisis of identity and purpose is an inner burning that is rarely extinguished by a visit to a career planning office, by graduation from a prestigious school, or even by years in a successful career. It is a hollowness, a void that threatens to erase meaning in everything people do. Initiation is simply a set of challenges presented to an individual so that he or she may grow. Consequently, the troubles we encounter in our paths in the modern world are, in essence, initiatory to the extent that each one of them is life changing. What is lacking in this rich life experience is a community that observes the individual's growth... the mere act of seeing and responding, which enables a person, in powerful periods of growth, to behold voices within confirmed by voices from the community without. I would like to stress at this point that where mentors and elders are lacking, where initiation in one form or another is not recognized, there can be no support system capable of curbing the intense sense of aloneness that haunts the psyche of the modern person. Another form of this illness is the inability to accept or even tolerate those who are different than us. Ritual is aimed at increasing our awareness, for awareness of the existence of the reality beyond the palpable world that we live in is one of the keys to transforming an individual. ... If something comes into our lives and we deny it by labeling it impossible, an indigenous elder would interpret this way of thinking as a manifestation of our own rigidity in the face of new possibilities. Eventually such awareness becomes an honoring of the shadowy and hidden parts of ourselves, those parts of ourselves that are invisible ... more often than not the physical being is so detached from the spirit that one feels split inside. Awareness should often lead to an attempt to bring these two parts of the person together to become one. Inside ritual and sacred space where energies are being woven, people's imagination and consciousness can be moved through time backward or forward. It is as if the awakened psyche is pulled toward those materials it was not able to recall otherwise. This is a shamanic journey... The kind of memory that we are talking about here is something very personal, very compelling, and very transformative. Purpose begins with the individual, and the sum total of all the individuals' purposes creates the community's purpose. Being born into this world is a trying experience. Whatever enthusiasm you bring with you here can be tamed down and radically edited simply as a result of being here. Making ritual a part of daily life will help to rekindle the intensity that keeps us on the path of our purpose. Ritual is not a rigid thing. Simply by virtue of being a human being, one is an authority on creating ritual. If people know the problem that they are confronting, they are capable of devising a ritual that will handle this problem. ... If you start by trusting yourself and your ability to address an issue symbolically, you are likely to deepen your experience in designing a ritual. Rituals never like to be done the same way twice, for they would rather reflect the versatility of human imagination than its corresponding power to create stagnation and rigidity. In order for ritual to manifest its full power, it must be connected to the world of nature... Chapter 2: The Healing Power of Nature ====================================== Our relation to the natural world and its natural laws determines whether or not we are healed. Nature, therefore, is the foundation of healing, and the type of nature that surrounds a community at the time of doing a ritual determines the types of ritual that are appropriate... So if something in us must change, spending time in nature provides a good beginning. This means that within nature, within the natural world, are all of the materials and tenets needed for healing human beings. Nature is the textbook for those who care to study it and the storehouse of remedies for human ills. Being born into this world in a particular place is like having the signature of that place stamped upon you. Had I not encountered beings like them [the kontomblé] many more times as an educated adult and conversed with them while taping their voices with their permission for my own record, I think I would have dismissed my original experience as a kind of hallucination. It has made me wonder, every time I am walking in nature, about who is looking at me, who is observing me, and how many eyes are seeing everything that I do without my knowing it. After the experience with the green lady, I couldn't get myself to cut a live tree, because I never knew what I was cutting. A community is held together by emotional ties that result in a conscious feeling of connection... It is more important to heal our relation with nature by doing our own emotional work rather than by seeking extraordinary experiences that appear supernaturally powered. For those of us who are not called to work directly with the spirits, our work consists in healing relationships where we experience separation and brokenness. We can begin this work by reconnecting, in the first place, with the natural world. Chapter 3: Indigenous Technologies ================================== In the West, technology is usually defined as applying knowledge to serve a purpose; among the Dagara and many other cultures, technology is what keeps the individuals and the relationships between individuals and nature healthy. Technologies in the indigenous world do not enslave people, because they include the world of Spirit. What indigenous and Western peoples have in common is the desire to understand the intricacies and complexities of the world we live in and to harness the power of nature for certain practical purposes. In the West, technology is oriented toward industry, commercial, and military uses; among indigenous people, it serves to heal and help people remember and fulfill their purpose in life. In order to exist as material beings, we have to take a form, and then in the sense among my people that to be in material is not the most familiar or suitable form for us. The contracted form of our volatile spirit is the body. The adventures of the body prepare the spirit for the leap into its next phase of growth. There is a reciprocity here that really cancels out the whole sense of hierarchy. If Spirit is looking up to us, and we are looking up to Spirit, then we are looking up to each other, and human beings should take from this a certain sense of dignity. The industrialized world and the indigenous world need to look up to each other. Peoples attraction to material things is proportional to their thirst for the source from which things come. To indigenous people, matter is the skin of Spirit, a permeable boundary between the dimensions. This is an extremely important subject, for we cannot assume that people either have or do see the same things. However, if you are looking only for shadows you will see only shadows; to see Spirit you must revert to your spiritual sight. This is similar to what in the West is called ecstatic perception. For instance, when women get together to make pottery, they are acknowledging that their ability to create is part of nature's design, a part of their purpose. Before a woman participates in the work with clay, which is the earth, she will first gather the signs and images she has seen in nature, and she will bring these signs into the circle of other women. In the interest of producing something that is an extension of their wholeness, the women will begin by chanting and singing together, echoing one another. The work is not in the form of a production line, even though a production line would have yielded more than enough of these practical containers. Nor do the women work alone. Each person has clay. They are seated in a circle, and they chant until they are in some sort of ecstatic place, and it is from that place that they begin molding the clay. It is as if the knowledge of how to make pots is not in their brains, but in their collective energy. The product becomes an extension of the collective energy of the circle of women. I have watched this process unfold countless times. The women can sit all day in front of two dozen mounds of clay, doing nothing but chanting--until the last hours, when in a flurry of activity all kinds of pots come forth. Imagine a job where two-thirds of the time was spent chanting, and one-third was spend in production! The product of work here, the pot, embodies the intimacy and wholeness experienced by the women over the course of the day. The women understand that it is necessary to reach that place of wholeness before they can bring something out of it. As a result of our work practices, the indigenous notion of abundance is very different from that in the West. Abundance means a sense of fullness... The purpose is not so much the desire to get the job done but to raise enough energy for people to feel nourished by what they do. You are nourished first, and then the work flows out of your fullness. I remember my mother uttering very moving, poetic chants as she milled grain, grinding for six hours to fill only a small bucket. The meal that came out of her work contained tremendous energy, the spiritual energy of the poetry and music as well as the physical energy contained in the grain. All of her work was a work of art, done so genuinely, with total devotion, that it contributed to a profound sense of fullness in the family. What I must emphasize here is that the energy required to sustain the harmony we are talking about is so delicate that it can easily be destroyed by the slightest intrusion, and such intrusion has clearly taken place through colonialism. Chapter 4: The Value of a Healthy Community =========================================== As Carolyn Shaffer and Kristin Anundsen point out in their ambitious and detailed book, Creating Community Anywhere, Americans have defined themselves in terms of individual freedom: a people breaking away from old, limiting structures, dogmas, and attitudes and pushing forward to new frontiers. But with every gain there is a loss. Individuality, not individualism, is the cornerstone of community. Individuality is synonymous with uniqueness. These examples suggest that what is required for the maintenance and growth of a community is not corporate altruism or a government program, but a villagelike atmosphere that allows people to drop their masks. A sense of community grows where behavior is based on trust and where no one has to hide anything. To produce beauty consistently requires a healthy community. Therefore the artist is the pulse of the community; her or his creativity says something about the health of the community. In such a place of struggle, the longing for the sacred is so enhanced that people are collecting and storing art objects. From an indigenous point of view, the isolation of self and community from Spirit appears to have translated into the imprisonment of art. The museums of the West, from an indigenous perspective, speaks poignantly of the sharply felt longing for spirit experienced by modern people. The difference is that in the modern world, errant behavior in a person is regarded as a personal problem, concerning only that individual. The possibility that there is a larger meaning to be found in the person's expressions, which might be transformed into something meaningful for that person's community, is rarely considered. In an indigenous community, each person is precious. No one is born on this earth without a reason, a special purpose. Failure or inability to perform one's function in the village places a person in a constant state of crisis. So crises from either of these two sources--the embodiment of a new spirit wanting to emerge, and the impossibility of doing what one came into the village to do--must be addressed by the community. Chapter 5: Mentors and the Life of Youth ======================================== There are certain things without which young people cannot survive and flourish, and mentoring is one of them. At the core of mentoring is the understanding that genius must be invited out of a person. People carry to this world something important that they must deliver, and mentors help to deliver that genius to the community. Because genius is sacred, originating not in this world but another, it must be approached ritualistically, that is, symbolically--with respect and even reverence. ... genius understands the language of ritual better than any other language. Indigenous people tend to approach emotion, and sometimes even pain, as a sacred thing because they think it means that something in the person is moving out in order to let something else come in. The tension between the incoming and outgoing energies produces pain. So the pain involved in bringing genius to birth evokes ritual. The stretching of the body's physiology out of its normal parameters, which is what allows the shift to happen, is supported through ritual, as a serious and sacred thing. Literacy represents a kind of clairvoyant knowledge that diviners think does not agree with magical knowledge. Their approach may be a reaction to colonialism, for the brutality perpetrated on indigenous people under colonial rule came from literate people. So it is easy for indigenous diviners to conclude that literacy is a violent knowledge bent on attacking any nonliterate knowledge. Therefore the first form mentoring must take is simply seeing the presence of genius in a young person. It begins with paying careful attention to the young person. The best medicine for a young man in crisis is listening [being listened to]. Listening equals respect and recognition. Recognition begins with supportive attention. As long as someone is in crisis, mentoring is called for. The violence that cripples so many lives is a tearing consequence of a call for mentoring that has met no answer. Yet to mentor requires some giving of the self, some willingness to compromise in the interest of establishing a progressively healthy psyche and spirit in the other. This includes the willingness to be vulnerable, to learn gently about the world of the other, instead of jumping to conclusions about the plight of the other, and it also requires finding a way into the emotional world that produced the crisis. The mentor exists, in the West, in the counselor and the therapist. Chapter 6: Elders and the Community =================================== The full blossoming out of youth requires taking risks. It demands that one be safe enough to respond to the urge for growth. That safety comes from the hands of older generations. This is where young and old intersect. Here, old means someone who is dry, solid, lasting. Thus the old and the elders embody stability, dependability, and wisdom. In this capacity, they become a frame of reference, a resource, a research center. The wisdom I am trying to point out here for Westerners is obvious. I am trying to say that a retirement house is the wrong place for old people to be. While they are there waiting for their end, the entire society loses a great opportunity: the opportunity to be anchored and thus blessed. Elders, like the ancestors, are expected to identify and address what is not working in the village, not to give compliments and praise behavior. Thus elders do not express energy, they hold it. When they speak, everybody listens. They often don't speak directly to the person whose situation they are addressing. They don't even name the person. The reason for this indirectness is linked to a rather peculiar understanding of shame and the effect of shaming. Shame is seen in Dagara culture as a collapsing emotional force that paralyzes the self, and therefore, like grief, shame should be experienced only in a sacred, ceremonial context. In the context of ritual and sacred space, the repentant "sinner" is said to be more capable of deep humility than in an ordinary context. When suffered in daily life, shame compresses the psyche dangerously. The result is that one experiences crippling rejection and ostracism as one's self-esteem is almost exterminated. A person in power and respect who uses it exposes himself and the other to danger. Distrust, suspicion, and discord are the offspring of shame and attacks against self-esteem. Therefore shaming someone as a way of making that person accountable without the sacred endangers the whole community. The heaviness of the shamed person will in the long run and in subtle ways affect everyone and everything. Accountability in the form of punishment is debilitating: it encourages concealment, secrecy, and even distortion of reality. The greatest responsibility of the elder is leading rituals. In the culture of the West now, it is easier for someone to become an elder to their grandchildren than to anyone else because a grandchild spontaneously listens to and respects a grandparent. But I would also venture to say that there is something of an elder in any person whose words are listened to and who commands respect and attention. Elders also appear as people who have profoundly changed the lives of others through their teaching or writing. There is an elder in the making in everyone, but it is most visible in those who have the receptivity to listen to the stories of others. The ability to listen, and the willingness to support others in different situations, are at the heart and soul of elderhood. Everyone who solicits the services of an elder-to-be is looking for a container to unload some problems. Similarly, anyone who attends to the sorrows of another person and does not feel overwhelmed or frightened is a person who nurses an elder within. Above all, to be an elder is to be able to come down to the level of the person you wish to listen to, not with a mind to tell that person what to do and what not to do but to share similar experiences you have had in the course of your own life. If a culture rejects the sacred, it rejects elders. If it rejects elders, it rejects the welfare of its youth. You can't have one without the other. We must learn how to sit quietly with our youth and to listen quietly to what they have to say. This is the job of elders. This calm, almost meditative approach to youth can also be a model for self-calming to other people who are too troubled to be quiet. Calmness is the beginning of the ability to hold the space, the beginning of an elder's contribution to the community. Chapter 7: The Elements of Ritual ================================= Every time a gathering of people, under the protection of Spirit, triggers a body of emotional energy aimed at bringing them very tightly together, a ritual of one type or another is in effect. In this kind of gathering people primarily use nonverbal means of interacting with one another, thereby stimulating the life of the psyche. There are two parts to ritual. One part is planned: people prepare the space for the ritual and think through the general choreography of the process. The other part of ritual cannot be planned because it is the part that Spirit is in charge of. The unplanned part of ritual is spontaneous, almost unpredictable interaction with an energy source. It is a response to a call from a non-human source to commune with a larger horizon. It is like a journey. Before you get started, you own the journey. After you start, the journey owns you. It is important to recognize what ritual is not. It is not repetitive or compulsive behavior, like having a coffee or cigarette in the morning. Nor is it an everyday formality, like greeting another person with a handshake... Ritual... is gathering with others in order to feel spirit's call, to express spontaneously and publicly whatever emotion needs to be expressed, to create, in concert with others, an unrehearsed and deeply moving response to Spirit, and to feel the presence of the community, including the ancestors, throughout the experience. From an indigenous point of view, ceremonies are events that are reproducible, predictable, and controllable, while rituals call for spontaneous feeling and trust in the outcome. Symbols are the doorway to ritual. Just as our bodies can't survive without nourishment, our psyches cannot sustain themselves without symbols. Two types of rituals are commonly practiced among the Dagara. The first one is called radical ritual since it involves major repair of the broken or damaged human psyche or spirit. In such a ritual, the physical body is pushed to the extreme in order to create a situation of tension favorable for the removal of unwanted energetic debris at the restoration of a much more acceptable self. The second one is called maintenance ritual. It is a nonstressful yet regular practice of acknowledging an existing connection with the Other World, the world of Spirit. Types of Ritual: * Radical Ritual - body is pushed to the extreme [induce catharsis?] * Maintenance Ritual - regular practice [stay connected to spirit] * Personal Rituals - keep self in harmony with surrounding world [a sub-set of Maintenance Rituals] There are four components of a ritual: * Prepare the ritual space * The Invocation: a form of prayer that formally invites Spirit, or any kind of personal deity, to join or participate in what is about to happen. * Healing: [Without healing, a ritual is not successful.] * The Closing: an expression of gratitude for what the presence of Spirit has allowed to happen. You can't simply say thank you; it is very important to itemize the things that you are thankful for. Because of our tendency to assert control, we need to be aware that our controlling self may try to kick in during ritual. One signal that this has happened is the feeling that the ritual has become more like theater, with an embarrassing superficiality. In a play, people go into scripted rage and weep synchronized tears. It is the duty of the ritual leader to rid the process of any such pretense... This is not to say that acting is always bad in ritual. The key is genuineness of purpose; every action needs to be focused toward the pure intention of seeking healing. Ritual is necessary because there are certain problems that cannot be resolved with words alone. The pain of abuse that someone carries within, the trauma of unfulfilled dreams, and the sorrow of loss are not the kind of feelings that go away over time. Whether we deny them or not, they remain as part of the weight that keeps our bodies tensed and our spirits constricted. They fuel our drive to violence, and they eat our spirit. When they are addressed in ritual, however, we get the chance to heal them. Complex problems plague and cripple entire communities; by actively involving the member of the community in seeking solutions based in ritual, a community can achieve a deeper solution than words and rhetoric alone can provide. Breaking the spell of circular arguments through the power of ritual is an area where indigenous people can provide effective help to the West. Chapter 8: Dagara Cosmology and ritual ====================================== Cultures define themselves in terms of the ways their people perceive the cosmos. [I think that this is inescapable.] Chapter 9: Preparing for Ritual =============================== Anthropologist Victor Turner has given us an instructive picture of the difference between indigenous and modern approaches to ritual. In The Ritual Process he refers to ascending symbolism as opposed to descending symbolism in order to clarify the distinction between indigenous ritual practices and Western ceremonial practices. The Western view of authority as something that comes from above dramatically affects one's perception of the source of transformation and change. The assumption is that if anything transcendental is going to happen, it has to come from above and descend to humans. Ever since Christianity unearthed the gods and goddesses and sent them far away above the clouds, many people in the West have been left standing on the ground feeling abandoned, staring longingly at the sky wondering when God will come. In contrast, indigenous people see the divine as arising from below. Indeed, the ancestors, who dwell under the earth and form a vast pool of energy, allow us to walk upon them. Thus the divine is right under our feet and directly connected to us through the earth. This perception calls for a significantly different attitude that encourages spontaneity and trust of one's instincts, because it sees redemption and healing as rising like heat from the divine below. Ritual therefore follows an ascending principle, presuming that healing rises from under the earth and overtakes us. Participants need to understand that success in a ritual is proportional to the level of surrender that one can achieve. Surrender is a difficult thing to achieve; it is impossible to do it with words or discourse. In the West more than anywhere else, the lack of community has increased the need for personal rituals. Personal rituals are generally done to keep oneself in harmony with the surrounding world. Personal rituals are for the most part maintenance rituals. Ancestor rituals help to heal the ancestors themselves and our connections with them. Another form of personal ritual is that which honors and develops our connections to spirit allies. The first thing to recognize is that in community ritual, one is required to give something to the gathering. It takes the combined energies of many givers to make a ritual work. The most destructive thing one can do in a ritual is to become a passive observer, thinking that your physical presence is enough. In ritual passivity results in a significant and sometimes dangerous draining of energy. Yet it is frequently seen in community ritual, and it is the issue from which conflict most frequently and predictably arises. When passive participants are reminded that they are not being productive, their usual response is to take offense. I must reiterate the idea that conducting ritual begins by being acquainted with symbolic objects and gestures. If the psyche cannot be educated to embrace symbolism, people will have difficulty understanding and appreciating rituals. Ritual transcends language and enables us to communicate and interact with the Other World. It is important when conducting ritual that people move out of literal and dwell as long as possible on the metaphoric and symbolic regions of human experience. This is where the soul and spirit reside. This is the place where people abandon argument and when superficiality does not intrude. In the world of metaphor and symbol, a simple song and a little rhythm produce far greater results than a panel discussion by articulate experts. Here one experiences true collaboration and learns how to give the attention that all people, all spirits, and all ancestors need. Chapter 10: Fire Rituals ======================== We begin with rituals of fire, because fire is the first element in the Dagara cosmic wheel. Fire is the element that keeps people connected to their purpose and to the world of Spirit. However, it is extremely dangerous to suggest a fire ritual to people in the West, because Western society's essential characteristic is fire, and Westerners therefore need to understand the power of fire more than they need to perform rituals of fire. Positive fire, as we saw in the earlier chapter, emerges as vision, dream, and intimacy with the ancestors. Negative fire is speed, restlessness, radical consumption, and eventually death. Because the attributes of fire in the West are predominantly negative, people need to attend to that which can stabilize their fire before they move on to exploring fire as the warmth of being, creativity, and life. Therefore, before most Westerners interest themselves in fire rituals, it is crucial that they make their peace with water. Fire is the rising force that makes us do, see, feel, love, and hate. The inner fire is a rope that connects us to the world we abandoned when we were born into a human body. A fire ritual is a place where things that interfere with our connection with our soul's purpose can be surrendered and where fire can serve as a point of focus. Chapter 11: Water Rituals ========================= ... water ritual is an attempt to unite things that must be united, to reconcile things that are meant to be together in the interest of community. Water rituals tie up loose ends. These loose ends are obstacles to our balance and reconciliation, our peace and serenity. Until grief is restored in the West as the starting place where the modern man and woman might find peace, the culture will continue to abuse and ignore the power of water, and in turn will be fascinated with fire. Grief must be approached as a release of the tension created by separation and disconnection from someone or something that matters. To villagers it looks as if the West is uncomfortable with tears because one cannot argue verbally, logically, against this kind of emotion. Villagers also believe that Westerners are afraid of emotion because they are afraid of loss of control. Emotions have the tendency to spread from person to person, and therefore social control, to the Western mind, is being risked with any display of emotion. The end of the domination of one's life by such emotions requires an outpouring of liquid. You cannot truly grieve within and remain composed without. In order to do a water ritual effectively, one needs a community. There are few personal water rituals, as the Dagara people don't comprehend the idea of private grief. Grief is a community problem... It is sometimes useful for them to get together in small groups of eight to twelve people to tell one another what causes them grief. This is because grief does not necessarily come on demand. It is something that must be evoked through stories and images. It is not permitted to cultivate solemnity in the village, because solemnity encourages withdrawal and suspends participation. The village is a place where energy must flow, and stillness opposes that flow. A final and even simpler ritual involves simply maintaining a bowl of water someplace where you spend time, such as on an altar, in the house, or at an office. Placing a bowl of water in a room where a difficult discussion or meeting is to take place can have a remarkable effect on the tone of the interaction. The mere presence of water near us is calming and reminds us of the peace and reconciliation we desire in all aspects of our lives. Chapter 12: Earth Rituals ========================= Earth rituals greatly emphasize the sense of belonging, self-worth, and community, including all forms of relationships. They serve as an opportunity for a group of people to demonstrate their ability to give attention, love, and appreciation, and caring to an individual who needs it badly. This is how certain psychological illnesses are healed. One aspect of earth ritual that people in the West are clearly in need of involves touching. Human hands carry a huge amount of healing energy, provided one is aware of the kind of mental alignment that must accompany their touch. ... The lack of touch is the greatest source of grief in modern culture. Poor self-esteem and the shrinking of a personal sense of identity can be traced, in part, to the lack of touch. It is not possible to engage in a productive earth ritual without proper touch. Earth is the archetypal symbol of giving. Indeed, the earth teaches us that touching must take the place of taking, or the modern world will continue to destroy itself by devouring everything that is consumable. Chapter 13: Mineral Rituals =========================== Mineral rituals aim at restoring lost memories. One of the key memories that mineral rituals evoke is the life purpose linked to each human being. Everyone is gifted. This means that everyone has something to give. Sometimes we are the last people to recognize our own gifts. So many people in the modern world, caught between their commitment to survival and their intuitive allegiance to a genuine life purpose, find themselves forced to sacrifice their purpose to make a living. It is for these people that mineral rituals must be done. Their very livelihood undermines their reason for being. There is no greater harm done to a person than the harm of a life activity that competes against, or contradicts, their purpose. To the indigenous, healing has a lot to do with knowing where you are in your life journey. ... Behind these tales, wrestling for a place to live, are countless memories that have been frozen in the cells of people's bones. This is why every mineral ritual must include a period of listening, for listening is the complement of storytelling. To further the awakening begun by attraction to a symbolic object, frame your attraction in a series of ritual dialogues in which you speak to the things you are attracted to. In the dialogue, it is important to speak to the object as though it is animated by a spirit and is alive, not as tough it is simply a symbolic representation of something in the distance. Then, as you engage in dialogue with the object, describe to it as clearly as possible the feelings and images that arise in you as you associate with the object. ... The attraction is an invitation to respond, whether or not one knows exactly how to proceed. The simple act of having heard the call is enough. The elders say that the rocks can speak, but their voice is so tiny that it can barely be heard. The rocks remind us to be still and to listen carefully, to stop searching outside of ourselves for that which we already hold within. Chapter 14: Nature Rituals ========================== Human beings are most of the time unaware of the extent and intimacy of their connection with nature, especially the world of plants and animals. It is hard to separate nature rituals from water, fire, earth, and mineral rituals. Since every ritual is an attempt to change our relationship with the Other World, and since nature is all about change and transformation, there is some sense in which every ritual pertains to nature and aims to reveal, heal, and reinstate our own innermost nature. Nature rituals, like mineral rituals, help people remain focused on their true purpose. Indeed, while it is possible to do a ritual in an amphitheater or in a hotel ballroom, this same ritual will generate greater energy if done in the woods. In the modern world, as in the indigenous world, ritual is best done out-of-doors, surrounded by the elements of the natural world. The indigenous believe that healing comes in giving more than in getting. So in order to remain energetically healthy, and to reduce the danger of loss, individual as well as collective lives are punctuated by periodic sacrifices, gift giving to Spirit, and countless giveaways. This conviction has given rise to the invention of an enormous number of rituals that are meant to bring something to oneself, and each of these begins by giving something meaningful away. In the West, when nature is neglected, people often wear masks in order to survive. The mask may be a professional role; it sometimes comes with a suit or uniform and is a refuge, a place of anonymity. Those who don't wear a mask in their culture risk being hurt, and thus many are driven to find one. The problem is that as people hide behind these masks, they become defined by them and unable to tell the difference between what is natural and what is not. Sometimes they become so profoundly disconnected from their true self that they think that their mask is their true nature. Nature rituals aimed at unmasking the true self need to begin by addressing the theme of change. The goal is to allow people to relax, which will allow people to let go of their masks and to find how it feels to be without a mask for a moment. Healing begins when the mask is released from the self, for people can't transform when they are hiding behind them. An indigenous person can easily identify the mask someone carries by watching that person dance or play a drum. Music and dance are diagnostic tools that bring out of hiding parts of the body that are masked... Actual mask-making rituals are another way to unmask the self. [Reminds me of a story i heard about Joana Macy's workshop The Work That Reconnects.] Chapter 15: Initiation: A Response to Challenges of the West ============================================================ Rites of initiation are aimed at including the young person in the community and recognizing her or his genius, and moving the youth toward maturity and adult responsibility. Through initiation, a young person gains access to dynamic and purposeful living. While initiation as it takes place in African indigenous culture would not be appropriate in the West, since we are by definition located in a different place and culture, some aspects of initiation would, I believe, speak to particular challenges that Western societies are facing at this time. Initiation focuses on and is responding to some basic existential questions faced by human beings since the dawn of time. Everyone wonders, Who am I? Where do I come from? What am I here for? Where am I going? But troubles do not befall individuals because of their failure to avoid them. Rather they are milestones of one's journey toward maturity and responsibility. Their aim is to help people better understand what life is, and who we are. They are a necessary ingredient in the removal of whatever stands between us and our essential self. It is as if there is a natural pull toward challenges and ordeal in the interest of gaining inner strength and living a responsible life. Hardship and ordeal therefore initiate a change from within. One emerges from them with a profound sense of having undergone a real education. Those who understand this may even come to welcome adversity. Every bump in a person's life is an opportunity to grow and change. Thus, it is not enough to simply regard problems as unfortunate events. One must deliberately attempt to see the potential for growth inside trouble. Because initiation experiences are part of every life, the immediate issue for Westerners is perhaps not initiation itself but how one may bring closure to initiatory pain and suffering. People who want to be recognized as survivors are attempting to seal off an initiatory experience so that they can get on with something else, because when suffering is met with recognition, it passes. It is the absence of radical and genuine recognition and acknowledgment that makes suffering grow larger. There is an endless series of unresolved initiations in the modern world due to isolationism and the personalization of trouble. In addition, there is a tendency for many to ostracize people who seek to have their suffering acknowledged. Community is key to closing initiation. The absence of a community to recognize and end suffering is also visible in Westerners' prolonged grief over their parents' inadequacies. On numerous occasions I have seen men and women in their 30's and 40's still grieving that their mothers and fathers weren't there for them the way they should have been, that they had abandoned them. This crisis in midlife is the result of the person's sense of anonymity and lack of belonging. Indeed, it is important for these people to recognize that their parents were not experts at rearing children. But to hang onto this for many years is symptomatic of a spiritual paralysis. It reveals the isolation of individuals and families from a wider sense of community. When children are raised by a whole village, they do not grow up expecting their biological parents to provide for all their emotional needs. Attributing blame to someone else can never bring closure to a problem. On the contrary it keeps it alive, near enough to affect us deeply but just too far out of reach for us to solve. If we begin by accepting the possibility that problems occur because we make them occur--that hardships such as broken relationships, loss of a job, financial troubles, and even sickness come because we need them for our own good--then many healing opportunities become available. The question of why I would have invited such a hardship is a good place to begin the journey through initiation. The issue is not how to get out of the hardship as quickly as possible, but how to read the message of change embedded within the hardship. Trouble means that the psyche must move on. Three stages of initiation: * [beginning] -- The trouble or ordeal has just started * [middle] -- A period of extreme disruption * [end] -- The end is in view, but it is as hard to reach as the disruption was to endure. Wherever one fits in these three stages of initiatory journeys, the key is to escape isolation. Chapter 16: Maintaining Community Through Ritual ================================================ Any community that begins with a mission statement and a set of bylaws, any group that believes that it has an identity and purpose before it has ever even asked anyone to join, will fall short of serving the true needs of each of its individuals. Any group that demands that its members follow a pre-existing set of rules and bylaws can therefore never be a true community. The character of any true community can be seen only when each of its members has been awakened fully and allowed to reveal her or his innate gifts and genuine self. The sum of all these unique identities then becomes the character and identity of the community. A healthy community not only supports diversity, it requires diversity. In the West people usually translate the problem into some type of either/or duality, where someone is right and someone [else] is wrong, someone is a winner and someone [else] is a loser. Conflict becomes an opportunity for instant polarization. Wherever polarity exists, there is a state of competitiveness that does not serve to meet the needs in a community, since it tends to separate rather than unite. Indigenous societies conceded the existence of conflict but view it as something of importance and of interest to the community. The conflict is some sort of message to the entire community--but expressed through the individuals embroiled in the conflict. Conflict becomes an occasion for people to enter into a ritual intimacy. Real friction is aimed at deepening the communal sense. There are dire consequences in an indigenous society when problems that are intended for a collective solution are held personal and private. When an individual nurtures a problem... that person carries the family conflict out into the community, where he or she is likely to continue the conflict with others. The indigenous alternative offers an opportunity. In it accountability means something like a deepening of the connection with the thing or person you wronged. If you cause harm to someone, accountability means doing something that brings you close to the person on a regular basis for as long as you live. I am deliberately trying to stress here the necessity of ritualizing conflict. It is acceptable and proper for individuals to have conflicts with others, as long as their arguments are voiced within a space that is considered sacred. This space in a village culture is maintained by an elder who mediates. The Dagara creation story says that the planet we are on is a frozen extension of a much brighter and more harmonious spiritual world. If we don't maintain this world, something [bad] will happen to the Other World. Our relationship with the Spirit World is a two-way stream, and we need to fine-tune and maintain the lines of communication between the two worlds. The wisdom of the Spirit World offers us guidance, understanding, and healing. Our purpose in this world is linked to a job that returns critical material into the spiritual world. ... this is why when we come here we are not at peace until we find ourselves useful, wanted, and needed. We do not come to this world on vacation. We come here for service, and we have to remember what service is. author: Somé, Malidoma Patrice, 1956- detail: LOC: BL2480.D3 S65 tags: book,non-fiction,ritual,spirit title: The Healing Wisdom of Africa Tags ==== book non-fiction ritual spirit