Shamanic Healing Quest
An injured woman seeks relief from the pain that gnaws at her spirit
by Maryam Henein
Whole Life Times, December 2003
Sundancer Lone Eagle "walks the Lakota Way."
With eyes closed, I knelt before African healer
Mandaza Kandemwa. He was holding my hands. Deena
Metzger, an author and healer, crouched to my right,
reaching across me to place her hands upon my left
femur.
Deena's assistant, Danelia Wild, sat to my left. She
was also touching me, as was Mark, the love of my
life. They addressed my pain, trying to heal me.
Instead of the usual aching, I could feel a pulsing of
energy surge through my leg. For more than nine
months, I've had pain in my shin and a deep bone hurt
due to a femur fracture which hasn't properly mended.
I was grateful for their time and their touch.
A year and a half ago, I stepped into a crosswalk
opposite the Bodhi Tree and was hit by a Ford Explorer
going 35 mph. I was hurled upon the hood before I
bounced off and struck the pavement. By the time the
driver realized he'd hit a human being, he'd dragged
me 49 feet into the adjacent crossing. I'd made skid
marks with my denim jeans, but somehow, the vehicle
hadn't rolled over me. I had survived.
I was rushed to Cedars Sinai Medical Center, where
they placed a metal shaft inside my broken thighbone.
I also suffered four broken ribs, a fractured vertebra
and tailbone, a torn rotary cuff and a heavily-bruised
spirit.
My healing journey has been a long one, full of
switchbacks and surprises. For some reason, I still
have a non-unionized break. It's taken me a long time
to arrive at a place of self-compassion. Now I know
that the process is even more important than the
destination.
While Cedars did a brilliant job of patching me up
during my week at the hospital, I quickly learned that
without medical insurance, they had no incentive to
tend to my lingering pain. I already owed them
$67,000. As a Canadian, I wasn't accustomed to the
notion that health is only for those with money.
I've gone to see three orthopedists since then.
They've all wanted to cut into me. One suggested I
remove the screw in my hip and place it higher up in
my buttock, with the hopes that it would force the
bone down (I felt like a piece of Ikea furniture). The
original surgeon claimed that the rod within the bone
was moving and suggested placing a bigger rod. The
third said I needed a bone graft and urged me to stop
doing yoga for fear I would bend the (titanium) rod.
There was no heart or tenderness in their approach,
and each visit left me feeling sad and hopeless. I
rejected all of their options and realized that
Western medicine did not, does not hold all the
answers for me. I've used my accident, which was
really no accident at all, as an opportunity to meet
different types of healers within my community:
acupuncturists, energy workers, massage therapists,
chiropractors, channelers - in the hopes that I could
experience healing energy.
When I was asked to write about the fourth annual
Gathering of the Shamans, I marveled at the
opportunity. The event, which is organized by the
nonprofit organization Journey to the H.E.A.R.T
(Healing Earth and All Who Reside There), brings
together shamans from around the world to share their
practices and join together in healing, explained
founder Kim Langbecker.
For months, I looked forward to having an experience
with these wise healers. I purposefully had no
expectations, but in my heart, I quietly held great
hope.
Circles
The four-day retreat, jam-packed with healing
ceremonies, yoga sessions, drumming, dream circles and
a sweat lodge, unfolded in the San Bernardino
Mountains near Big Bear in mid-September. The air was
crisp, and every so often a gentle breeze carried the
sweet scent of pine. There were finches and fat blue
jays, and a number of birds swooped down and ate out
of visitors' hands.
To my surprise, it was an intimate crowd of only about
80 people from different age groups and ethnic
backgrounds. I had assumed there would be hordes
lining up for the chance to meet these shamans who
are, in a sense, an endangered species.
The main event of each day was Dar, which means
"council" in the Shona language of Zimbabwe. The first
time, for instance, we gathered outside by candlelight
as the sun set behind the mountains, and formed a
circle; this shape, we were told, holds strength and
intelligence.
We called in the spirits by chanting and drumming and
feeling from our hearts. This creates a field of
knowing and remembering, said Deena, a 60-something
Jewish woman who resembles a Native American elder
with her wild gray hair and weathered face. Deena and
her husband, Michael Ortiz Hill, also an author and a
registered nurse, brought Dar to North America in
1997 after visiting Mandaza Kandemwa, a Bantu healer
of the Shona and Ndebele peoples, in Zimbabwe.
"Dar is for the sake of healing, but we don't presume
to say we know what healing is, how it occurs or even
how, always, to recognize it," Deena said. "Sometimes
one is the healer and sometimes one is desperate for
healing. Sometimes the two activities are one in the
moment. Healing is, thus, an interchange, the dynamic
of giving and receiving."
But this was not just a nice weekend to feed our
souls, stressed Deena.
"We live in times of fear and aggression, and this is
about getting as close as you can to the wisdom so you
can go back into the world to restore it," she said.
Some of the other guests: Sundancer Lone Eagle, who
receives visions from Grandfather Spirit and "walks
the Lakota Way," his wife Morning Dove, and Chief
Crazy Bull, a Lakota Medicine man and Sundancer.
Journey to the Heart had also invited Polarnaya Sova,
a Siberian shaman in America for the first time, and
Yuan Miao. Reared in the ancient ways of Tibetan
Buddhism, Miao has created a unique form of Tibetan
Yoga.
Although the traditions and rituals of the healers
varied, there was a thread that ran through each:
reverence and respect for the One Spirit that
permeates all life.
Besides the nightly Dar, we also held daily dream
circles. In Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, where Mandaza is from,
you begin your day by gathering to share dreams.
Council and dreams are channels between the world of
the living and the world of the invisibles, explained
Deena.
Interestingly, all the healers at the gathering placed
value on dreams. By studying our individual night
visions, we can identify patterns in the collective
consciousness.
"Dreams come in code. They are not always logical, but
they understand how spirit speaks. We should allow our
dreams to undo our Western-thinking minds," said
Deena.
During one of the circles, we started with a dream
about devastation and ended with one about creation,
going full circle. The main image in the first dream
was that of an elephant's shattered skull. Another
vision included a larger elephant with a tusk missing,
uprooting branches for a smaller one. The older
elephant transformed into a Mastodon.
Symbolically, these stoic creatures are said to teach
us about family. They are so closely bonded that they
have been seen grieving over the death of a herd mate.
By supporting and loving each other, our own ability
to flourish in the physical world is enhanced. This
became one of the central themes: the desire to honor
our elders and nurture our young. We concluded that
something in the world needs to change. We have to
save ourselves.
The Walrus
We all gathered around Mandaza, poolside. The Nganga,
(indigenous healer) attended the gathering last year,
and several of the organizers said I should not miss
his session.
In the late '60s, Mandaza was recruited against his
will into the British South African Police as a
consultant and ultimately a school administrator.
During his tenure, he was afflicted with severe "water
spirit disease," understood to be the call of the
ancestors to practice as a traditional healer. People
with water spirits, it was explained, often suffer
from excruciating empathy.
Eventually, Mandaza dreamed he was to be initiated by
an Ndebele Nganga, which seemed outrageous considering
the Ndebele have historically been enemies of his
tribe, the Shona. Shortly afterward, however, his job
transferred him to an Ndebele-speaking part of the
country where a stranger (a healer) ultimately took
him through the rites of initiation. This catapulted
him into the role of peacemaker.
Mandaza works with the Enjusu (water spirits) and
specializes in initiation and physical healing,
helping to remove the obstacles that stand between the
initiate and spirit ancestors.
Through Mandaza, we were told, the spirits would
deliver a special message to each and every one of us.
We would then be guided into the pool, which was
filled with about three feet of water, and submerge
ourselves three times. (Full immersion baptism was
practiced in Africa for 2,500 years. In the 1770s,
with the influx of slaves, the custom was
Christianized.)
As my turn approached, I was filled with fear and
excitement. What would he tell me? Could he possibly
take away my pain? I was already emotional because of
the energy around me. Tears are often contagious.
I sat barefoot before the regal Mandaza, who has coal
black skin and soothing water energy. I sensed a
Walrus.
Sometimes, I can see animal spirits in people. I saw
the Sea Lion in him. Later, while doing research, I
found out that symbolically, these mammals, who live
both on land and in water, possess a powerful psychic
touch; the ability to uncover unseen treasures in the
things around them.
"You dream of the water," he said to me in a
British-tinged accent.
I nodded.
"Yes. Thank you," he said. (Mandaza often says this
when he touches upon a truth.)
I do daydream of water, of the ocean in particular
because it has had a healing effect on my leg and my
spirit. I had recently returned from the beaches of
Otranto, located at the southern most-point of Italy
where the Adriatic meets the Ionian Sea. Those were
the waters that were currently on my mind.
"I don't have a drop of water in my natal chart and so
I long for it," I whispered.
"Yes, you are a water spirit, my dear. It is clear to
me."
In its absence is its presence, they say. Einstein,
for instance, had no air in his chart, and yet he
became a master of formulas and mental equations.
"When you go into the water, offer yourself to the
spirits, tell them, 'Here I am.' "
As he said this, he took a pine tree branch, dipped it
into a pail of water and flicked it over my head. The
droplets dripped down, and I shivered. He then pinched
some snuff from a pear-shaped wooden container and
placed it in my palm. To share snuff shows great
respect and is said to enhance the brooding presence
of the ancestors.
"You are going to have visionary dreams. You will be
what they refer to in the Bible as a prophet."
His words amazed me, but I was skeptical. And what
about my leg?
I inhaled the snuff and felt a jolting zing inside my
brain.
"I have a bone that is not mending properly. It's been
more than a year and I still have a lot of pain. Is
there anything I can do?"
"Wait."
He looked me deep in the eyes and let out one of his
heart-filled laughs.
Only one word and yet it was so poignant. I knew that
in this life, I was meant to learn patience. I hated
waiting.
Walrus-like, Mandaza uncovered a hidden treasure in
me.
We Are All Related
To my disappointment I couldn't attend the Inipi
ritual, commonly referred to as a "sweat lodge." Many
Native American tribes do not allow females to
participate during their moon cycle. According to
Chief Crazy Bull, women are very powerful during this
time - in fact, he told me, I was so powerful that I
could take all his powers away.
Native American mythology states that White Buffalo
Calf Woman brought Inipi (a Sioux word that means "to
purify") to the Lakota people. It is one of the most
fundamental ceremonies among the Native Americans of
the Northern Plains. The term "sweat lodge," Crazy
Bull explained, is a slang term, which shows profound
disregard for its true meaning. In the Inipi, which is
representative of the womb of Mother earth, you must
go within, into the darkness, to find the answers you
are seeking. Also, when you enter, you must crawl.
This is not only symbolic of a child in the mother's
womb, but also an act of humility by which we
acknowledge our nothingness before the Great Spirit
and the World of the Spirit we are about to enter. All
pride and ego must be checked outside.
There's a mischievousness to Crazy Bull. A scar
zig-zags across his face where he was struck by
lightning as a child. He is now a thunder dreamer.
Despite having to miss the Inipi, Chief Crazy Bull
still had a message for me. In private, I asked him
what he thought the common theme of the weekend had
been.
"Mitakuye Oyasin," he replied.
This is a primary teaching in the Lakota way; it
literally means "All my relations," or we are all
related.
"We must realize the importance of family. We must
create a fist of power because we all bleed the same
color. What we do to another, we do to ourselves."
His words reminded me of elephants.
I asked him about pain and healing. His reply: "I have
absolute belief in perfect harmony. We are always in
pain for something." Pain is constant, but it
encourages us to seek spiritual experience, he added.
I also asked whether he could offer any personal
advice regarding my healing journey. What he told me
was profound. I had to share the message with the
circle.
The White Eagle
At our last council meeting together, the shamans
invited us to communicate to the group the question we
would be mulling over after our departure.
One woman, with short-cropped hair and a round face,
said: "I want to bring this elevated sense of energy
back to the community. How do I do this? I am someone
who works behind the scenes. I take care of people's
homes and I want to leave something behind; something
more than just a clean mirror."
Her words were poignant.
When my spirit informed me that it was my turn, I
reached for the stick and trembled as I spoke.
"I am here this weekend as a journalist, but also as
someone who has pain. I was interviewing Crazy Bull
earlier and asked him, 'If I came to you to ease my
pain, what would you tell me?'"
"He said, 'Well, first I would ask you to give me four
reasons why you want to heal. Why should you heal?'
His words stumped me. Why did I want to heal? And are
my reasons too selfish? This is the question I will
ponder when I leave here."
Before I left, Deena invited me to her hilltop home in
Topanga Canyon where she and Michael would be holding
an African-style Dar the following week in honor of
Mandaza. The couple regularly host their own monthly
rendition of Dar on the first Sunday after each new
moon.
"And bring your four reasons," she added.
A couple of days before Dar, I had a dream: I was
looking up through trees at a triangle of blue sky.
There was a huge white bird. By the looks of his
wings, I concluded that it was an eagle. In my dream,
I felt a sense of awe. Wow. I've never heard of a
white eagle before.
And then I woke up.
Full Circle
As Deena touched my leg, I whispered my reasons to her
in no particular order:
I don't want to feel physical pain anymore. It gnaws
at my spirit. I want to put all my words, all the
things I claim I believe into action to help others
realize we are a crucial part of the equation in
healing ourselves; I want to knit the fracture that
resides in me physically, emotionally, spiritually and
mentally so I can feel whole.
She didn't say whether my answers were any good.
"Have you had any dreams?" Mandaza asked. I told him
about the bird.
"I have some other ones if you want to hear them?"
"No, this is the one I want," he responded firmly.
I had dreamt of Chapungu: the White Eagle; the
Peacemaker; one of the spirits Mandaza works with. I
had actually dreamt of something with a name.
"Like me, you are a wounded healer," he said.
Mandaza carries a pain for the world. A pain so deep
and ancient that it has manifested into the physical.
He has a mysterious ache on the right side of his
torso. It is a wound that does not heal, a wound that
constantly reminds.
I began to cry. Mandaza reminded me of Chiron in Greek
mythology. I didn't want to remain in pain like him, I
decided. I've grieved for so long that I became the
very thing I was grieving. And yet I never wanted to
forget what I had gone through.
Strangely, as I wept, I also thought about a
20-year-old Portuguese girl I had briefly met in
Italy. Since my accident, I have attracted several
people with metal in their flesh - my very own
titanium club.
She had fallen several feet and crushed her ankle. My
pain seemed to soothe her. She no longer felt alone.
As I sat before Mandaza, I realized that if I could
embrace my pain, listen to it and share it with
others, then perhaps I could soothe souls. Just one
would be enough. And then, all this pain would have
been worth it.
It's a circle; you have to believe that you can heal.
And as you heal, you can heal others. And by healing
others, you continue to heal. We should learn from the
elephants. Because we are all related. Mitakuye
Oyasin.
Maryam Henein is a freelance journalist who is working
on her first novel.
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