Excerpt
andlt;Bandgt;INTRODUCTION andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Amazonian Vine of Visionsandlt;/Bandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Ralph Metzner, Ph.D. andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;andlt;Iandgt;Ayahuascaandlt;/Iandgt; is an hallucinogenic Amazonian plant concoction that has been used by native Indian and mestizo shamans in Peru, Colombia, and Ecuador for healing and divination for hundreds, perhaps thousands, of years. It is known by various names in the different tribes, including andlt;Iandgt;caapiandlt;/Iandgt;, andlt;Iandgt;natandeacute;maandlt;/Iandgt;, andlt;Iandgt;mihiandlt;/Iandgt;, and andlt;Iandgt;yagandeacute;andlt;/Iandgt;. The name andlt;Iandgt;ayahuascaandlt;/Iandgt; is from Quechua, a South American Indian language:andlt;Iandgt; huascaandlt;/Iandgt; means andldquo;vineandrdquo; or andldquo;lianaandrdquo; and andlt;Iandgt;ayaandlt;/Iandgt; means andldquo;soulsandrdquo; or andldquo;dead peopleandrdquo; or andldquo;spirits.andrdquo; Thus andldquo;vine of the dead,andrdquo; andldquo;vine of the souls,andrdquo; or andldquo;vine of the spiritsandrdquo; would all be appropriate English translations. It is however slightly misleading as a name, since the vine andlt;Iandgt;Banisteriopsis caapiandlt;/Iandgt; is only one of two essential ingredients in the hallucinogenic brew, the other one being the leafy plant andlt;Iandgt;Psychotria viridisandlt;/Iandgt;, which contains the powerful psychoactive dimethyltryptamine (DMT). It is the DMT, derivatives of which are also present in various other natural hallucinogens, including the magic mushroom of Mexico, that provides visionary experiences and thus access to the realm of spirits and the souls of deceased ancestors. DMT is not orally active but is metabolized by the stomach enzyme monoamine oxidase (MAO). Certain chemicals in the vine inhibit the action of MAO and are therefore referred to as MAO-inhibitors: their presence in the brew makes the psychoactive principle available and allows it to circulate through the bloodstream into the brain, where it triggers the visionary access to otherworldly realms and beings. The details of this remarkably sophisticated indigenous psychoactive drug delivery system, and the history of its discovery by science, will be described and explored in this volume. andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;As a plant drug or medicine, ayahuasca is one of a group of similar substances that defy classification: they include psilocybin derived from the Aztec sacred mushroom andlt;Iandgt;teonanandaacute;catlandlt;/Iandgt;, mescaline derived from the Mexican and North American peyote cactus, DMT and various chemical relatives derived from South American snuff powders known as andlt;Iandgt;epenaandlt;/Iandgt; or andlt;Iandgt;cohobaandlt;/Iandgt;, the infamous LSD derived from the ergot fungus that grows on grains, ibogaine derived from the root of the African andlt;Iandgt;Tabernanthe ibogaandlt;/Iandgt; tree, and many others. As plant extracts or synthesized drugs, these substances have been the subject of a large variety of scientific research approaches over the past fifty years, particularly as to their potential applications in psychotherapy, in the expansion of consciousness for the enhancement of creativity, and as amplifiers of spiritual exploration. They have been called andlt;Iandgt;psychotomimeticandlt;/Iandgt; (andldquo;madness mimickingandrdquo;), andlt;Iandgt;psycholytic andlt;/Iandgt;(andldquo;psyche looseningandrdquo;), andlt;Iandgt;psychedelicandlt;/Iandgt; (andldquo;mind manifestingandrdquo;), andlt;Iandgt;hallucinogenicandlt;/Iandgt; (andldquo;vision inducingandrdquo;), and andlt;Iandgt;entheogenicandlt;/Iandgt; (andldquo;connecting to the sacred withinandrdquo;). The different terms reflect the widely differing attitudes and intentions, the varying andlt;Iandgt;set andlt;/Iandgt;andandlt;Iandgt; settingandlt;/Iandgt; with which these substances have been approached. We will be describing the Western scientific psychological and psychiatric approaches to ayahuasca in this book also. andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;The concepts of andlt;Iandgt;shamanandlt;/Iandgt; and andlt;Iandgt;shamanismandlt;/Iandgt; are not peculiar to South America; the terms themselves are derived from a Siberian language. In recent years they have come to be used for any practice of healing and divination that involves the purposive induction of an altered state of consciousness, called the andldquo;shamanic journey,andrdquo; in which the shaman enters into andldquo;nonordinary realityandrdquo; and seeks knowledge and healing power from spirit beings in those worlds. The two most widespread shamanic techniques for entering into this altered state are rhythmic drumming, practiced more in the Northern Hemisphere (Asia, America, and Europe), and hallucinogenic plants or fungi, practiced more in the tropics and particularly in Central and South America. Ayahuasca is widely recognized by anthropologists as being probably the most powerful and most widespread shamanic hallucinogen. In the tribal societies where these plants and plant preparations are used, they are regarded as embodiments of conscious intelligent beings that only become visible in special states of consciousness, and who can function as spiritual teachers and sources of healing power and knowledge. The plants are referred to as andldquo;medicines,andrdquo; a term that means more than a drug: something like a healing power or energy that can be associated with a plant, a person, an animal, even a place. They are also referred to as andldquo;plant teachers,andrdquo; and there are still extant traditions of many-years-long initiations and trainings in the use of these medicines. andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;Many Western-trained physicians and psychologists have acknowledged that these substances can afford access to spiritual or transpersonal dimensions of consciousness, even mystical experiences indistiguishable from classic religious mysticism, whether Eastern or Western. The new term andlt;Iandgt;entheogenandlt;/Iandgt; attempts to recognize this element of access to sacred dimensions and states. andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;In several Brazilian churches using ayahuasca, we have seen the incorporation of an entheogenic or hallucinogenic plant extract as a sacrament--developing both syncretic and highly original forms of religious ceremony. These churches have thousands of followers, both in South America and in North America and Europe, and they are growing in numbers and influence. So here we have a substance that has profoundly affected the transformation of individuals now beginning to bring about something like a cultural transformation movement. These facets of the ayahuasca story will also be explored in this book. andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt;As hundreds, perhaps thousands, of Westerners and Northerners have participated in shamanic practices involving ayahuasca (as well as other medicines and nondrug practices) and joined the ceremonies of the various ayahuasca churches, it has become clear that there is a profound discontinuity in fundamental worldview and values of traditional shamanistic societies and practitioners. A powerful resurgence of respectful and reverential attitudes toward the living Earth and all its creatures seems to be a natural consequence of explorations with visionary plant teachers. As such, this revival of entheogenic shamanism can be seen as part of a worldwide response to the degradation of ecosystems and the biosphere--a response that includes movements such as deep ecology, ecofeminism, bioregionalism, ecopsychology, herbal and natural medicine, organic farming, and others. In each of these movements there is a new awareness, or rather a revival of ancient awareness, of the organic and spiritual interconnectedness of all life on this planet.