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Jaguar Eating Ayahuasca

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colonos

Matrice Périnatale
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12/9/08
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Some thoughts on that issue here:
http://colonos.wordpress.com/2008/10/09 ... -to-purge/ - with a video embedded.

Plain text pasted here:

Video: Jaguar Eating Ayahuasca: simply to purge?

A video, embedded below, is circulating the ayahuasca surfers’ realm. It shows, whether true or not, a jaguar feeding on the ayahuasca vine. The jaguar is a very centrally important figure in the cosmovision of many Amazonian ayahuasca cultures, the observations of which continue to spawn many speculations about the various practices and myths around the jaguar (and ayahuasca).

A very early observation states that:

“Ingestion of Ayahuasca usually induces nausea, dizziness, vomiting, and leads to either an euphoric or an aggressive state. Frequently the Indian sees overpowering attacks of huge snakes or jaguars. These animals often humiliate him because he is a mere man. The repetitiveness with which snakes and jaguars occur in Ayahuasca visions has intrigues psychologists. It is understandable that these animals play such a role, since they are the only beings respected and feared by the Indians of the tropical forest; because of their power and stealth, they have assumed a place of primacy in aboriginal religious beliefs.

In many tribes, the shaman becomes a feline during the intoxication, exercising his powers as a cat. Yekwana medicine men mimic the roars of jaguars. Tukano Ayahuasca-takers may experience nightmares of jaguar jaws swallowing them or huge snakes approaching and coiling around their bodies … shamans of the Conibo-Shipibo tribe acquire great snakes as personal possessions to defend themselves in supernatural battles against other powerful shamans.

The drug may be the shaman’s tool to diagnose illness or to ward off impending disaster, to guess the wiles of an enemy, to prophesy the future. But it is more than the shaman’s tool. It enters into almost all aspects of the life of the people who use it, to an extent equalled by hardly any other hallucinogen. Partakers, shamans or not, see all the gods, the first human beings, and animals, and come to understand the establishment of their social order.
 
Interesting reading moment for me.

I came to think of my dogs who ate alot of grass when they had some kind of belly trouble,then later they would throw up on the floor
and i guess alot of bad goo followed their purge.

(this was outdoor wild growing casual green grass,not marihuana if you thought..so.


They would pick a nice fresh patch,and then start gobbling alot of grass
and be like totally out of it while they where on it.
I remember watching them,and thinking they mimiced the cows to feed
but got the message when they started puking.
God it smelled from that.

The first shamans where the animals!
 
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