5 Types of Imbalance: A Guide to Illness from a Shamanic Perspective

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October 10, 2019

Being human means we suffer (yes, I took that little gem from the Buddhists). Our bodies are susceptible to injury and illness, and our minds struggle with emotional difficulties, addiction, and more.

You probably have a pretty good idea of what’s behind your challenges—from viruses and bacteria, to brain chemistry and the microbiome, to emotional trauma and straight up injury.

While these factors are important to understand and work with, from a shamanic perspective they paint an incomplete picture.

Shamanism holds that everything originates in the unseen world before it manifests physically—and that includes illness and disease. By tending to the spiritual and energetic roots of illness in addition to whatever physical, mental, and emotional support is needed, we can heal more fully.

Causes of Illness from a Shamanic Perspective

On a basic level, shamanism views illness as an energetic imbalance of some sort—either something is there that shouldn’t be, or something should be there that isn’t.

That said, there are a few areas of imbalance that are helpful to understand:

Power Loss

In shamanic terminology, the idea of “power” could be likened to life force, vitality, or chi. The late shamanic teacher and physicist Claude Poncelet also defined it as “the ability to transform energy,” which makes sense—when you are fully empowered, you are more capable of creating the changes you want to see.

There are many reasons we lose our power—it seems to be part of the human condition. A few things that appear to be connected to power loss are: having our boundaries violated, sacrificing our own integrity to get certain needs met, internalizing limiting beliefs about ourselves, and anything that disconnects us from our true divine nature. In some traditions, there’s even the act of stealing power.

How do you know if you have power loss? This often shows up as a lack of vitality or zest for life. If you seem unable to make positive changes or take action on your dreams, power loss could be at play. Other common symptoms of power loss include chronic illness, depression, fatigue, low self-esteem, poor boundaries, suicidal feelings, or ongoing misfortunes.

Soul Loss

This might sound scary, but it’s actually very common from a shamanic perspective. Soul loss is when a part of your soul’s essence leaves, usually due to some sort of emotional or physical trauma. This can be from a sudden shock, such as a car accident, or an ongoing difficulty, such as an unhealthy relationship.

When part of your soul essence leaves, it does so to protect itself—soul loss is a survival mechanism. And not to worry, your soul essence is never fully gone and is usually comfortably waiting in the unseen world for an opportunity to return.

How do you know if you have soul loss? If you’ve ever experienced an injury or trauma and never quite felt the same again—even after your physical symptoms healed—there could be soul loss. Other symptoms include addiction, PTSD, depression, a weakened immune system, dissociation, grief, or, in extreme cases, coma.

Entanglement

Entanglement is often the result of power or soul loss. It occurs when we take on energy that isn’t our own—this may come in the form of intrusions, attachments, cords, or even possessions. I’ll go into more detail about what all these terms mean in future posts. For now, just know that this is all totally natural, even common, and very fixable with shamanic healing.

Symptoms of entanglement vary widely. You might have localized pain with an intrusion or enmeshed relationships that are sustained with energetic cords between you and another person.

Now, I know “possession” sounds intimidating, and it kind of is. Yet, in my own healing journey, working with possessions has been one of the most powerful practices I’ve experienced. Basically, some sort of spirit becomes enmeshed in your field with varying degrees of influence on your personality and life. It is an amazingly healing process to decouple from this outside influence and reclaim your sovereignty through shamanic healing.

Lineage Patterns

Much of what we experience has actually been passed down through our lineages. This is a complicated subject, but in short, I work with three main types of lineage healing:

  • Blood lines—this is the lineage held in your DNA, your genetic makeup
  • Milk lines—similar to blood lineages, milk lines incorporate other influential relationships, such as adoptive or step parents and important caretakers
  • Light lines—this is your own spiritual lineage, comprised of the many lives you’ve lived and all the vows, beliefs, influences, and experiences you carry from them

Shamanic work can help you uncover not only unhealthy patterns and curses, but also the hidden gifts within your lineages. It can also help you heal ancestral trauma in ways that serve generations to come.

Disconnection from the Natural World

For most of human history, our daily survival depended upon being in right relationship with the natural world. We recognized the spirit in birds and trees and rocks and rivers—in Mother Earth herself. We honored the sun, stars, and moon.

This need for intimacy with the natural world runs deep in our blood, yet we’ve largely forgotten how to nurture this relationship. As a result, we’re collectively becoming more and more out of balance with our environment.

The effects of this on our planet are clear—I won’t go into a laundry list of environmental destruction here. But what does this mean for us? What soul-level illness might be occurring because we’re missing out on some of the most important relationships in our lives?

Shamanism doesn’t ask that we all go live off the grid (and I’m in no hurry to give up my Netflix subscription!). But it does recognize that healing our relationship with nature is essential to the survival of our species and the planet. As above, so below; as within, so without.

Final Thoughts

So, are you worried you might have soul loss and intrusions and—gulp—even a possession?

I can’t emphasize enough how common and normal all of this is. Shamanic healing has been around for thousands of years, and as my own teachers say, it wouldn’t have lasted this long if it didn’t work. The reason we’re discussing these causes of illnesses is so that we can tend to them and heal.

Also, please note that this information is not intended to define or diagnose anything you’re experiencing. Your “symptoms” could be related to something that would completely surprise your human mind. And in truth, these areas overlap quite a bit (and since when has the spirit world been a fan of categories anyway?).

If you’d like to learn more about shamanism and shamanic healing, check out some of my favorite Sounds True resources—I’d be recommending these even if I didn’t work here. 🙂


Juniper Stokes is a shamanic practitioner, clinical aromatherapist, and certified yoga and pranayama instructor. When she’s not in her apothecary or working with clients, you can find her writing behind the scenes at Sounds True, backpacking in the Colorado mountains, and spending quality time with her loving man and two feline familiars. Learn more at alchemessence.com.

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What Does It Mean? A 4-Step Guide for Understanding Yo...

How often have you had an unusual encounter with an animal and immediately wondered, “What does it mean?” 

Perhaps you saw an owl in daylight. Or you kept noticing images of elephants everywhere. Or maybe a huge spider appeared right in front of you on the sidewalk. 

If you’re like many shamanically-inclined folks, the first thing you’ll want to do in these situations is google what that animal “means”. 

I understand the temptation, but please—hold off!

The universe and spirit have many ways of communicating with us, including animal messengers. And the universe does not play by a set of pre-existing rules. The messages each animal carries will be unique to you, and no book or website can tell you the full meaning of your encounter. 

The same is true of power animals—spiritual helpers in animal form who share their gifts and medicine with us. While a bit of research can certainly be helpful, if you dive right in to other people’s interpretations, you’ll be more likely to miss important elements of your personal relationship with your power animal.

Animal messenger or “normal animal doing normal things”?

I can hear it now . . . Sometimes a bird is just a bird. It doesn’t have to mean anything.

That’s true. Not everything has to mean something. 

But I have to be honest—one of my biggest pet peeves in spiritual communities is dismissing others’ experiences in this way. 

Because the truth is, the universe is always communicating with us. Who are you to say what does or doesn’t have meaning for another person?

The great advaita scholar Richard Miller, PhD, once spoke to this in a training while teaching us about the art of welcoming. As he explained, it’s too exhausting to keep trying to figure out which parts of life are trying to tell us something and which parts are so-called “normal life”, so he has the practice of “welcoming everything as a messenger”. 

This practice of welcoming is a beautiful way to fall deeper into relationship with all of life. Every sensation, emotion, encounter, or insight can provide an opportunity to open to and learn from spirit.

If this sounds overwhelming, not to worry. This doesn’t mean you need to go through life looking at every little thing as a symbol to decipher or every animal as a messenger bearing life-altering news. Instead, it means that spiritual guidance is always available to us. To access this wisdom:

  • Relax. You don’t need to overwhelm yourself by seeing every little thing that happens as a critical message. You will notice what you need to notice.  
  • If something does catch your attention, even if it’s something very common and “normal”, trust your intuition and recognize that you are noticing it for a reason.
  • You can also set an intention to receive a message from a spirit via the natural world. Bring your awareness into your heart, send your request to spirit, and then open your awareness, letting your attention wander and draw you to your answers.
  • Finally, once something does call your awareness, use the process outlined below to discover the meaning and messages it holds for you.

When to Pay Attention

Many teachers share that for an animal to actually mean something, rather than be a simple sighting, it must show itself to you four times. For example, let’s say you see a hawk on a walk, then on TV, then hear the word “hawk” in a conversation, and then find a hawk feather.

Still others will note that if an animal is behaving in an unusual way, it could very well carry a message for you.

If either of these happen, definitely pay attention.

And if you only see a normal animal doing normal things, but feel that there is a message for you, trust that too.

Maybe the Message is Love

Sometimes when our attention is drawn to something in nature—a beautiful flower, an animal sighting, or an unusual cloud—we’re receiving a blessing. In this case, you don’t necessarily need to go through the process below. Simply receive your hello from spirit and know that the “message” is love. 

Your 4-Step Guide

So, when you encounter an animal—whether a messenger in nature or an actual power animal—what are you to do? How do you figure out what the message is? How do you know what gifts your power animal carries?

Here’s the process I recommend for understanding your animal messengers and power animals. This is based on years of working with my own animal spirit guides and those of my clients.

Step 1

Journey to the spirit of the animal and ask them to teach you about themselves and your relationship. (If you don’t have a journey practice, Sandra Ingerman’s course, Experiencing the Shamanic Journey, offers a wonderful introduction to the practice.)

If the animal in question is one you’ve encountered in ordinary reality, you might like to ask:

  • Are you here to share a message with me, or are you appearing to bring my awareness to a new power animal relationship? Or both?
  • What is the message you bring me?

If you’ve received a power animal, whether from a power animal retrieval or another means, you might like to explore some or all of the following questions:

  • What medicine do you carry? 
  • What gifts would you like to share with me? 
  • How may I carry your medicine? 
  • What areas of life can you help me with?
  • Why are you appearing in my life now?
  • Are you a new power animal, or have you been with me for sometime?
  • May I have an attunement to your energy?
  • What name may I call you by?
  • How may I nurture our relationship?

Step 2

After you’ve done your journey or meditation, think about any pre-existing ideas or knowledge you already have about this animal. This process can provide many clues as to how the animal will support you.

Ask yourself:

  • What is my immediate reaction to this animal? Am I excited, fearful, surprised?
  • What symbology or associations do I think of first? 
  • Are there any stories or myths that come to mind?
  • What character traits do I personally connect with this animal?

Then, reflect on what your answers might mean for either a message or the unique gifts a power animal might share with you.

Step 3 

Once you’ve finished this personal exploration, it’s time to learn more about your animal in ordinary reality. Try to find out:

    • What do they eat?
    • Where do they live?
    • What is their social nature? Family dynamics?
    • What unique features stand out about this animal? 
    • When are they most active? Quietest?
    • What are their biggest threats? 
    • What do you find most fascinating about this animal?

Ask yourself how the following information might help you understand either the message or your power animal’s gifts. 

Step 4

Finally, go ahead and look up existing ideas about your power animal might mean. Even though we don’t want to fill our minds with other people’s and cultures’ ideas first, this information can be helpful. 

As you explore, pay attention to a few things:

  • What feels right and relevant? Where do you get an immediate hit or “ah-ha” moment?
  • What doesn’t feel right or relevant? Not everything you read will relate your personal relationship.
  • Does the animal have any particular meanings within your own ancestry? What about within other cultures you feel especially connected to?*

*Make sure to explore a variety of cultural mythologies at this stage, as each might have quite different interpretations of your animal. For example: In North America, many indegenous tribes associate the owl with death. Yet in Greek and Roman mythology, the owl was a bearer of wisdom. Though in China the owl was viewed as an ominous creature, the Japanese considered the owl to be a sign of good fortune. 

At this stage, I’ll encourage you to avoid the spirit guide websites out there—in my experience, many of them seem to exist just for profit and do not have the depth of meaning you can find in a book, such as Ted Andrew’s Animal Speak, Jamie Sam’s Medicine Cards, or Sounds True’s own The Book of Beasties by Sarah Seidelman. If you’re looking online, visiting sites that detail mythological or symbolic associations from more academic perspectives can be useful.

Receiving messages from spirit through the natural world is a gift that has been bestowed on humanity since the beginning of our species on this planet. Be gentle with yourself as you learn to read the signs and deepen your relationship with the natural world. It is your birthright. 

And, while the steps outlined here can initiate your journey into understanding your power animal, getting to know your power animal and its gifts is a lifelong journey. Revisit each of these steps often, and make sure to nurture your relationship with your power animal just as you would with a beloved friend.

If you’d like help discovering who your power animal is, be sure to check out Sandra Ingerman’s 6-week course, Experiencing the Shamanic Journey, which begins on September 8, 2020.

In this course, you’ll learn how to take a shamanic journey and meet one of your power animals! 

You can learn more about this wonderful course with Sandra here.

Juniper Stokes is an intuitive healer and spiritual teacher. She helps others activate and tune into their own intuition, healing abilities, and connection with spirit through private sessions, classes, and workshops. (And yes, this includes Power Animal Readings.) In touch with the spirit realms from a young age, Juniper has trained in wide variety of healing traditions, including Sandra Ingerman’s Two Year Shamanic Teacher Training program and Samahita’s Pranayama Teacher Training, to name a few. Juniper also writes behind the scenes at Sounds True and regularly leads guided shamanic journeys for Sounds True’s Shamanic Path Facebook page, which currently has nearly 30k members. In addition to her spiritual teaching and healing, Juniper is a clinical aromatherapist, herbalist, and flower essence practitioner. Her healing products, including a line of spiritually-infused botanical perfumes, will soon be available in the Alchemessence Apothecary.

5 Types of Imbalance: A Guide to Illness from a Shaman...

Shamanism views illness as an energetic imbalance of some sort—either something is there that shouldn’t be, or something should be there that isn’t.

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Dreams have long stirred human curiosity. Some feel fleeting and fragmented. Others arrive with striking clarity, emotion, or insight that lingers long after waking. Across cultures and generations, people have sensed that the dream state is more than random mental activity. It can feel like a living landscape, one that invites participation. Active dreaming speaks to this invitation. It is the practice of entering our dreams with awareness and intention, learning how to navigate the inner worlds that unfold each night.

Since 1985, we have been dedicated to sharing living spiritual wisdom in the authentic voices of the teachers themselves. From audio programs and books to immersive trainings and podcasts, our work preserves the energetic transmission of transformative teachings. Through conversations with visionary leaders in meditation, psychology, and contemplative traditions, we have witnessed a deep recognition that dreaming is not peripheral to awakening. It is woven into the path itself.

Here, we will discuss active dreaming, how it relates to lucid dreaming and shamanic dreaming, and how conscious dream navigation expands our understanding of the multiverse within awareness.

Key Takeaways:

  • Awareness in Sleep: Active dreaming builds conscious presence within the dream state, strengthening clarity and intentional participation.
  • Multidimensional Consciousness: The lucid dreaming multiverse reflects layered dimensions of awareness accessible through practice.
  • Integration into Life: Dream navigation supports emotional insight, creativity, and continuity between waking and dreaming states.

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What Is Active Dreaming and How Does It Relate to Conscious Dreaming?

Have you ever sensed that a dream was more than random imagery? That it carried presence, intelligence, or even invitation?

Active dreaming is the practice of engaging the dream world consciously and creatively. Rather than analyzing dreams only after we wake, we enter into a relationship with them. We respond, ask questions, and participate.

This approach overlaps with conscious dreaming, which refers to bringing awareness into the dream state. While lucid dreaming emphasizes recognizing that you are dreaming, active dreaming goes further. It invites dialogue with dream figures, landscapes, and symbols. The dream becomes a living field of experience rather than a puzzle to decode.

In many spiritual traditions, dreams are understood as experiences in subtle realms of reality. Active dreaming helps us move from passive observer to active participant. It is the foundation for dream navigation and for understanding what some describe as a multiverse of awareness within our own consciousness.

The Lucid Dreaming Multiverse: Expanding Our Understanding of Reality

What if the dream state opens into multiple layers of reality? The lucid dreaming multiverse points to the idea that consciousness is not limited to one world but can move through many dimensions of experience.

Lucidity as a Gateway

Lucid dreaming begins with recognition. You realize you are dreaming while the dream continues. That awareness creates stability and choice. The environment becomes responsive rather than fixed. Through practices taught in The Lucid Dreaming Training Program, we can strengthen recall, increase clarity, and remain present in the dream state. Lucidity becomes the doorway through which deeper exploration is possible.

Layers of Reality Within the Dream State

In a single night, we may move through shifting identities, symbolic landscapes, and encounters that feel deeply real. Active dreaming treats these not as random images but as meaningful dimensions of consciousness.

By bringing conscious dreaming into these experiences, we begin to sense the vastness within awareness itself. The multiverse is not somewhere else. It unfolds within the field of our own mind.

Dream Navigation: Moving Intentionally Through Inner and Outer Worlds

If dreams open into multiple dimensions of awareness, dream navigation is how we move through them with intention. It is the practice of orienting ourselves within the dream and choosing how to engage.

Orienting Within the Dream

Once awareness arises, we pause and observe. Where am I? What is unfolding? This simple reflection creates stability. The dream becomes a space we can explore rather than endure. Self-Hypnosis Online Course supports this kind of intentional inner orientation, training the mind to enter receptive states with clarity and calm — a foundation that translates naturally into conscious dream navigation.

Integrating Inner and Outer Worlds

Active dreaming does not end when we wake. Through approaches like Dreamtending, we continue the dialogue with dream images, allowing insight to deepen over time.

Dream navigation becomes a way of living, recognizing that inner and outer worlds are in constant conversation.

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Shamanic Dreaming as a Pathway to Active Dreaming

Long before modern language around lucid dreaming emerged, shamanic dreaming offered a map of the inner worlds. In many indigenous traditions, dreams are understood as journeys into subtle realms where healing, guidance, and insight are available.

The Shamanic View of the Dream World

Shamanic dreaming treats the dream state as a real experience. The dreamer may travel, meet teachers, or retrieve wisdom for the community. These journeys are intentional and relational, not accidental.

This perspective aligns naturally with active dreaming. Both approaches recognize that consciousness can move beyond ordinary perception and engage directly with symbolic and spiritual dimensions.

From Journeying to Conscious Participation

In active dreaming, we cultivate the same respect and intentionality found in shamanic traditions. We enter the dream with curiosity. We listen. We respond. Revolutionary Discoveries from Non-Ordinary Realities illuminates how these dream-state encounters connect to broader dimensions of consciousness, affirming that the dream state is a living field for transformation rather than a private fantasy.

Conscious Dreaming Practices for Multiverse Awareness

If the dream state opens into layered dimensions of awareness, how do we cultivate the stability to move through them? Conscious dreaming develops through steady, grounded practice. These approaches strengthen clarity, recall, and intentional presence within the lucid dreaming multiverse.

Core Practices That Support Conscious Dreaming

  • Strengthen dream recall by journaling immediately upon waking. This signals to the mind that dreams matter and builds continuity of awareness.
  • Set clear intentions before sleep. A simple inward statement, such as “I will remain aware in my dreams,” helps orient consciousness.
  • Practice reality reflection during the day. Pausing to question, “Am I dreaming?” builds the habit of awareness that can carry into sleep.
  • Meditate regularly. A steady meditation practice supports clarity and reduces mental fragmentation in both waking and dreaming states.
  • Reenter meaningful dreams through imagination while awake. This deepens dream navigation and keeps the dialogue alive.

Through consistent practice, conscious dreaming becomes less about control and more about relationship. Awareness stabilizes. The multiverse within consciousness begins to feel accessible, not abstract. Active dreaming then unfolds naturally as a lived experience rather than a concept.

The Role of Imagination in Dream Navigation and Active Dreaming

Imagination is often dismissed as fantasy, yet in active dreaming it becomes a bridge between worlds. It allows us to reenter dreams, deepen their meaning, and remain in relationship with their images.

In dream navigation, imagination acts as a compass, strengthening the connection between waking and dreaming awareness. Within the lucid dreaming multiverse, it becomes a mode of perception, helping us move between layers of experience with flexibility and presence. Active dreaming is not an escape from reality but an expansion of how we participate in it.

Integrating Lucid Dreaming Multiverse Experiences into Daily Life

Experiences in the lucid dreaming multiverse gain depth when they inform how we live. Active dreaming is not confined to the night. Its insights are meant to be embodied.

Integration begins with simple reflection. After a conscious dreaming experience, we ask what qualities were present and how they can be practiced during the day. Courage, compassion, or clarity in a dream can become intentional actions in waking life. The Remote Viewing Online Training Course offers a complementary discipline here, sharpening perceptual awareness and discernment in ways that support the grounded integration of expanded inner experiences.

Rather than interpreting dreams literally, we listen for what resonates. Over time, awareness feels more continuous. The boundary between dreaming and waking softens, and active dreaming becomes a grounded spiritual practice woven into everyday reality.

The Spiritual Roots of Shamanic Dreaming and Conscious Dreaming

Active dreaming is rooted in ancient traditions that honored the dream state as sacred. Across cultures, shamanic dreaming was practiced to access guidance, healing, and insight beyond ordinary awareness.

In these traditions, the dreamer was a traveler, cultivating conscious dreaming through intention and discipline. Dreams were approached as real encounters with personal and collective wisdom.

Active dreaming carries this lineage forward, affirming that consciousness is multidimensional and that dream navigation can be a path of awakening. Over time, lucid dreaming, shamanic dreaming, and conscious dreaming converge into a deeper, continuous relationship with awareness across waking and dreaming life.

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Final Thoughts

Active dreaming invites us into a living relationship with the dream world. Through lucid dreaming, shamanic dreaming, and steady conscious practice, we begin to sense the multidimensional nature of awareness itself.

The multiverse is not somewhere far away. It unfolds within consciousness, night after night. As we learn the art of dream navigation, we participate more fully in both our inner and outer worlds, grounded, curious, and awake.

Frequently Asked Questions About Active Dreaming: How to Consciously Navigate the Multiverse

What makes active dreaming different from regular dreaming?

Active dreaming involves intentional engagement with the dream state. Instead of passively experiencing dreams, the dreamer cultivates awareness and participation, both during sleep and upon waking reflection.

Is active dreaming the same as lucid dreaming?

Lucid dreaming is one component of active dreaming. Lucidity refers to knowing you are dreaming while the dream continues. Active dreaming includes lucidity but also emphasizes dialogue, integration, and an ongoing relationship with dream imagery.

Can anyone learn active dreaming?

Yes. Active dreaming is a trainable skill. With consistent practices such as intention setting, meditation, and dream recall, most people can strengthen their capacity for conscious awareness in dreams.

Does active dreaming require a spiritual belief system?

No specific belief system is required. While active dreaming has roots in spiritual traditions, it can be approached psychologically, creatively, or contemplatively. The practice adapts to the framework of the individual.

How does active dreaming relate to the idea of a multiverse?

In this context, the multiverse refers to the layered nature of consciousness. Active dreaming allows individuals to experience multiple dimensions of awareness within the dream state, expanding their sense of reality.

Is active dreaming safe?

For most people, yes. It is a practice of awareness rather than control. Those with certain mental health conditions should approach intensive dream practices with professional guidance, but for many, it supports insight and emotional integration.

How long does it take to become proficient in conscious dreaming?

Progress varies. Some people experience lucidity quickly, while others build skill gradually. Consistency matters more than speed. Even small increases in dream awareness can be meaningful.

Can active dreaming support creativity?

Yes. Many artists, writers, and innovators draw inspiration from dreams. Active dreaming strengthens access to symbolic imagery and intuitive insight, which can enrich creative work.

What role does intention play in active dreaming?

Intention acts as a guidepost. By clarifying a question or focus before sleep, the dreamer orients awareness. Intention does not force outcomes but shapes receptivity within the dream field.

How does active dreaming influence waking consciousness?

Over time, practitioners often report greater self-awareness, emotional clarity, and sensitivity to subtle experience. The continuity of awareness between sleeping and waking states can lead to a more reflective and intentional life.

Michelle Cassandra Johnson is an author, activist, spiritual teacher, racial equity consultant, and intuitive healer. She is the author of six books, including Skill in Action and Finding Refuge. Amy Burtaine is a leadership coach and racial equity trainer. With Robin DiAngelo, she is the coauthor of The Facilitator's Guide for White Affinity Groups. For more, visit https://www.michellecjohnson.com/wisdom-of-the-hive.

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Julie Kramer: Partnering with Compassionate Spirits

Our modern worldview emphasizes the material factors that impact our health and well-being — such as our genetics, lifestyle, or environment. From the shamanic perspective of our indigenous predecessors, however, there are unseen, spiritual influences that are equally vital and valid to recognize. In this podcast, Tami Simon speaks with her partner of over 20 years, shamanic healer and teacher trainer, Julie Kramer, about learning to connect with the helping spirits that are always available to guide and support us. 

This long-awaited conversation explores: absolute integrity in the practice of spiritual healing; Core Shamanism and the work of Michael Harner; taking a posture of humility and respect; the lineages of earth-based spiritual practice; using natural trance states to enhance our perception of non-ordinary realities; benevolent versus malevolent origins, and how to protect yourself from ill-intentioned spirits; the frequently-asked question, am I making this up?; meeting your guides from a place of maturity; equality in relationship; when guides intercede—and when they don’t; the ever-present element of mystery; conviction in your work; the path of “ennobling the heart”; the shamanic skill known as “psychopomp”; compassionate depossession; relying on your own experience; living in an intra-dimensional reality; and more.

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  • Vartan Agnerian says:

    Miss Stokes’ Thank You for this enlightening article ‘ So clearly I saw myself in the category of Power loss and Soul loss and as a result Entanglement’ In my early sixties’ it’s a wonder and miracle that I’ve managed to float’ and gotten along with my family duties and work responsibilities while carrying that whole package of symptoms ‘

    Laura’

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