As a vibrational worker it is often my job to highlight for people their vibrational matching indicators. These are the things that come into their life in the obvious or not so obvious ways that can help them specifically, to mold their vibration into the feeling and manifestation place they are looking for. This is not a process of telling them what to do or where to look but to point out what already gets their attention and how to use it. There are many people on this planet already utilizing their extra sensory perception but in such minute ways it just seems normal to them, so they don’t understand what they are doing. Music is a big one that I see often even in those not asking for my help. In this article I will explore the role of music relating to the shaman and how you may already be using it and how you may be able to expand on how music is helping you if it is a modality that is already relating to you.
Music is influence.
Yes we all have those songs that have an obvious effect on our emotions and there for state of being. In the Caribbean, drums were a big part of their shamans getting into state. Working your way into the optimal state can be helped by music but why does some music work for you and not other shamans and why are you sometimes not as affected by certain music to the state you wish to be in, that is; where it usually takes others? This is because we are not all starting from the same place and you are not always starting from the same place. The change of state is a shift in vibration, your usual vibrative state can be altered by thought and your emotions will relay that change. You are by no means thinking even closely to other practitioners and may see a large difference in the music you may choose to use. However, you, yourself are not thinking the same thoughts on a daily, or even a moment to moment basis. You will change, grow and expand. No two people will experience the same song in the same way. It’s fine. This is not something to worry about. Your individual practice is up to you and you must find it for yourself. Allow others to do the same. What works for you works for you, you needn’t question it, in fact if you don’t you’ll find more time to move on to what you really want to be doing which is practicing.
You influence music.
As a young person in love with music I used to have a saying, “I only have two moods, one where the music I listen to affects my mood and the one where what music I listen to is affected by my mood.” You will will match with certain music due to the intentionality of that music. It helps to think of it more like this: Once a song has been created, it becomes an living entity of its own. It has many vibrational matching points that will draw you to it or repel you from it. From the drums to the bass to the melody, on to the lyrics in all the ways they are expressed over the duration of the song. This can be invaluable if you know this because the next time a song is stuck in your head or you wake up with a random song in your head, notice it is not the whole song, it is one particular part. Even if you don’t know what the lyrics are supposed to be saying in that part, find out. You will be surprised as you listen to these lyrics you find wisdom meant specifically for you. From a strong affirming of where your thoughts have been, to advice about how you may handle a situation and the lyrics all of a sudden are not relating to the context of the song but the context of your life.
How to use music
There are a few questions you can ask when you find a piece of music that ‘speaks’ to you.
1. What parts are the best.
What are the parts of the song you like the best? This will tell you why you are enjoying the song so much and this may be multiple things. If you are not enjoying the song, don’t bother with a process like this. Just don’t listen to the song. It may sound elementary but examining what makes us feel bad, often just makes us feel worse. It’s not that you can’t do it, if you feel you need to know, it may be worth it to you to find out, but in general it’s usually better to leave it.
2. What feeling are these parts giving you?
Even the non-lyrical parts of music can make you feel, and even when you like the lyrical melody of the song the lyrics may have nothing to do with it. By honing in on the parts you really like, you will enhance the emotion that you are extracting from the song already, making it easier to identify. Once you can tell what feeling you get from the music it is a sure fire way to know what you want to use it for, if at all. Sometimes you like it because it reflects where you are very well. It gives you a justification for feeling the feelings you are already experiencing on a regular basis. Which is great if you are where you want to be emotionally. Sometimes it is taking you somewhere else and this is where you can follow it. By knowing what you are already extracting from the song you can enhance the feeling and go to the place, or state it is calling you to. And being it was doing this for you already, there is a good chance it is trying to take you somewhere you want to go. Somewhere you can find answers to the most important questions you are asking right now.
3. Do any lyrics stand out?
What lyrics hit you the hardest? This may also be what are the lyrics that keep going around in my head? This can help you to know how the music has accessed you. How this song grabbed you is most likely related to what it wants to help you resolve, or teach you about. Do not try to think of the lyrics in the context of the song. Instead hear the lyrics the way they sound to you. Even if you have gotten the lyrics wrong, the reason you have interpreted them the way you have is because that is the message for you, and only you. What do the lyrics mean to you, don’t try to figure out what the singer or writer meant. That is their journey and needn’t have anything do with you.
Music can be Tarot for the ears
This can be hard as there is no set framework for what each song is meant to mean to you. But when you ask a question and randomise your song choice you can be led to music that may have meaning to you and your situation. What this means is that the part of the song that answers your question may come in the title of the song, a specific lyric in the song, the overall meaning of the song or even just the feeling the song is giving you. Which of those things that is your answer will be known to you by the parts that stand out the most to you. You must know you are always right as you couldn’t see it if you were not a match to it. The main thing that differs with songs as opposed to tarot is that the well crafted Millenia old art of tarot has a strong basis and has been developed to help the divination process. This is just your form of vibrational match and indication. It will give you feedback on where you are now and will not necessarily give you a reading on the future or where that vibration will take you. But knowing what you are emanating now may be what you want to know, and it this case, could be for you.
You don’t have to use this process when listening to all your music, or even every song you like. You will find the process will call you when you need it and it can be fun to play around with music and your abilities. Have fun with it. And know every human experience has the potential to carry you things you never dreamt possible.
So I am a lightworker so to speak. I am a human with much multidimensional being experience and an extraterrestrial background. I have a shaman. In 2018 being a shaman is not just about the practice of being a shaman. It is about understanding the diverse cultures and beliefs systems that may come to you for guidance. When working with lightworkers this may seem hard because the way of the shaman has to be translated into the understandings of those outside of shamanism. But shamans can be great benefit to all of the interested community. In this article, I will write about how to help shamans when faced with this experience and show lightworkers what having a shaman can do for them.
SHAMANS: Your lightworker clients are a genius in their own field.
Respect between shaman and client is not something that shamans are new to and they practice it often. But understanding that your lightworker client is meant to deliver their message exactly in their own way. The way in which they are delivering the message can be invaluable. Your connection with the spirit world is of great benefit to lightworkers when they get stuck as we all do, and your excessive testing has made you resilient where they may not be. Reach for the message coming through that is specific for them. You needn’t understand it, just have faith your lightworker client is going to relay it and translate it in ways that will amaze and delight you.
LIGHTWORKERS: Trust your shaman.
You must find a shaman that you trust and that you feel is in alignment with you and your desires as a lightworker. Understand that when you look for expansion in your chosen field, whether it be reiki, channeling, vibrational work or magic practitioners, your shaman has gone though the worst to be able to offer you the best. Your trusted shaman will have gone though things relating to your abilities and has built him or herself from the worst to be the best. They train to release themselves from limiting beliefs and are the best at working on themselves. And what they have learned from that process, they have become adept at helping others who may be far down the scale on a subject to a free flowing place. That's where you want to be.
Hi! We hope you're enjoying this article. If you want to access our other exclusive content, please consider subscribing here. We'd love to have you be a part of our dynamic community and your support allows us to bring you cutting-edge perspectives on urban shamanism. Ok, back to the article.
SHAMANS: Encourage your lightworkers to be more.
You may or may not be aware of your lightworker clients’ extraordinary ability to push themselves out of their comfort zone. And you might discover that they will surpass you in certain areas. When your lightworker client surpasses you in areas, know this is your success. They can handle much more that you may realize. Use your innate intuition and take direction from spirit as to how far and and in which ways to push them. After all you got to where you are through contrast of an immense proportion and lightworkers can handle way more than your average public clients.
LIGHTWORKERS: Offer back to your shaman.
Your shaman is a constantly evolving being. When they give to you, give back. They appreciate your feedback from your journeys with spirit and it will help them to help others. The right shaman for you will respect you and your craft. Allowing them to partake in your craft is a great way to help them along their shamanic journey. They will be able to experience your craft like no other and you will find it a rewarding experience if you show them what you are capable of.
SHAMANS: Dig deeper.
Your Lightworker clients will be the ones who inspire you to the most craziest and meaningful experiences with spirit. Allow them to. Find the deeper truths, embrace the unknown experiences. Go to the place you never thought you could or would go. This is the beauty of being a shaman. You are meant to test the boundaries of reality and your lightworker clients will take you there regularly.
LIGHTWORKERS: Shamans are your recon.
Shamans are like the berserkers of the spiritual practice. They go before you into the places you dare not got to bring back what you could not retrieve. They train for this. Let them do this for you. They do not see this as a sacrifice. They bring back much for themselves as well in the process. Much more than they pass on to you. You may be bold with much courage and little fear but there are some places you simply would never think or know how to go to. What they bring back will inspire you to places they never dreamed. What a fantastic team.
There is much more in this dynamic than what I’ve stated here but I will leave that up to each shaman and each lightworker to discover. The thrill of human life is the surprise. But I hope I have enticed each to find their way into a harmonious and powerful coupling with each other.
The Urban Shaman® is honored to sponsor this submitted article by Felicity Alaska. It has been edited.
The first surrender: the mind.
Am I going to do this?
Yes, I am. I want this.
For my own reasons, whatever they may be, I want this. I’m scared, but I consent to this.
The second surrender: the body.
The facilitator sets the stage, creates the space, asks that shoulders come back, marking, forward again. The process is deliberate.
Flesh pulls, tugs- discomfort, and again.
The question rises: am I going to do this?Yes… I am. I want this.The first moment- the setting of the needle against skin. “Breathe”, they tell you… “Breathe.” Fear, anxiety, stress. A very LARGE needle is about to pass through my body. “Breathe… at the height of three, we go.”Little do you know that the setting of the hook is as intensely intimate for the facilitator as it is for you. Wanting the perfect set, the perfect experience for you. But you don’t know that. They are serene, a guide.Surrender- knowing one more is yet to come. But hey, that wasn’t so bad. What was done once can be done again, and now you know what to expect.Second verse, same as the first, a little bit louder, a little bit worse. But not really.You can center yourself, breathing. Your friend may be holding your hands. You draw strength from their eyes. Their touch. Their energy. You are loved here. There is nothing but support for the journey you are about to take.You feel the prick- second needle. “Breathe…” says the facilitator, and you do. Eyes locked on your friend, eyes locked on a place, you draw your strength. “Breathe…” Your chest inflates, deep belly breaths, flooding your mind and body with oxygen and awareness, senses afire.One, two, three, and the second needle passes through the flesh, with the exhalation of old ideas, old patterns, old junk. You release. Carbon dioxide, certainly, but more than that: fear, anxiety, a perfect, perfect surrender. A few moments, and the second hook is settled. Taped to your skin, but you feel it. Oh, you feel it. Weight, where previously there was none, a mass, within your body, where before there was none, rigid yet so........freeing. The third surrender: self.
“Dance”, they say. Take the hooks into yourself. They belong to you. Breathe, dance, stretch- the more you become one, the better you will feel. And I have seen it. A butterfly on wings of beauty, dancing. They became a part of her. You stretch, move, take them in, savor the experience. Feel the tightening against the skin and move to mitigate it. This is your journey, and yours alone. We are simply here to support and bear witness to one another.And have no doubt, whether this is your first flight or one of many, it is always a journey. Always. Life shifts, life changes. As does your intention. No flight is the same as the first- that high lasts for days, just integrating the experience, and knowing what you accomplished. And each flight is unique, unlike any that have come before, and any that will come after. A suspended moment in time. Each has its purpose, its own intention. Yours is simply to be present to the experience, in all its' nuances, its' flavors. Surrender four: trust.
Rigging and tension. You’ve seen the rigging plate, complete with straps, waiting for you.Again, the question, “Am I ready for this?”Yes… you are.Safe and secure in the love around you, to the plate at the facilitator’s direction. This person is your guide. They will not let you fall, they will not fail you. They will be with you every step of the way, because that is what they do. Facilitate, hold space, guide, banish fears.You’ve got this.. you do.You begin to settle, strength and purpose becoming clear. Why are you here?Remember.What do you want to accomplish? Shackles attached, cord strung, it’s your journey now, but not entirely alone. Witnesses. But more than that. We stand here, in our love and in our strength, and it’s yours, free for the taking. A gift, from those who know where you are, and what you are walking through, to those whom you inspire with your courage to someday take a journey of their own. But they are here, holding space for you as the nerves fire up, as the slack is consumed, as the real journey begins… surrender.The fifth surrender: mind/body/spirit.
Every facilitator does it differently. There is no one true way. Some ask you to lean into it, and they will lift you- a total guide. Some may hand you the rope and instruct you to lift yourself- this is your journey.What to know about this: there is a tremendous surrender to the hooks. To the fear, to the doubt, to the love, and to the joy. When you place your faith in another, you trust them to know you better in some ways than you know yourself- what your limits are, and to push you past them.To help you achieve your goal. Lean into the hooks. Lift your feet off the ground. Take your time. I will only take what you give me.Breathing is critical. It disperses bad energy, it fills the body with oxygen and light, restores calm, banishes anxiety and nausea- common adrenaline responses to what you have chosen to subject your body to.And isn’t that part of it? Trusting your body to take care of you? That it can do this, defy gravity on just so many small square inches of space of skin? Aren’t you TRUSTING? Pushing through fear and doubt, to laugh with joy in the triumph over adversity. All of the adversity. It's that moment of power, of being able to say “FUCK YOU” to anything that says you can’t do this. To lift your feet and fly.I’ve seen it- the unwilling, the joyous, the determined and the fearful, but the physical process is the same.One foot lifts… breathing… up, up, up… till one dances upon a toe’s breadth. Already flying, if you only knew. But that last contact is the hardest. To let go. To let go of fear. To simply let go to the experience.Nerves afire, feeling your body in different way, to let go. Let it all go and trust. The hardest things we will ever do in life, let go and have faith.Each moment is different, whether it is a “fuck you, I’ve got this”, or a simple lift of the feet. And in the moment you're so present with it that you may not even know yet what you’ve accomplished, because you are so focused. But the result is always the same. Your feet leave the ground and you are flying.. defying.. gravity. One of the universe’s great laws, and yet here you are, defying it. Anxiety slips away as the euphoria rises.Yes! ….. oh, fuck yes….Euphoria, intention, desire, clarity, life. Everything melts away and it all becomes so much simpler when you are absolutely in sync with your body, with your experience.Surrender six: self-acceptance
If you have a facilitator who says lift yourself, here are my thoughts:
You’ve been handed your rope. All has been explained. You are on your own. But not. Everyone is with you, holding space, encouraging you on.So you have this rope, a direct line to your senses. You can push as hard as you want, or not. Every body, every sensory system, is different. Perhaps it is not your day to fly. Perhaps you pull and pull and learn something from that journey. Perhaps you dance in beauty and light, experience a complete fulfillment of your heart. That is very okay too. Because here, in this space, we accept one another totally.But if you have your rope, and you're responsible to lift yourself, you'll fight yourself even more in the process. Taking your time, giving what you are ready for, your journey, your walk, the empowerment that offers, is very different from the trust you give to the one who lifts you. It is an amazing feeling to lift yourself, but know that, for absolute flight, your journey is not yet over.The seventh surrender: control.
Technicals come into play here. The rigging, of which you are only partially aware of now, is still holding part of your weight as you lift yourself. But to be weightless you’ve got to surrender your rope. You’ve walked the path- the hooks, the meditation, the breathing, the lifting, you’re in the air, but now to surrender your rope - your safety line?! To completely let go of the control we think we have over our lives, to trust another soul after already doing so much to set ourselves free- are you fucking kidding me?No.. I am not. Give me your rope. You’ve done so well. Look at you, swinging and content. Trust me. Trust your body. Take just a little bit more, I promise you will not regret it. Let me hold this for you. I can carry it until you want it back. I am your guide and your support. I will not fail you. Let go.. let it all go… and be free.If you go this route- surrendering the rope- the hardest thing you will ever let go of. We cherish our safety lines. But to let them go is to be truly free.There are a few more bits to the experience- the ministrations as you come down, as the shackles are released, as the hooks are removed and any air massaged out. But that is what they are, ministrations.
You’ve walked one hell of a journey. One that has been an honor and a privilege to be present for and to hold space for. I grow as you do, whatever my role in this moment we've shared together. You are an incredible soul and I’ve watched you along a journey, to what end I cannot know, but I am grateful. Grateful that I could be there.
A last note about the moments after:
You’ve just opened holes in your body. You’ve created holes in your heart and in your soul, and filled them too. When the hooks come out, you are open, more so than you may ever have been in your life. Things will come in and things will come out. Embrace them.
You are growing and evolving, and some of those responses may surprise you, some may rock you to your core. But as always, you are never alone. There are many with you on your path, on your journey, and we stand by you, always. In love and light….
This… this is suspension… to me.
Our goal here at The Urban Shaman® is to encourage healthy discussion to further our contemporary definition of shamanism and enhance our local practice. We do not intend to instigate or promote argument or divisiveness. Rather, we believe we can achieve unity and clarity within the wholeness of the full shamanic expression. We would like to provide a safe space for everyone to explore shamanism with mutual respect, and to promote the concept of the shamanic archetype, while dispelling the myths and biases of the stereotype. These exploratory questions are intended to encourage this process and open up the discussion.
Modern flesh suspension is similar in external practice to the Sun Dance, which is a practice of the many plains native North American tribes, including the Sioux. How do you think modern flesh suspension troupes might differ from Sun Dancers, and how might they be similar?
What aspects of Felicity's experience can you relate with, or did her testimony offer any personal insights, or strong reactions?
In Felicity's experiences and her orientation to the practice of body suspension, she uses the ritual for connecting and healing. But is there potential for flesh suspension to also be harmful, or for the processing of the experience to bring up traumas or other difficult emotions- and how might that be mitigated? Are facilitators responsible for that?
Do you think flesh suspension can cause a shamanic initiation? How?
Do you think facilitators of flesh suspension, or what Felicity calls "guides" express aspects of the shamanic archetype? In what ways? And if no, why not?
How can this type of ritual foster and strengthen tribe? And what can we learn from this?
There are many ethical considerations in any modern ritual, and especially rituals involving the body. What are some of the ethical considerations to flesh suspension?
Has reading Felicity's account changed your perspective on this practice? In what ways?
On March 30, 2018, The Urban Shaman® investigative reporter, Patrick John Coleman sat down with Jinji Willingham, LPC and Zen Chaplain.
Jinji, can you tell us a little bit about what you do?
Hi Patrick, it’s good to be here. I live in Austin, Texas, where I am a licensed professional counselor and I have a psychotherapy clinical practice, and I am also a Zen hospital chaplain.
A Zen hospital chaplain. So, how did you get into this line of work? What called you to this line of work?
Well, it’s definitely been a long term process and a journey that’s changed along the way. It began with personal loss. After years of being an academic and interested in history, intellectual history, philosophy, and literature, and being kind of a scholar for a little while, I felt academia wasn’t the right place for me. It’s more like a gladiator role. And after the loss of my son in 2001, that was a really, you know, strangely beautiful and transforming experience. Lots of people who have been through grief will say something like that- that it changed them. In my case I think it just kind of connected me to my heart in a way that I hadn’t been for a long time. And after a few years, I kind of thought, ‘how can I stay there? How can I stay and inhabit this beautiful space?’ of…..
I tell people that, you know, when you’re in deep grief and struggling with something you kind of drop all your shit. And you get real. And so I wanted to try to find a way to continue doing that, and it seemed that walking on the path of loss and grief with others would be the most intuitive way to do that.
So I went back to school- again – and got my degree and became a counselor, or therapist, and I love doing that. But it really didn’t give me much access to people who are actively ill and dying. They often can’t come in for weekly therapy. And I realized that working in the hospital would be a place to do that, and the only way I could do that was to become a chaplain. So, I, it took me a while to figure things out. And then I found the Upaya Zen Center’s program, and so now I’m both [a therapist and chaplain]. Part of my current challenge is how to hold both of these credentials and roles, which our culture sees as separate, but my practice in psychospiritual care really requires both trainings, and both credentials.
So, how does your work differ from, say, a transpersonal psychologist?
It depends. I wouldn’t say that there is any one way to be a transpersonal psychologist. My training in therapy focused on…. I was already a Buddhist practitioner when I went back for counseling, so I looked for a program, and luckily in my own town I found one… that steers clear of the…. I mean, we needed to get the basic foundations in the history of psychotherapy, psychology, and counseling, but there was really very little of, you know, Freud and Adler and Jung, and even Rogers. It focused more on neuroscience and mindfulness practice, and attachment, and systems, which is really very much congruent with Zen tradition, Zen practice, Zen teachings. So there’s some similarity with the transpersonal approach in terms of, for me personally, but my work is primarily relational. Simply put, it is relational work that creates a safe space for people to drop into their core experience at a somatic, affective, and cognitive level.
Okay. Good. So, in your work as a chaplain and in your work as a grief counselor in helping the dead and dying, how has that informed your other practice? You know, because you said you had to, you’re balancing two different things, so how is each informing the other? How are you managing that?
Well, that’s a really good question. They’re not really two separate things. Our culture views them as two separate roles. So this is the best way I can respond. When I’m with the psychotherapy and counseling community I often feel there’s something missing, which is a deeper awareness of Zen or Buddhist teachings. I’m not saying that everybody has to be a Buddhist, but there’s a lot of awareness of mindfulness that’s crept into the counseling world, but they don’t have a very deep foundation of where that comes from. So they just kind of borrow some of the lexicon, some of the practices. When I’m with the Zen and Buddhist community I often feel that there’s a lack of insight about the psyche and the human experience, and it can often get into a ‘just breathe and relax and be calm.’ So, for me these are really not separate. And, it’s that our, it’s that the way that I am identified is I am a chaplain seeking board certification and I’m an LPC, so it’s all about credentials and which professional community you’re in.
But in the course of my work each day, whether I’m in my office with a group of people, or a couple, or an individual, or whether I’m at the hospital working with families, or staff, or patients, my orientation is very similar. I am practicing awareness of myself. I am tuning into my own experience, and staying regulated and grounded. I am remembering why I do this work, and it’s a process of attuning to myself and the other, regardless of who that may be, and doing the work at hand.
You know, it might be something administrative, seemingly administrative, like Advanced Directives. It might be an ethical conversation about withdrawal of care at the hospital. Or it might be working with people to explore the roots of their struggle, and ways of creating change in their lives that feels right. They’re all very integrated for me. At a conference I recently presented at in November of 2017 in Japan, it was a psychospiritual care conference. And that’s really the term that I might be leaning towards these days, is that I am a psychospiritual care provider.
Okay. Now here in Chicago, mental health, there’s several cutting edge programs in mental health here in Chicago, some of which I have had the opportunity to witness and participate in. So do you see in the communities that you’re in, in the therapy community, do you see therapists, or your colleagues more likely to address matters of the spirit or the soul now, moreso than they used to?
Possibly. Some of them. Some of them are. You know, there’s really a great benefit in, you know, I referred earlier to the benefit in borrowing of mindfulness language, and I’m not suggesting that that is not valuable. If it’s helpful, it’s helpful. I would be gratified for there to be a deeper understanding of what that term really means. But I’m happy that that trend is there and I do think that in the long run…hmm. Whether this is actually happening or whether it is the energy that I want to express in my work, in my life, and in my lifetime, it is moving towards….. I think there is a big trend of, you know, spiritual but not religious, and I think that we are waking up to this practice of compassion in a variety of service and caring roles. So I think we’re moving in that direction. But there are many therapists who are still practicing, who were trained thirty years ago. And there’s still a lot of CBT [cognitive behavioral therapy] out there. There’s still a lot of psychodynamic work. And some of it is good work. Some of it’s appropriate for the population. And then there are, there is an increasing number of people who are getting into various contemplative practices and becoming therapists and counselors, and I think that is healthy too. I really can’t say too much more than just, there’s a variety of trends out there. But I’m optimistic. There’s more and more dissatisfaction with the problems that used to be out there, that are still out there, actually. Sadly, I still hear about some things that I thought might have ended decades ago, but there’s still a lot of skillful practitioners out there.
Things like gay conversion therapy?
Right. That’s a good example. I was actually just talking about, sort of like, thinking in terms of diagnostic categories and requiring, organizations that require practitioners to use empirically validated treatments that are manualized and diagnostic codes, you know, that conventional model, the notion of ‘we’re going to change you, and fix everything’, ya, that’s kind of what I’m talking about. You know, there’s a systemic problem, or what we might call a structural violence problem that’s still out there, and then there’s just practitioners who don’t do their own work. They don’t do their own inner therapy, or what Joan Halifax calls inner chaplaincy, and they’re kind of operating at the level of the mind, and you know, I think it all starts with us. There was something else I wanted to add to that, but I can’t remember it, so it will come back.
Okay. That’s fine. So, I heard that the National Institute of Mental Health are no longer going to use those diagnoses as a basis for their research moving forward. Do you have any opinion on how that might effect what you do?
I just remembered what I had forgotten. It’s the term ‘mental health’, actually. I, I’m trying not to be argumentative and sort of pedantic, or get kind of fixated on things, but it’s just a term that I think, I think really outlived it’s usefulness. I think it’s harmful for us to consider, to continue using the term ‘mental health.’ I realize the alternative, finding the right alternative might be a challenge. Sometimes I say psyche-motional well being. Because ‘mental health’ reinforces this notion that it’s the mind, when more and more we’re finding that it’s, trauma is stored in the body, and that that effects the mid-pre frontal part of the brain, which creates emotional dysregulation of the nervous system, which is where the mood disorders come from, mood dysregulation, rather, comes from. And so I just want to kind of register that as a little note that I am not in favor of using the term ‘mental health.’ I don’t get, you know, I don’t arch my back and get upset about it. But I would just like to state for the record that I am in favor of us recycling that term and coming up with something more whole person. So, as for your question, so the NIH is no longer going to consider their DSM diagnoses for their research or their research grants?
In their research moving forward.
Well that’ll be interesting.
And I read this in Psychology Today, and the reasoning for that was that the diagnoses weren’t really thoroughly researched before they… they were based on expert consensus, not research data. So in a way, they’re taking a look, ‘are these diagnoses even valid?’
Yah. Thank you. You know, however long it takes for us to wake up to that problem. You know, again, having some compassion for my own profession, it’s so easy for me, and for all of us to be really harsh about that, because it’s such, there’s such injury. Often times there’s a lot of trauma that comes out of misdiagnoses, and people, practitioners used to really just..they’ll say, “so, this borderline person was in my room.” Equating people and identifying them as their diagnoses is harmful and it’s easy for it to happen to us. So I’m critical of that. I also understand that there was a reason the DSM categories formed. You know, clinicians needed to communicate with one another and, you know, sometimes there is relief when a person gets a diagnosis. They say, “Oh, no wonder I am struggling with that. That’s great.” And then a little bit later they have the follow up response, which is “Oh shit! I really do have something. Wow.” So sometimes it’s helpful. But there’s a huge amount of misdiagnosing, and a lot of the DSM, a lot of the diagnoses are really just symptoms. They’re just descriptions of symptoms. They’re not actual things, or there’s tremendous overlap and confusion. So, you know, they did the best they could, and there’s always been a lot of criticism, and there’s always committees that are trying to change things. So I wish them the best, and hope that, you know, we can just somehow find a way to approach that in a different way. I’m certainly not the one who’s going to solve that problem. But I’m glad that they’re re-thinking it. I don’t know how, I don’t know what they have in mind. But I think it’s, it’s a good sign that they’re thinking that way.
Right. Right. So a couple final things before we wrap up this written interview. You know, this, this is a magazine about urban shamanism. So, how do you, are there, how do you feel about bringing ceremony and ritual into therapy, into, or anything like what you do?
Well that’s my favorite question that you’ve asked, actually. I think it’s taken our country two decades, maybe, to realize that we’ve lost so much. I think it’s been missing for a long time. You know, I think it’s easy for us to forget just how long time, for how long it takes for us to grow as a species, as a culture, and our lives are really short, so I’m not being negative here. We lost a lot over a century, let’s say, and now we’re seeing the down sides. You know, young adults don’t have any kind of real acknowledgement or support for their transition, which we’re now seeing is so painful for so many of them. There’s not, there’s really a marginalizing of elderly people, and of course, the sanitization of death and dying. So, ritual is a word that for many people has a negative connotation because then they think religion, and Christianity. And as our culture really is beginning to transition, I think, to, you know, spiritual but not religious- that could mean secular. Spiritual could be secular or it could be more conventionally spiritual. But more and more people I talk to, I talk to hundreds of people each…. let’s say over a period of a week I speak to dozens, so in a month there might be a hundred. There’s really a shift away from traditional sects of Christianity towards broader thinking, and I think people are in need of ritual. And I think part of the challenge here is language, you know, what we call it. But I’m beginning to incorporate elements of ritual in my work, at, not in the hospital, other than prayer and things like that, but in my office for groups, I am beginning to hold memorials for families who have survived the loss through suicide, or people who have lost their lives through addiction, women who have lost babies in utero, or parents who have lost children. But I don’t only want them to be oriented around loss. There’s also rights of passage ceremonies, and honoring age ceremonies. So these are things that I am slowly using my training at Upaya with Joan Halifax, and also going in to see what feels right to me to create some of these. I think it’s very, I think it’s important and I think that there was a period where we were really not wanting it and I think we over-corrected to the point where there was kind of nothing, and now I think we’re swinging back to, ‘maybe it would be nice to have some kind of ceremony for this.’
Okay. Thank you, Jinji.
The remainder of the interview can be seen on our exclusive channel:
Our goal here at The Urban Shaman® is to encourage healthy discussion to further our contemporary definition of shamanism and enhance our local practice. We do not intend to instigate or promote argument or divisiveness. Rather, we believe we can achieve unity and clarity within the wholeness of the full shamanic expression. We would like to provide a safe space for everyone to explore shamanism with mutual respect, and to promote the concept of the shamanic archetype, while dispelling the myths and biases of the stereotype. These exploratory questions are intended to encourage this process and open up the discussion.
What aspects of Jinji's practice overlap with the shamanic archetype? Can you identify what facets of the shamanic archetype she might be expressing in her work?
If you were to embrace a couple ideas that Jinji shares in these interviews in defining what shamanic practice might look like, what ideas would those be?
Jinji talks about secularization, and the trend of moving away from religion and towards spirituality. Do you see shamanism as a religion, or as a spirituality, or both?
Do you see contemporary shamanism as psychospiritual practice? Why, or why not? And how might contemporary shamanism differ from indigenous and archaic shamanism in regards to the psychological aspects of the work?
Jinji doesn't call herself a 'shaman', but she may exemplify shamanistic aspects. Is she a shaman? Why, or why not? And if not, what is missing in her practice that excludes her from being considered a shaman?