From PS-Magazine.com Alternative Therapies Shamanic View: Understanding the story of ‘The Horse Boy’
By Dawn Paul
Mar 24, 2010 - 2:36:59 PM
A lovely
client recently gifted me a copy of “
The Horse Boy”
by a man called
Rupert Isaacson. Rupert and his
wife Kristin live in the
US
and have an
autistic son called
Rowan, who suffered severe difficulties and tantrums.
Conventional therapies
failed to help Rowan, but Rupert found that there was a strong bond between
Rowan and his neighbour’s horse, Betsy.
Rupert had a background in horse
handling and also an interest in shamanism, due to his involvement with the
Kalahari Bushmen, for he had helped them to reclaim their sacred land. One day
he decides to follow his intuition and also merge his two interests and take
Rowan to see the
shamanof
Mongolia and
Siberia, on horseback, in the hope of bringing Rowan to a
more balanced place emotionally.
The book
is beautifully written and I highly recommend it. It was interesting for me to
see the similarities in practices between the shaman of
Mongolia and that of
Peru, which is the shamanic lineage
I have trained in. For example, Iike the
Mongolian
shaman who sprayed Rupert and his family with vodka, I had to learn how
to use my mouth and breath to spray alcohol (containing flower essences) at
people. This caused much laughter when I recently had to blast away at a BBC Radio
presenter who was live on air some time ago. In fact I heard that the people at
the radio station are still joking about me “spitting” on him!
However
the spray uses the living energy of the breath, the vibrational energy of the
flower essences and intention to clear the energy field, and is particularly
helpful after psychic or emotional healing. If you like, it acts as a kind of
antiseptic spray, it
cleans and
clears energy - and it is also refreshing and revitalising for the person
having it done. Honestly! Additionally, Rowan experiences the Mongolian shaman
“whack, whack, whacking him on the back” with a whip, something his parents
also endured.
I also remember
being in Peru
a few years ago, lying in a pitch black room, being whipped painfully across
the face,
eyes (ouch!) and body by a
tiny female shaman who seemed a third of my size and yet who was immensely
powerful. In 2008, that same tiny shaman beat at me once more, this time with
sacred reeds pulled from the side of a lake, as I crouched naked and freezing
to death underneath the icy flow of a
glacial
waterfall!
Although
this sounds cruel, the whipping is used to break up the density of the energy
body, as heavy, condensed energy collects in our energy field as a result of
stress, negative thinking or negative experiences. This then serves to block us
and can eventually bring about disease or disharmony. The shaman is literally
smashing off old imprints and hardened chunks of energy with their whips. Not
wishing to risk a lawsuit, I do not use whipping in my own shamanic
healing practice – instead I use the sound, energy and movement of my rattles,
which is far nicer for the client, but still has the same effect, even if it is
not quite as powerful as the whips!
Many of
the shaman in the book talked about the “dark energy” which affected Rowan
while in the womb. This was said to have come from a river or a lake. It is
possible for “dark” energy to take up residence within the human energy field,
and cause mischief to its host in a variety of ways. More information on this
can be found on my website, (www.liberate-online.co.uk)
in the articles section. My training has taught me that there are only two
types of energy, light energy or dark energy, known as “Sami and Hucha”
respectively in Quechua, the language of the Inca.
A shaman
understands the natural world and knows that rivers
and lakes - in fact all natural things - have an intelligence, a consciousness.
That can be a light or heavy consciousness.
This is why a shaman places such importance on reverence for nature. For
example, the mountains in Peru are said to be inhabited by “Apu’s” – Mountain
spirits or “Lords” if you like.
In
Peru these can be perceived as huge eagles with
human heads, and it is said that these are a type of
Archangel,
vastly intelligent and powerful. No-one would ever consider building a mountain
road in
Peru
without first asking the Apu for permission! It was interesting to read in The
Horse Boy that the
Siberian shaman,
Ghoste, also spoke of “The Lords of the Mountains and
the Lords of the Rivers.”
Ghoste is a
shaman of
the Reindeer People, and he worked by
using the beat of his drum to enter into a trance-state (the rhythmic sound of
a rattle also achieves the same effect) to receive information from his power
allies, and the consciousness of the reindeer helper spirits. The Native
American Indians may use the powers of wolves, bears, buffaloes and eagles. The
medicine people in the High Andes receive their information from the Apus, the
mountain spirits. I have
worked with shaman in the Amazon who receive visions and information from the
psychotropic plant “
Ayahuasca” and others who
utilise the services of their power animals and others that may obtain their.
In short, shaman use whatever power sources are locally available to them, so
the medicine people of the Andes who live high up in mountain villages, would
not utilise the powers of Ayahuasca for example, as firstly this is not easily
available to them and secondly they have no relationship with it.
I will
not spoil the ending of the book for you, should you chose to read it I am sure
that you will enjoy it. I will write further on how shamanic healing can assist
children with
autism, so watch this space!
The Horse Boy: A Father's Miraculous Journey to Heal His Son: The
True Story of a Father's Miraculous Journey to Heal His Son (Paperback), by Rupert
Isaacson (Amazon
UK, Amazon
USA), DVD: Amazon UK, Amazon
USA