Quote
Someone was discussing Tolle on an older Google listserve and mentioned something.
There is a discussion on the Google listserve that raise intersting points
[forum.culteducation.com]
[]'A cessation of mentation as a result of intense concentration _may_ be
a precursor to Awakening in some "accidental" enlightenment
experiences..... (Echart Tolle** or John Wren-Lewis'), or in some
very thorough systematic approaches (like the Theravada), but it is
not Awakening itself: or, put it this way, it isn't a _necessary_
precursor to Awakening.
(((Corboy note::the author generously names Eckhart Tolle's but ET's hunger for money and publicity calls his alleged enlightement into question so far as I am concerned Corboy),
'In fact, Awakening is a BREAK in any form of
samadhi-like concentration (taking "samadhi" in its lesser meaning -
for it can also mean the Result itself, in some systems). It's at
complete right angles to anything you've ever experienced or imagined.
(I say this based on your writings - you may be playing a game of some
sort, but I am responding to your words as they stand.)
"It's like this: if you fix your gaze, the saccades (the little
jerkings about) that your eyes constantly unconsciously make cease,
and because the visual system normally sees things by noticing
borders, edges and differences, the visual system "whites out".
"(Author turned aside to comment to discussion participants)This is taken advantage of in some Daoist practices, and some Dzogchen Longde practices, if I'm not mistaken - right Namdrol?)
(Corboy note: very interesting as the Vajrayana practices aim at Clear Light. If that CL is being produced by a mundane neurological glitch due to prolonged fixation of the eyes then this calls into question all the various white light experiences people and religous systems use to validate claims of enlightenment.)[/[/i]i]
"Since the whole mental system works in an analogous way, by noticing
differences, I believe something analogous may happen if the _whole
mental system_ is "frozen" in a concentrative state - it ceases to
experience anything at all. BUT THAT IS NOT AWAKENING.
Quote
A person named Daniel was doing sitting meditation and reported this
"it happens that for a long time I lose awareness of everything -- of myself, of time, of my mind, of objects -- everything.
I sit and it feels like 10 minutes have passed, when in fact one hour or more have passed. Is this alright ?
Am I doing something wrong ? It is almost as if I fell in deep sleep, except that I don't think this is the case because I had my wife watching me to see if this was the case, which wasn't.
"Blogger LV said...
Daniel,
You're hitting a state of non-perception. If possible, you need to find an experienced meditation teacher to get you past this obstacle. Your experience sounds exactly like it:
"The second state was one I happened to hit one night when my concentration was extremely one-pointed, and so refined that it refused settle on or label even the most fleeting mental objects. I dropped into a state in which I lost all sense of the body, of any internal/external sounds, or of any thoughts or perceptions at all — although there was just enough tiny awareness to let me know, when I emerged, that I hadn't been asleep. I found that I could stay there for many hours, and yet time would pass very quickly. Two hours would seem like two minutes. I could also "program" myself to come out at a particular time.
After hitting this state several nights in a row, I told Ajaan Fuang about it, and his first question was, "Do you like it?" My answer was "No," because I felt a little groggy the first time I came out. "Good," he said. "As long as you don't like it, you're safe. Some people really like it and think it's nibbana or cessation. Actually, it's the state of non-perception (asaññi-bhava). It's not even right concentration, because there's no way you can investigate anything in there to gain any sort of discernment. But it does have other uses." He then told me of the time he had undergone kidney surgery and, not trusting the anesthesiologist, had put himself in that state for the duration of the operation.
In both these states of wrong concentration, the limited range of awareness was what made them wrong. If whole areas of your awareness are blocked off, how can you gain all-around insight? And as I've noticed in years since, people adept at blotting out large areas of awareness through powerful one-pointedness also tend to be psychologically adept at dissociation and denial. This is why Ajaan Fuang, following Ajaan Lee, taught a form of breath meditation that aimed at an all-around awareness of the breath energy throughout the body, playing with it to gain a sense of ease, and then calming it so that it wouldn't interfere with a clear vision of the subtle movements of the mind. This all-around awareness helped to eliminate the blind spots where ignorance likes to lurk."
[www.accesstoinsight.org]
"Another type of wrong concentration is one that a modern practice tradition, following DN 1, calls a state of non-perception (asaññi).. I
n this state, which is essentially a concentration of subtle aversion — the result of a strongly focused determination not to stay with any one object — everything seems to cease: the mind blanks out, with no perception of sights or sounds, or of one's own body or thoughts. There is just barely enough mindfulness to know that one hasn't fainted or fallen asleep.
One can stay there for long periods of time, and yet the experience will seem momentary. One can even determine beforehand when one will leave the state; but on emerging from it, one may feel somewhat dazed or drugged, a reaction caused by the intense aversive force of the concentration that induced the state to begin with.
There are other forms of wrong concentration, but a general test is that right concentration is a mindful, fully alert state.
Any state of stillness without clear mindfulness and alertness is wrong."
(If one dislikes the term 'wrong' one can substitute the term 'misleading' as in a map giving inaccurate directions. Corboy)
[www.accesstoinsight.org]
Quote
Kyle Nolan, 18, died after drinking extracts of a psychedelic plant called ayahuasca during a ritual in the Madre de Dios jungle region of Peru.
Clients and friends of Nolan's mother Ingeborg Oswalo contributed about $1,000 (£615) to his memorial fund, which was kept in a donation box at her veterinary surgery.
On Wednesday, a receptionist said a toothless woman came into the office and chatted for about 40 minutes.
The receptionist said that after she turned her back to find a brochure, the woman and box were missing.
Vargas, 58, admitted trying to cover up Nolan's death by burying him
A day earlier, a man pretending he was Nolan's brother called his grandmother in Los Angeles pleading for $2,100 (£1,300) to get out of prison on bail.
The caller asked the grandmother not to call any other members of the family, saying he did not want to cause any further upset.
She transferred the money before discovering the scam. Police are looking for suspects in both cases.
Nolan, from northern California, went on a spiritual retreat in the Amazon rainforest about 530 miles east of Lima on August 17.
He was later reported missing and his mother travelled to Peru to appeal for information after police failed to find him.
Shaman Jose Manuel Pineda Vargas, 58, later admitted trying to cover up his death by burying him in the grounds of his retreat. He was arrested with two other men.
Quote
Peruvian shaman buried body of U.S. teen who died from drinking ayahuasca
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A Peruvian shaman admitted to police on Wednesday that he had buried the body of a U.S. teenager to cover up his death during a spiritual retreat in the Amazon last month.
Shaman Jose Pineda Vargas, 58, told the authorities that 18-year-old Kyle Joseph Nolan, from northern California, died on August 22 from exceeding the dosage of a medicinal brew called Ayahuasca while staying at the Shimbre Shamanic Center.
Vargas then buried Nolan’s body at his jungle retreat and said that the teenager disappeared. Nolan's mother began searching for him after he failed to return from Peru as scheduled August 27.
Nolan arrived at the shamanic center on August 17 and according to the Spanish-language site, he paid $1,200 to take part in the Ayahuasca ritual.
‘It's like he's vanished,’ his mother, Ingeborg Eswalo, said before police found her son’s body in a thick brush on the grounds of the shamanic center.
Vargas’ spiritual retreat is located near the native community of Tres Islas in the Madre de Dios region of the Amazon basin that borders Brazil, according to police colonel Roberto Palomino.
Peru is a popular destination for a growing number of tourists who want to try Ayahuasca, a hallucinogenic concoction derived from Amazonian vines and shrubs that is traditionally drunk in indigenous ceremonies with the guidance of a shaman to heal sicknesses and communicate with nature and ancestors.
A similar brew is also used in certain religions in Brazil.
The website for the Peruvian retreat, written in English, describes Pineda as ‘Master Shaman Mancoluto,’ and says he helps Ayahuasca initiates ‘open their minds to deeper realities, develop their senses and intuitive capabilities and unlock the person's untapped potential.’
The center says it holds five ceremonies held over 10 nights, when participants ingest psychedelic plants in ‘a comfortable private space in the middle of a virgin rainforest,’ but that people familiar with the side effects of the drugs are always on site to help.
Vargas was arrested following his confession, along with two other men who are accused of helping the shaman bury Nolan.
In 2011, Vargas was featured in a documentary called Stepping Into the Fire that tells the story of a wealthy New York Stock Exchange trader who travels to Peru - the land of his ancestors - in search of enlightenment, only to encounter the spiritual leader.
A synopsis of the film on the site IMDB describes Vargas as a 'first-level master shaman descended from one of the earliest civilizations in Amerindian history, Chavin.'
The documentary also touts the shaman's 'expertise in natural health, particularly in the case of two ancestral medicines known as Ayahuasca and Huachuma.'
22:40 EST, 12 September 2012
Snejana Farberov
[www.dailymail.co.uk]
Reputation Comments on this Post:
Very complete and well done article you have brought to us.
Great article that definetely cries out "more info needed!" Please keep us updated if you happen to stumble upon more details, or a coroner report.
Another interesting and very well selected article. I don't know how you do this, but keep it up!
great find
Enjoyed reading this, excellent find. Keep us all updated please!
US Teen Dies After Amazon Psychedelic Ritual
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A shaman has admitted trying to cover up the death of an American teenager who died after eating an hallucinogenic plant by burying him in the grounds of his Amazon retreat.
Kyle Nolan, 18, died after drinking extracts of a psychedelic plant called ayahuasca during a ritual in the Madre de Dios jungle region of Peru.
He was reported missing ten days later when he failed to return to the US.
His mother Ingeborg Oswalo, from northern California, travelled to Peru and launched a media appeal for information after police failed to find him.
He was eventually traced to the Shimbre Shamanic Centre, near Tres Islas, but shaman Jose Manuel Pineda Vargas, 58, told them he had disappeared from the area.
He later confessed to burying him in the grounds of the retreat, and was arrested with two other men who helped cover up the death.
Local police chief Roberto Palomino said: "During a drinking session of a hallucinogenic beverage, the following day they found him dead and did not advise authorities, police or competent authorities.
"They proceeded to bury and get rid of the body."
Spanish language website Peru21.pe said the teenager had paid £800 to take part in the ritual.
For centuries, Amazonian Indians have been drinking ayahuasca - a combination of the ayahuasca vine, tree bark and other plants - to achieve a trance-like state.
It is traditionally drunk in indigenous ceremonies in the presence of a shaman, and has become popular with New Age tourists from Europe and the US.
The website for the retreat, written in English, claims ayahuasca helps people "open their minds to deeper realities, develop their senses and intuitive capabilities and unlock the person's untapped potential."
Sting and Tori Amos have reportedly admitted sampling it in Latin America, where it is legal, as has Paul Simon, who chronicled the experience in his song Spirit Voices.
[uk.news.yahoo.com]
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Very interesting and disturbing article.
great addition to the forum,good read
Thanks for the extra info on this story
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Old 14-09-2012, 02:02
Trancel0v3r Trancel0v3r is offline
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Re: Peruvian shaman buried body of U.S. teen who died from drinking ayahuasca
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To SWIM this is whole practice is worrying, in that these people truely believe that after taking DMT in its various forms, or other halluciongens no doubt, that the result is an encounter with spirits and the supernatural, rather than down to scientific reasoning and logic due to changes in the brains filters and nuerons
. To then try and cover up a persons death by someone who is considered a master in the trade adds to the problem. I have no doubt that Ayahuasca etc can help with addiction and problems in ones life, and indeed lead someone to ultimately become a better person, but I'd rather do it in the hands of a medical team in the know, instead of a remote forest, guided by a sharman misiformed by myth and fantasy....
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Old 14-09-2012, 02:36
rawbeer rawbeer is offline
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Re: Peruvian shaman buried body of U.S. teen who died from drinking ayahuasca
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I don't think this tragedy should be in any way linked with the traditional worldview of Amerindian shamans. It is certainly disturbing what this man did but honestly it's not likely this kid died because of ayahuasca, which is known to be pretty non-toxic. Chances are it was some sort of medical fluke, because I've never heard of an ayahuasca death before. It certainly didn't have anything to do with traditional beliefs about ayahuasca.
Medical science cannot explain ayahuasca intoxication, period. It can describe the mechanics of the intoxication but this is like describing a book in terms of ink and paper. These are rich experiences that inspire myth and fantasy. This is where I think you have the direction wrong - myth does not taint the experience, it is a product of the experience. If you can experience something as wonderous and profound as psychedelic intoxication and reduce it to neurons and filters...you lack imagination.
I doubt that taking ayahuasca surrounded by a medical team of people taking your blood pressure, checking your pupils, asking you questions about how you feel and probably just sedating you if things got tough, would be very enlightening. I don't believe in supernatural planes being accessed through drugs but I think it's dismissive to ignore the mythology that has evolved alongside millenia of ayahuasca use. Myth is instructive; one needn't literally believe in it for it to be effective.
This guy is one of hundreds of shamans doing the same thing in South America. I would like to see people like this offering their services but with a team of college-educated medics on hand to make sure there's a safety net if things go beyond "bad trip" to "medical emergency." But I don't think there's anything wrong with experts on traditional ingestion of a sacred brew sharing their culture with foreigners, myth, fantasy and all.
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Re: Peruvian shaman buried body of U.S. teen who died from drinking ayahuasca
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There has been a tendency in certain writers, or self appointed experts on psychedelia, to promote shamanism. Terence McKenna wrote a lot about Shamanism and this subject was continued with vacuous nonsense like Daniel Pinchbeck's writings, in which he opines that the psychedelic experience is invalid without "Shamanism."
I also don't see what is wrong with shamans sharing their knowledge which is fascinating in itself. Nor can you blame them for trying to make some money, but many of these centres are run by foreigners, charging a hefty fee (over $1000), who claim to be 'spiritual' healers/ teachers. There are those who have been helped apparently by 'spiritual' encounters with jungle spirits (set and setting!), but remember how many people claim to have been helped by Jesus, Krishna, etc.
This type of tourism is now quite widespread. Problems are bound to occur. I doubt that the participants are properly prepared and the potency of brews which the shaman make cannot be accurately controlled. They are also full of toxins-- hence the vomiting. Different plants have different alkaloids and so on. (Jonathan Ott wrote rationally about this.)
Strassman did conduct such scientifically controlled experiments in DMT: The Spirit Molecule. There were certainly problems with the setting.
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I agree 100% about this being more of a tourist attraction these days, than a spiritual embarkment, which is what it should be.
Good point about the romanticism of shamanic practices
Thanks for bringing this up
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ebastopol teen died in Peru trying ‘to further open his mind’
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Kyle Josef Nolan and his parents knew exactly why the 18-year-old Sebastopol man traveled to a retreat center in the Peruvian jungle: to participate in an “ayahuasca ritual,” ingesting a psychoactive concoction used by Amazonian people for centuries and popular with westerners, including the musician Sting.
But the 10-day program at the Shimbre Shamanic Center went tragically wrong, and the operator, a shaman named Jose Manuel Pineda Vargas, attempted to cover up Nolan’s death and lied to his mother when she first arrived in Peru, according to Sean Nolan of Petaluma, Kyle’s father.
Peruvian National Police said they arrested Pineda, 58, who called himself “Master Mancoluto,” and two men who allegedly helped bury Nolan’s body on the shamanic center’s property outside the city of Puerto Maldonado in southeastern Peru near the Bolivian border.
A YouTube video depicts Pineda leading authorities to the spot where Nolan’s body was unearthed.
Ingeborg Oswald of Sebastopol, Nolan’s mother, and his sister, Marion Nolan, were in Peru Friday waiting to bring Nolan’s body home and also obtain official reports on his death, Sean Nolan said.
“This is what he wanted to do,” Sean Nolan said. “This was not to be a vacation for him, but rather an experience to further open his mind.”
Nolan, a 2011 graduate from Analy High School, had taken a year off from school and worked odd jobs to save money for the trip to Peru and the shamanic retreat, where ayahuasca is the “centerpiece” of a 10-day program, Sean Nolan said.
“It does have inherent risks,” he said.
Sean Nolan said he was concerned about his son’s use of ayahuasca, a psychoactive brew widely used by indigenous Amazonian people that contains dimethyltryptamine (DMT), a psychedelic substance that is illegal in the United States.
Nolan said he had researched ayahuasca and found no reports of “bad experiences” with it. He disputed a media report that his son had taken an excessive dose in an Aug. 22 ritual at the shamanic center.
On the program’s seventh day, the shaman made a specific “preparation” for each of the participants, who had fasted and taken other steps prior to the ritual.
“Kyle drank what he was given,” his father said, then found his way to a tent on a wooden platform on the center grounds. No one checked on him, and he was found dead the following day, Aug. 23, his father said.
After Kyle Nolan failed to return home on Aug. 26, his mother and sister made the first of two trips to Peru to find him. Sean Nolan said that Pineda “looked them right in the eye” and told them Kyle had seemed “despondent” and “just walked off with his suitcase.”
Pineda’s account apparently did not hold up under police questioning, Sean Nolan said.
Roberto Velez, the owner of the Shimbre Center, told Oswald what had really happened, prompting her second trip to Peru, Nolan said. Oswald is a veterinarian who runs a clinic in Rohnert Park.
On Friday, the Shimbre Shamanic Center’s website had only two photographs: a man identified as “Master Mancoluto” and a round, unoccupied building. All other information on the site had been deleted.
More than 30 YouTube videos depict people describing their “ayahuasca experience,” including Sting, who said he drank it at a big church in the jungle outside Rio de Janeiro about 20 years ago. In four minutes, Sting said, he experienced a sensation of being “wired to the entire cosmos.”
“It is communion, this direct access to the Godhead or whatever you think that is,” Sting said, calling it “the only genuine religious experience I’ve ever had.”
Charles Grob, a professor of psychiatry at UCLA School of Medicine who has studied ayahuasca, said in a YouTube video that it can cause “a very painful ordeal, it can be an eternity in a hell realm, as it were.”
Grob said the substance can be harmful when used along with certain anti-depressants, but he had heard of only one ayahuasca-related death. That involved an elderly Native Canadian woman whose body was overloaded with nicotine.
Kyle and Marion Nolan and their brother, Kevin Nolan, were triplets, born on Sept. 23, 1993. Kevin and Marion are sophomores at UC Santa Cruz and UC Davis, respectively.
Cesar Inda of Sebastopol said he knew the brothers at Analy High, describing them as a “dynamic duo” who looked a lot alike and were “almost inseparable.”
Inda, 19, said he had seen Kyle Nolan at Santa Rosa Junior College early last month and was shocked to learn on Facebook of his death .
“It really made me think how short life can be,” he said.
Sam Watkins, 19, of Sebastopol said he and Nolan were good friends at Twin Hills Middle School years ago. They played video games and listened to classic rock, including “Knocking on Heaven’s Door” by both Bob Dylan and Guns N’ Roses.
Watkins recalled that Nolan would come to his birthday party in the middle of summer when “everybody else was gone.”
September 15th, 2012
Photo: Kyle Nolan of Sebastopol, right, pictured with his triplet siblings Marion, left, and Kevin. Kyle died Aug. 22 at a jungle retreat in Peru. (Family photo)
By GUY KOVNER
[sebastopol.towns.pressdemocra...open-his-mind]
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Old 18-09-2012, 18:48
Phungushead Phungushead is offline
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Tragedy in the Amazon
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Apparently, there was a death recently at Chimbre (Shimbre?). An 18 year old kid passed away during ceremony, though details are still spotty and it looks as though there was an attempt to cover up the tragedy and pretend he just 'disappeared'. Mancoluto and two others were put in police custody, and the future of the retreat center is at risk.
I have to say that I'm not surprised. When I wrote my original post about Chimbre, I heavily edited my writing so as not to be another one of the smack talkers online. This retreat center was notorious before it even opened, after the SNAFU with Pinchbeck and the Reality Sandwich retreat that was cancelled due to monetary squabbles, and a bevy of documentary filmmakers who were brought on and then discarded after 'creative differences' (including the gentleman who invited us down).
But that was all just drama. Interpersonal drama, around money, and around message: philosophical, personality, and moral differences. The stuff that I edited out of my original post that was truly relevant was related to the methodology of Chimbre.
Mancoluto, aside from claiming to be descended from Martians by way of Atlantis, Lemuria, and Chavin de Huantar, also claimed to be a "First Level Shaman". He said there were only 5 such skilled people on earth, and that it signified they were: a) possessing of 7 senses including ESP, Telepathy, and Intuition, and b) pureblooded Martians.
Needless to say, this was pretty controversial stuff. I didn't really believe it, but found myself translating it to the other retreat-goers as all of his apprentices were selectively editing what he said to fit their narrative.
The Maestro also had an extremely avant-garde approach to administering the medicine. Rather than prepare the brew himself (he DID prepare the San Pedro as he is a Huachumero), he bought it second-hand from an ayahuasquero in Pucallpa. He also didn't sing ikaros, but instead sang the same song about Las Huarinjas (his homeland, and the San Pedro capital of Peru) before sending the 'ceremony' participants alone out into the jungle.
I repeat, alone out into the jungle. Yes, there were several minders, apprentices (oftentimes also under the influence of either San Pedro or Ayahuasca) who were supposed to keep an eye on people. However, they were spread out across at least an acre of raised walkways, each in individual tents on raised platforms.
Maestro Mancoluto claimed that he was able to monitor everyone from up in his scaffold tower using his ESP and Telepathy. After sending all of the ceremony participants into the jungle, he climbed into his room and would watch Peruvian Soap Operas while sitting on a bank of batteries. He said they didn't need the circle, the group intention, the ikaros, or his guidance to get the most from the medicine. In his own words, all that was just 'therapy', and therapy was for the weak. He wanted people to evolve, to awaken their DNA. to that end, he said ayahusca was only useful as a purgative, a reset button, and that San Pedro was the true medicine.
The ayahuasca he administered was heavy on the brugmansia admixture, though in a one on one interview he confided in me that he had three mixtures with separate quantities of Toe (brugmansia, a dangerous tropane alkaloid containing plant) and that he'd instruct his apprentices to give people different brews depending one what his intuition told him. Brugmansia is notorious for its deliriant and anti-cholinergic effects, and can cause blindness, amnesia, ataxia, xerostomia, hyperthermia, tachycardia, and death. On our arrival (after the first night of ayahuasca and san pedro), one of the participants, an 18 year old America, reported wandering out of the jungle, onto the road, talking to people that weren't there, waving down cars, smoking imaginary cigarettes, and that his eyes actually changed color, all of which indicated a high quantity of Brugmansia in Mancoluto's borrowed brew.
Mancoluto also administered San Pedro in the same ceremony as the Ayahuasca, after he'd sent all those who'd imbibed Ayahuasca out into the jungle alone. He'd then lead the Huachuma participants in a march around the Maloca before sending them alone out into the jungle.
All of these things were very disconcerting, and many people (including several of his volunteers and some acclaimed international researchers) refused to participate in such a dangerous ceremony. At the time, many of us discussed at length whether or not it was responsible to send people alone into the jungle on Ayahuasca or San Pedro, let alone on a brew heavily laced with tropane alkaloids.
For experts and experienced psychonauts, such an experience alone with the medicine and the jungle could be a really beneficial thing, we rationalized. Maybe his goal of administering this brew to Wall Street would help influence the trajectory of global finance. Maybe he's living the shaman dream?
Now, in light of the death of an 18 year old kid from Northern California and the subsequent cover up, I feel the need to come clean. When I wrote my first journal, I wanted to show appreciation to Rob and the Chimbre crew by writing a non-critical blog after they so graciously allowed us (and many others) to participate for free in their retreat. Many of their naysayers were already spread out on the internet, and I had no desire to join their ranks given the rationalizations I'd created in my mind about Maestro Mancoluto and Chimbre. But now that my trepidations and fears have been confirmed, I feel it necessary to write this follow up.
Ayahuasca and San Pedro are incredible medicines with complex rituals and ceremonies developed over thousands of years of co-evolution between man and plant. They also contain various admixtures, depending on the preparer, and Ayahuasca in particular is frequently mixed with potentially dangerous other plants. That is part of the reason so many practitioners stick to the dieta and the ritual, including the circle, the darkness, the group intention, and the ikaros.
While I am not experienced enough to tell anyone whether or not they should participate in a particular ceremony or with one shaman or curandero or another, I think its absolutely essential for people to do their homework.
Find out what is in the medicine. Ask if a ceremony is traditional, or avant-garde, and decide if its right for you. Make sure you're not taking any medication or eating any food that is contra-indicated. The dieta is not just superstition, it can save your life!
I'd also like to say that I am deeply sorry to the family of Kyle Nolan for their loss, as well as to all the people who put so much into Chimbre and believed in Mancoluto's message. Losing someone so young in such a way is just terrible. Having lost some of my friends, too young, in murky situations, I know how much it hurts, but I can only imagine what losing a son is like...
That being said, hopefully this doesn't create a backlash against the medicine, this is the first death I've heard of related to Ayahuasca since I was introduced to it, and someone dies in America from prescription drug overdose every 19 seconds [www.cdc.gov] . May we hold those responsible for this tragedy to the same standards we would a Western Doctor who misdiagnosed someone or was engaging in a groundbreaking therapy that went awry. I also pray for Mancoluto, Rob, and those involved, that if they were acting responsibly they are exonerated, and if they were acting irresponsibly, that they eventually find justice and peace.
May this be just another step in our collective evolution.
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The knowledge which Shaman Mancoluto carries comes from the Order of Bancotauri, a system used by the Shamans of Chavin de Huantar to access a superior metaphysical knowledge coming from Atlantis, Lemuria and different parts of the Universe.
Quote
By GUY KOVNER
THE PRESS DEMOCRAT
Published: Friday, September 14, 2012 at 7:16 p.m.
Last Modified: Friday, September 14, 2012 at 8:15 p.m.
Kyle Josef Nolan and his parents knew exactly why the 18-year-old Sebastopol man traveled to a retreat center in the Peruvian jungle: to participate in an “ayahuasca ritual,” ingesting a psychoactive concoction used by Amazonian people for centuries and popular with westerners, including the musician Sting.
But the 10-day program at the Shimbre Shamanic Center went tragically wrong, and the operator, a shaman named Jose Manuel Pineda Vargas, attempted to cover up Nolan's death and lied to his mother when she first arrived in Peru, according to Sean Nolan of Petaluma, Kyle's father.
Peruvian National Police said they arrested Pineda, 58, who called himself “Master Mancoluto,” and two men who allegedly helped bury Nolan's body on the shamanic center's property outside the city of Puerto Maldonado in southeastern Peru near the Bolivian border.
A YouTube video depicts Pineda leading authorities to the spot where Nolan's body was unearthed.
Ingeborg Oswald of Sebastopol, Nolan's mother, and his sister, Marion Nolan, were in Peru Friday waiting to bring Nolan's body home and also obtain official reports on his death, Sean Nolan said.
“This is what he wanted to do,” Sean Nolan said. “This was not to be a vacation for him, but rather an experience to further open his mind.”
Nolan, a 2011 graduate from Analy High School, had taken a year off from school and worked odd jobs to save money for the trip to Peru and the shamanic retreat, where ayahuasca is the “centerpiece” of a 10-day program, Sean Nolan said.
“It does have inherent risks,” he said.
Sean Nolan said he was concerned about his son's use of ayahuasca, a psychoactive brew widely used by indigenous Amazonian people that contains dimethyltryptamine (DMT), a psychedelic substance that is illegal in the United States.
Nolan said he had researched ayahuasca and found no reports of “bad experiences” with it. He disputed a media report that his son had taken an excessive dose in an Aug. 22 ritual at the shamanic center.
On the program's seventh day, the shaman made a specific “preparation” for each of the participants, who had fasted and taken other steps prior to the ritual.
“Kyle drank what he was given,” his father said, then found his way to a tent on a wooden platform on the center grounds. No one checked on him, and he was found dead the following day, Aug. 23, his father said.
After Kyle Nolan failed to return home on Aug. 26, his mother and sister made the first of two trips to Peru to find him. Sean Nolan said that Pineda “looked them right in the eye” and told them Kyle had seemed “despondent” and “just walked off with his suitcase.”
Pineda's account apparently did not hold up under police questioning, Sean Nolan said.
Roberto Velez, the owner of the Shimbre Center, told Oswald what had really happened, prompting her second trip to Peru, Nolan said. Oswald is a veterinarian who runs a clinic in Rohnert Park.
On Friday, the Shimbre Shamanic Center's website had only two photographs: a man identified as “Master Mancoluto” and a round, unoccupied building. All other information on the site had been deleted.
More than 30 YouTube videos depict people describing their “ayahuasca experience,” including Sting, who said he drank it at a big church in the jungle outside Rio de Janeiro about 20 years ago. In four minutes, Sting said, he experienced a sensation of being “wired to the entire cosmos.”
“It is communion, this direct access to the Godhead or whatever you think that is,” Sting said, calling it “the only genuine religious experience I've ever had.”
Charles Grob, a professor of psychiatry at UCLA School of Medicine who has studied ayahuasca, said in a YouTube video that it can cause “a very painful ordeal, it can be an eternity in a hell realm, as it were.”
Grob said the substance can be harmful when used along with certain anti-depressants, but he had heard of only one ayahuasca-related death. That involved an elderly Native Canadian woman whose body was overloaded with nicotine.
Kyle and Marion Nolan and their brother, Kevin Nolan, were triplets, born on Sept. 23, 1993. Kevin and Marion are sophomores at UC Santa Cruz and UC Davis, respectively.
Cesar Inda of Sebastopol said he knew the brothers at Analy High, describing them as a “dynamic duo” who looked a lot alike and were “almost inseparable.”
Inda, 19, said he had seen Kyle Nolan at Santa Rosa Junior College early last month and was shocked to learn on Facebook of his death .
“It really made me think how short life can be,” he said.
Sam Watkins, 19, of Sebastopol said he and Nolan were good friends at Twin Hills Middle School years ago. They played video games and listened to classic rock, including “Knocking on Heaven's Door” by both Bob Dylan and Guns N' Roses.
Watkins recalled that Nolan would come to his birthday party in the middle of summer when “everybody else was gone.”
Sebastopol teen died in Peru trying 'to further open his mind'By GUY KOVNER
Kyle Nolan
PressDemocrat.comSeptember 14, 2012 8:15 PM
<p>Kyle Josef Nolan and his parents knew exactly why the 18-year-old Sebastopol man traveled to a retreat center in the Peruvian jungle: to participate in an “ayahuasca ritual,” ingesting a psychoactive concoction used by Amazonian people for centuries and popular with westerners, including the musician Sting.</p><p>But the 10-day program at the Shimbre Shamanic Center went tragically wrong, and the operator, a shaman named Jose Manuel Pineda Vargas, attempted to cover up Nolan's death and lied to his mother when she first arrived in Peru, according to Sean Nolan of Petaluma, Kyle's father.
Peruvian National Police said they arrested Pineda, 58, who called himself “Master Mancoluto,” and two men who allegedly helped bury Nolan's body on the shamanic center's property outside the city of Puerto Maldonado in southeastern Peru near the Bolivian border.
A YouTube video depicts Pineda leading authorities to the spot where Nolan's body was unearthed.
Ingeborg Oswald of Sebastopol, Nolan's mother, and his sister, Marion Nolan, were in Peru Friday waiting to bring Nolan's body home and also obtain official reports on his death, Sean Nolan said.
“This is what he wanted to do,” Sean Nolan said. “This was not to be a vacation for him, but rather an experience to further open his mind.”
Nolan, a 2011 graduate from Analy High School, had taken a year off from school and worked odd jobs to save money for the trip to Peru and the shamanic retreat, where ayahuasca is the “centerpiece” of a 10-day program, Sean Nolan said.
“It does have inherent risks,” he said.
Sean Nolan said he was concerned about his son's use of ayahuasca, a psychoactive brew widely used by indigenous Amazonian people that contains dimethyltryptamine (DMT), a psychedelic substance that is illegal in the United States.
Nolan said he had researched ayahuasca and found no reports of “bad experiences” with it.
He disputed a media report that his son had taken an excessive dose in an Aug. 22 ritual at the shamanic center.
On the program's seventh day, the shaman made a specific “preparation” for each of the participants, who had fasted and taken other steps prior to the ritual.
Kyle drank what he was given,” his father said, then found his way to a tent on a wooden platform on the center grounds. No one checked on him, and he was found dead the following day, Aug. 23, his father said
After Kyle Nolan failed to return home on Aug. 26, his mother and sister made the first of two trips to Peru to find him. Sean Nolan said that Pineda “looked them right in the eye” and told them Kyle had seemed “despondent” and “just walked off with his suitcase.”
Pineda's account apparently did not hold up under police questioning, Sean Nolan said.
Roberto Velez, the owner of the Shimbre Center, told Oswald what had really happened, prompting her second trip to Peru, Nolan said. Oswald is a veterinarian who runs a clinic in Rohnert Park.
On Friday, the Shimbre Shamanic Center's website had only two photographs: a man identified as “Master Mancoluto” and a round, unoccupied building. All other information on the site had been deleted.
More than 30 YouTube videos depict people describing their “ayahuasca experience,” including Sting, who said he drank it at a big church in the jungle outside Rio de Janeiro about 20 years ago.
In four minutes, Sting said, he experienced a sensation of being “wired to the entire cosmos.”
“It is communion, this direct access to the Godhead or whatever you think that is,” Sting said, calling it “the only genuine religious experience I've ever had.”
Charles Grob, a professor of psychiatry at UCLA School of Medicine who has studied ayahuasca, said in a YouTube video that it can cause “a very painful ordeal, it can be an eternity in a hell realm, as it were.”
Grob said the substance can be harmful when used along with certain anti-depressants, but he had heard of only one ayahuasca-related death.
That involved an elderly Native Canadian woman whose body was overloaded with nicotine.</p>
Kyle and Marion Nolan and their brother, Kevin Nolan, were triplets, born on Sept. 23, 1993. Kevin and Marion are sophomores at UC Santa Cruz and UC Davis, respectively.
Cesar Inda of Sebastopol said he knew the brothers at Analy High, describing them as a “dynamic duo” who looked a lot alike and were “almost inseparable.”
Inda, 19, said he had seen Kyle Nolan at Santa Rosa Junior College early last month and was shocked to learn on Facebook of his death .</p><p>“It really made me think how short life can be,” he said.
Sam Watkins, 19, of Sebastopol said he and Nolan were good friends at Twin Hills Middle School years ago.
They played video games and listened to classic rock, including “Knocking on Heaven's Door” by both Bob Dylan and Guns N' Roses.</p><p>Watkins recalled that Nolan would come to his birthday party in the middle of summer when “everybody else was gone.”</p>
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"...one has to contemplate the extraordinary clash of pre-modern and postmodern cultures that constitutes much of the Tibetan-Buddhism-Comes-West experience.
We might call it an “epistemic collision”, in which two descriptions of the world and existence are mutually exclusive, leading both to mutual distortion and/or romanticization.
The Tibetans have not waded through the scientific or humanistic revolutions that form the groundwork for postmodern life.
How do we meet them?
How do we understand their world of deity yoga and oracular possession? How can they understand our general democracy of thought?
What do we create out of our mutual projections onto each other?
In my experience, Tibetan religions can speak powerfully to a wounded place in (postmodern) folk that yearns for pre-modern simplicity, or perhaps even a renewed clarity of childhood power dynamics.
This is not to demean the soaring complexity of Tibetan metaphysics, nor the therapeutic jewels in its meditation technology, but to suggest that its hierarchical and faith-soaked method of transmission runs counter to the secular-liberal-humanist neurology that most western acolytes bring to it.
To take it on fully, we have to partition off about four centuries of culture in our brains. Like every split, there is price to a pay.