Intuition

In previous articles, I have written about the ability of medicine men/shamans and other healers to access information intuitively about the people for whom they work. Therefore, it seems useful to describe this phenomenon in greater detail and how and why I use it in my practice.

In the American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 3rd Ed. (1992), intuition is defined as: 1. “The act or faculty of knowing or sensing without the use of rational processes; immediate cognition… a perceptive insight. 2. A sense of something not evident or deducible; an impression.” Physician and medical intuitive, Mona Lisa Schulz, MD, Ph.D., defines intuition by stating: “Intuition occurs when we directly perceive facts outside the range of the usual five senses and independently of any reasoning processes”. Psychotherapist Belleruth Naparstek refers to intuition as one’s sixth sense or psychic potential.  Psychiatrist, Judith Orloff, M.D. sees the Intuitive as a means of describing the psychic, prefers the term intuitive versus psychic due to the variety of myths and misconceptions associated with the term psychic. Personally, I use these terms interchangeably depending on with whom I am speaking. The public is also aware of the term Extra Sensory Perception (ESP), which I consider an intuitive phenomenon.

When presenting the topic of intuition to health care colleagues, I speak of: “Seeing that which is not normally seen; hearing (as in telepathically) that which is not normally heard; feeling (kinesthetically) that which is not normally felt; and knowing, beforehand, that which is yet to occur (precognition).”

  • Clairvoyance - Seeing information, such as a person’s Luminous Energy Field or a person’s deceased relative

  • Clairaudience - Hearing information which is most frequently experienced as thoughts

  • Clairsentience - Feeling information, such as feeling in my body precisely that which a patient is feeling in her body

  • Precognition - Knowing information that has yet to occur in linear time. Also, knowing information in a non-linear manner is often referred to as an intuitive hit. For example, a physician knowing that his patient has a cancerous breast tumor even though all radiographic data and palpations show no evidence of such a tumor but which exploratory surgery indeed finds. 

How intuitive/psychic phenomena occur is, in itself, a topic addressed in almost countless books and articles throughout the fields of metaphysics, spirituality, theology, and the hard sciences, such as quantum physics. They have been spoken of and taught throughout history in oral traditions especially among the indigenous peoples of the world. The yogi masters of India are famous for their abilities to access information about people and events that are outside those individuals’ immediate, physical purview.

For the purposes of this article, I shall share with you the typical answer I offer my patients who frequently ask, “How do you know that?” I begin by first normalizing the phenomenon of intuition, telling them that almost all humans have the ability to access information in this way. I ask them to think about a time or times in their lives when they too came to know something through intuition. Frequently, they have.

I also speak to them about people such as Swiss psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung, M.D. who theorized that humans share what he referred to as the collective unconscious, a library, so to speak, of all the knowledge humans have gathered since the beginning of their time on Earth. I also mention the theoretical and nuclear physicist, Amit Goswami, Ph.D., who referred to the “undivided, non-local consciousness.” The shamans and medicine people of the world describe the human being’s soul as being of the Divine and therefore, infinite and eternal. Hence, it has access to what theologians call Divine omniscience (all knowingness). The yogis refer to the superconscious that is tapping into the Christ Consciousness and Cosmic Consciousness. Lakota medicine man Wallace Black Elk said that he received information directly from spirits and spirit guides. 

I further introduce my patients to the works of laser physicists Russell Targ and Harold Puthoff who conducted research on psychic abilities, specifically, the phenomenon they call “remote viewing,” which is essentially, the ability to literally see in one’s mind that which another person, in another physical location is seeing directly (Targ & Puthoff, 1977). I encourage my patients to read the works of these people so that they can “seed” their own minds with the data I know to be true (reference my article on muscle-testing).

On a more personal level, I tell my patients that in my service to them, I have committed myself to being an agent of the Holy Spirit and as such, have offered to be open to any and all information, 24/7, that the Spirit would deem useful for me to possess consciously in the service of all those sent to me. I also inform those who are open to such phenomena that I receive direction and information from eight sentient beings who have assisted me since early 2003. Some folks receive this information openly and enthusiastically. We then do the work, which includes introducing patients to the muscle-testing procedure, utilized as a means of determining the accuracy of the intuitive data I receive.

As I mentioned in prior articles, I consider the patient’s soul, (High Self) and his angelic guides to be the experts about him. This is one of the major reasons why I use intuition in my practice. Therefore, I ask my patients to give their guides permission and a directive to either tell me either directly what I need to know or to tell my guides who, in turn, relay the information to me. I also reiterate that they themselves can receive this information once they develop their own intuitive abilities. Intuition is not magic, it is a trait/skill inherent in almost all human beings. As such, think of intuitive ability as one might think of musical ability. Most of us can learn to play an instrument or to sing with a degree of proficiency that allows us enjoyment. Similarly, we also know that there are those among us who are virtuosos and geniuses at their craft. In the arena of intuition, there are some that are particularly gifted.

Muscle-Testing: A Tool for Determining Truth

Consider this very common scenario: A person has been experiencing significant and chronic lower back pain. A variety of contemporary remedies including surgery, have been to no avail. This person’s quality of life has lessened dramatically and he/she is now despairing of ever again being able to enjoy life and living again. In what feels to the person as a last ditch effort to find relief, he/she again consults two orthopedic surgeon experts.  One recommends additional surgery, assuring the patient that this is the very best option. The other surgeon says: “This back pain is due to your mental and emotional habits. Changing your thinking and emotional habits will offer you the very best chance to heal, recover, and live a full life. Surgery is definitely NOT your answer.”  Two experts offering two dramatically differing recommendations.

What is that person to do? What would you do if you were in this position?  How is the person to know which approach, if either, is the best to take?

This scenario is presented in the arena of what most would refer to as the hard sciences (e.g., orthopedics, oncology, even physics). Now imagine that this person’s problem fell in the arena of the softer sciences, for example, the fields of psychology and psychotherapy. If experts in the hard science fields can disagree, one can imagine the breath of conflicting clinical opinions that exist in the softer sciences. I assure you, they do.

Now consider this: What if the patient and doctor had a tool they could use that could tell them which clinical intervention would be best?  As profound as it might seem, such a tool does exists. It is called muscle-testing.

Muscle Testing
Muscle-testing, also referred to as clinical kinesiological muscle testing (Hawkins, 1995), is a procedure in which a clinician assesses the relative strength of a patient’s indicator muscle, which is typically the deltoid muscle. Any muscle can be used, and I most frequently use a patient’s finger muscles. The procedure is based on the fact that when a person holds in mind a proposition that is true, his/her muscle(s) will test strong and when a person holds in mind a proposition that is false, the muscle(s) will briefly test weak.  This response occurs regardless of the person’s belief and whether or not the person has any familiarity with the concept/proposition being tested.

Muscle testing was originally researched by Kendall et. al. in 1971. It was popularized by chiropractor George Goodheart in 1976 when he published his book, Applied Kinesiology. Goodheart used muscle testing in part, to determine if a particular substance was healthy/life enhancing or not for a particular individual. He also used muscle testing to assess which areas of a person’s spine were functioning properly or improperly and thus knew where to apply chiropractic interventions.

In 1979, psychiatrist John Diamond, MD, expanded muscle testing to include his discovery that muscles would respond strong or weak to positive or negative emotional and intellectual stimuli, respectively.  For example, a picture of a smiling infant will test strong and the statement, “I hate you,” will test weak. Dr. Diamond’s called his new discipline, Behavioral Kinesiology.

Research on the kinesiological response as applied to truth or falsehood, was begun by psychiatrist Dr. David R. Hawkins, MD, PhD in 1975.  He first published his findings in 1995 in a book entitled, Power vs Force.  It appears that there is a part of the human being’s consciousness that has access to what Hawkins referred to as a database of consciousness. Swiss psychiatrist Carl Gustav Jung, MD called it the collective unconscious. Physicist Amit Goswami, PhD referred to this database as the undivided, non-local consciousness. Some say we are tapping into the Divine Omniscience.  Whatever it is, it appears our minds can access data our conscious minds are unaware of.

Particularly seminal was Dr. Hawkins’ discovery of a “scale of relative truth by which intellectual positions, statements or ideologies could be ranked on a range of one to one thousand.” In other words, it was now possible to determine just how true a particular statement was. As an example, consider the difference between a Ph.D. mathematician’s answer to the question: “What is mathematics?” and a second grader’s answer. The former would contain more truth than the latter. This discovery was expanded into Dr. Hawkins’ scale of Levels of Consciousness. Since this scale is not so relevant to the main purpose of this article, the interested reader is directed to see Hawkins (1995).

How I Use Muscle Testing in My Practice
Essentially, I use muscle testing to ascertain which type of intervention to apply, to which problem/symptom, and in what order to apply it. For example, a patient presents a complaint of suffering the physical symptoms of Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS).  We determine further that the person also experiences depression and anxiety as a result of having this physical condition. Let us also understand that the patient initially sought treatment because he/she believed that the use of hypnosis, which I specialize in, would be helpful.

After introducing the person to muscle testing as a tool and then demonstrating it with the patient, we proceed to test which symptom to address first. In this example we test the following: The first symptom to address is physical sensation A, B, or C. The first symptom to address is the anxiety. The first symptom to address is the depression.

Let’s say the muscle testing indicated Yes, i.e., went strong to the statement: The first symptom to address is the anxiety. We would then next test which tool/method/procedure to apply first (often more than one is required) to reduce or eliminate the anxiety. My patients find it fascinating to note that they are able to demonstrate differential responses (i.e., yes and no) to propositions, constructs, and procedures they do not consciously understand. As an example, I might say: “The best method to apply to reduce the anxiety is TFT” (or EMDR or The Protocol, etc.).  It is also important to note that at the time of testing, the client typically does not know what these procedures are, yet a part of his/her mind does. The treatment proceeds with the continuous use of the muscle testing procedure until the desired outcome is accomplished.

Muscle Testing Oneself
The greatest majority of people with whom I work in my practice are capable of learning how to muscle test themselves. If a patient chooses to learn self muscle testing, I tutor them throughout the course of our work together. There are a number of variables which the patient must learn about that can and do affect the accuracy of the muscle testing response. 

Also, there are some people who are unable muscle test themselves, in-particular, those whose level of consciousness is below the scale of 200 (Hawkins, 2003). Fortunately, I and other practitioners are able to muscle test ourselves in order to access all the data required to assist our patients even when the patient him/herself is unable to respond accurately. We are able to tap into that database of consciousness mentioned above, which contains the information needed for us to be of assistance to our patients.

Muscle Testing: Additional Applications
In addition to the abovementioned uses of muscle testing, there is data I assess prior to agreeing to meet prospective patients. During my initial telephone contact with the person I muscle test several basic and central propositions. Typically, I assess the following, if granted permission by the One I refer to as The Holy Spirit:

  1. Based on the information the individual has conveyed to me, I do have the capability to be of assistance.

  2. This person is currently able to benefit from treatment.

  3. This person is currently willing to benefit from treatment.

  4. The symptom(s) can be significantly ameliorated, healed or cured.

  5. The Holy Spirit directs me to work with this person at this time.

The answers help me in my decision to accept (or not) the person as a patient. Thus, I know in advance, the potential for our work together to be successful. However, in light of the gift of free choice, any individual can, at any point in the process, choose to reject his/her opportunities for self-improvement.  Oft times, people will succumb to fear and retreat from the rigors of the treatment process.  Yet, even in such instances, seeds of health, help, and happiness have been sown which may bear fruit sometime in the future. 

I have taught muscle testing to hundreds of colleagues these past few decades. When they contact me to conduct a remote session with themselves and their clients, the clinicians will often utilize muscle testing with their clients during our session.  This helps make the information that is being offered objective and often ratifies for the patient the soundness of the interventions.

Conclusion
It is my hope that this article has served to clarify both what muscle testing is and how it is employed in my practice. It is a marvelous tool that most people can learn to use and apply to almost every facet of their lives as well as its usefulness in clinical practice. It helps to reinforce the understanding that it is the person’s High Self whom is the expert regarding the person, above and beyond any professional expert. This is remarkably empowering for the patient.

Illumination Protocol

As mentioned in the prior article, Understanding Your Energetic Self, I mentioned that two central interventions used in my energy medicine practice include the Illumination Process and the Extraction Process (Villoldo, 2000). This article will be dedicated to describing a variation of the Illumination Process that I use in my practice and which I refer to as the Illumination Protocol.

The Illumination Process that I learned from Medical Anthropologist, Psychologist, and shaman Dr. Alberto Villoldo, is beautifully explicated in his seminal book entitled, Shaman, Healer, Sage (2000). I highly recommend this reference for the interested reader. There are times when I conduct this process as it is described by Dr. Villoldo. Before I describe the Protocol, as I refer to it with my patients, I believe it would be helpful for the reader to understand the educational context in which we students were taught the variety of shamanic practices, rites, and rituals as presented by the Four Winds Society (Dr. Villoldo’s institute).

Over the course of 2 years of study, students were required to perform each process, rite and ritual taught, approximately 100 times during the six months in between our week-long gatherings.  We were then asked to write 3 case studies in which we described the client, his/her presenting problem(s), and the specific procedure we employed.

It was during the first six-month period that I became aware of eight beings who were present to guide and assist me in this energy medicine practice.  Some writers refer to them as spirit guides.  Others call them Master Guides, while others call them allies or guardian angels. More important than the moniker is, in my opinion, their purpose, which is to assist the practitioner in functioning as a tool for the Holy Spirit in the service of helping others. 

These eight guides present themselves as flamed-shaped forms with specific colors and functions.  I see them in an upper corner in my consulting room. The upper layer contains the four guides who specifically address and assist with issues that are psychological, emotional, behavioral, and spiritual in nature. They present as Ruby Red, Gold, Royal Blue, and Violet.  The lower row of guides primarily assist with issues of a physical/biological nature. They present as Crimson, Orange-Red (as the color of a rising sun), Aqua-Marine Blue, and Lavender.  To say I was rather perplexed might be an understatement. However, I intuitively felt at peace, supported, and reassured that they were there in support of the highest good for all concerned.

I share this information with you for the following reason: these guides began to speak to me telepathically, suggesting alternate ways of conducting the specific procedures I had been taught, including, but not limited to, the Illumination Process.   Being relatively skeptical and left-brained, I conducted research on all the instructions I was receiving, that is, I used a procedure called muscle-testing (the Kinesiology Response) to ascertain the veracity/truth of each instruction and, more importantly, my understanding/interpretation of the specific instruction.

I tested each instruction I received and recorded the data. By the second week of our instruction, I had submitted a total of six case studies including an additional six case studies of the same cases in which I iterated the alterations.  Included in my narratives were apologies to the instructors for any missteps I might have been committing. The teaching shaman who was charged with reading my case studies approached me and suggested first that I stop apologizing and then offered what I considered a remarkable gift. She asked if I would privately conduct the alternative procedures I had described with five other teaching shamans (herself included) who were present among us. She then said they would hold council, compare their experiences, and then offer me feedback regarding their opinions about the soundness (or lack thereof) of each procedure. I was honored that they were so eager to assist me in this manner.

Their conclusions were, in a word, validating. They said it was their opinion that I was remembering ancient procedures they believed I had learned in past lives and was collating them into the new energetics of our modern times. They also encouraged me to continue doing what [I] was doing and again offered to experience any variations I might come across. So it is from these processes of intuiting data and having the data checked by the teachers, that I came to develop what I refer to as the Protocol.

The core of the Protocol includes the following: The first piece of datum that is assessed is the soul part of the individual that is eventually to be retrieved. To date (14 years of this form of practice) the soul part presents as a geometric form (e.g., 4-sided pyramid, sphere, octahedron, etc.) of a particular color, in a specific location in the person’s Luminous Energy Field, and rotating in either a clockwise or counterclockwise direction. The guides advise that it is “not useful” at this time for me to understand the import of the specific geometric pattern. The color signifies the level of consciousness of the soul part. The location in the LEF indicates whether the issue being addressed is of a spirit (causal), soul (psychic/etheric), psychologic (mental-emotional), or physical nature. The direction of the energy rotation offers a gross, preliminary determination of where on earth the traumatic event occurred (i.e., a clockwise direction indicates the Northern Hemisphere and counterclockwise indicates the Southern).

The second step of the Protocol indicates the number of other peoples’ soul parts that are attached to the persons LEF. For people who have not had an Illumination in this incarnation that number can range from hundreds to thousands. 

The third level of information includes which chakra is to be Illuminated (cleansed, repaired, reprogrammed), the number of cords of energy that emerge from the back of that chakra, and the location of the entities (one attached to each cord) in the person’s LEF.

The fourth piece of datum is the number of fluid entities that visually present in the person’s body. These are other peoples’ soul parts with whom the person had some form of intimate relationship in prior lifetimes and that had, in a sense, been “invited” to take up residence within the person. This number also ranges from the hundreds to thousands. These data are then checked for accuracy by using muscle- testing. The energy medicine interventions are then conducted.

The first intervention is the clearing of the souls parts in the person’s LEF. They are released to any of the four cardinal directions as well as to above and below, whichever direction is correct for each particular soul.

The second step involves cutting/clearing the energetic cords, clearing the entities that were attached to those cords, cleansing, repairing, and re-programming the chakra, extracting the fluid entities, and returning them to the Light by once again addressing the four cardinal directions and the above and below directions.  Muscle-testing is used all throughout these processes to make certain that all clearings were fully effected.

The final step is to ascertain, via muscle-testing, whether or not the person’s guides (guards, guardian angels) want us to conduct research regarding the details and or gist of the person’s soul part’s experiences (typically from a past life) that accounted for that soul part splitting off. Finally, that soul part is reintegrated into the person’s LEF/soul. The clients and I then process their experiences and we field any questions and comments the person might have.

Often times, additional interventions are recommended by the person’s or my guides, which complement the Illumination Protocol. For example, a decoupling and/or the 3 Bath Ritual might be prescribed. (These will be described in future articles.)

In closing, it is important to note that prior to implementing any energy medicine intervention, the client and I will use muscle-testing to determine the specific intervention we are being guided to utilize, when we are to utilize it, and for which problem it is being used. As I often tell the clients, “It is your soul and your guides who are the experts about you and your needs. Not I. Therefore, let us let Them direct our work.”

Understanding Your Energetic Self

Two of the central energy medicine interventions I use in shamanic practice are called the Illumination and Extraction Processes, (Villoldo, 2000). These are the processes shamans use to address the energetic sources of an individual’s problems. To better understand what these processes are (which I shall describe in greater detail in a later article), it is useful to know about the energetic parts of what I’ll call the soul.

As Dr. Alberto Villoldo, Ph.D. describes, the parts of the energetic body, he refers to “The Anatomy of the Soul” in his epic work Shaman, Healer, Sage. Basically, the soul is comprised of the following energetic systems: The Luminous Energy Field, meridians, and chakras.

According to Villoldo (2000) and his teachers, the Luminous Energy Field (LEF), sometimes referred to as the aura, “… is an invisible matrix that informs the anatomy of the body".

This (typically) invisible energy field often contains the blueprints of mental/emotional/behavioral, and physical illnesses. To get a visual image of what the LEF looks like, imagine a luminous, egg-shaped bubble of light that surrounds the physical body. Under normal functioning, this field of energy extends about an arms’ length distance from the physical body outward, above one’s head, and below one’s feet. In part, the LEF is comprised of meridians, lines of energy that run up and down the field, as they do within the physical body. Villoldo refers to the meridians of the LEF as “the veins and arteries of the Luminous Energy Field.” (In a later article I shall describe a meridian-based therapy called Thought Field Therapy, developed by Psychologist Roger Callahan, Ph.D., I incorporate Callahan’s theory into my indigenous energy medicine healing practice.)

The LEF contains the entirety of data of the soul’s experiences in all lifetimes. These records are referred to as imprints in the South American Q’ero shamanic traditions.

Imprints influence the ways in which we think, feel, act and the manners in which our physical bodies function (i.e. diseases/illnesses that the body has proclivities for). These imprints are stored in the four layers of the LEF. The outermost layer is about an arm’s-length distance from the physical body’s surface and it holds information about physical traumas/injuries. The next layer inward is the emotional-mental layer. The third inward layer is called the “psychic-etheric” layer, which represents one’s soul’s experiences. The fourth and inner most layer is called the causal layer, which Villoldo refers to as the spirit’s layer. “All imprints contain information, which inform the chakras, which then organize our physical and emotional world[s]”. It is the LEF that “contains a template of how we live, how we age, how we heal, and how we might die”.

The Illumination Process, in part, addresses the clearing of the negative information in the imprints. When we heal the spirit the physical body often follows, as well as one’s thinking, emotions, and behavioral habits.

The Illumination Process also includes procedures designed to cleanse, clear, repair, and re-program the organs of the LEF, known as chakras. Chakras are cone-shaped vortices of spinning energy (imagine the shape of a sugar cone).  The word chakra comes from the Sanskirt, meaning disk, or wheel.  In the Hindu paradigm, there are seven chakras connected to the physical and subtle bodies.  The Q’ero tradition speaks to nine chakras; seven connected to the body and two above.

The mouth of the chakra extends about 3 inches from the front of the physical body and the tail or funnel-shaped back portion connects into the spine. In the words of Villoldo: “The chakras transmit information of past trauma and pain contained in imprints in the Luminous Energy Field into the nervous system. The chakras inform our neurophysiology, affecting our moods and influencing our emotional and physical well-being. The chakras also connect to endocrine glands that regulate all of human behavior.”

The Illumination Process cleans out energetic residues (information) that build up within chakras, thus clogging them and impairing their proper functioning. It is also important to understand that chakras have associated colors and, more importantly, have associated issues/information which they impart to one’s energetic and physical bodies. The first chakra, the root chakra, is red and holds information regarding one’s family/tribe, security and physical needs. The second is the sacral chakra, which is orange and holds procreative and creative information. The third is the solar plexus chakra. It is yellow and contains data pertaining to one’s self (apart from the tribe), and one’s personal power or self-will. The fourth chakra is called the heart chakra. It is typically considered green in color and pertains to issues of love and relationship. The fifth is the throat chakra, which is a blue color and correlates to issues of communication and self-expression. The sixth chakra is the third eye or brow chakra. It is also known as the spiritual eye. It is indigo in color and is correlated to issues regarding intuition and wisdom. The  seventh chakra is the crown chakra. It is associated with the colors violet, gold or white. It addresses the core issue of spirituality.

To summarize, the soul is comprised of the Luminous Energy Field, meridians and chakras. Each of these systems contain energy/information that is often misinformation, and their flow of energy can be underactive, blocked, overactive. The Illumination Process corrects incorrect information and trauma data, balances the meridians, and cleans, repairs, and re-informs the chakras. These interventions “heal” the soul/spirit and, consequently, the person’s mind, body and behaviors demonstrate healings and cures of the symptoms.

Spiritual Beings Having Human Experiences

In my first article, “What Is a Shaman/Medicine Man,” I noted that the shaman, among his many functions, conducts something called soul retrieval. Logically, this brings us to a discussion regarding this construct called soul. This then guides us to consider the proposition, as espoused by peoples throughout the world and ages, that we humans are, in fact, spiritual beings having human experiences and are comprised of spirit/soul, mind/awareness, and body.

To proceed, we would do well to first consider the meanings of the terms soul, Spirit, mind, and awareness as used by me. There are a multitude of meanings that people ascribe to each of these words/constructs. Some people hold negative interpretations to any or all of these terms, in part, due to religious biases. Certain writers have coined their own terms in an attempt to avoid raising the readers’ biases. For example, Poncelet uses the term authentic being instead of soul. Some use certain terms synonymously such as soul/spirit/Spirit. You, the reader, are encouraged to interpret any or all of these terms in ways that abide your particular religious, philosophical and theological perspectives.

When I refer to humans as spiritual beings, I am saying we are souls incarnate. Soul and spirit are used interchangeably. Spirit, with a capital “S,” is used herein to refer to the Divine, by whatever name you yourself refer to It. If I speak of a person’s High Self, I am referring to that aspect of us that is Divine and untouched, and unchanged by human world, astral world and causal world experiences. Our souls/spirits, on the other hand are affected by these world experiences and are often traumatized by them. For the purposes of this article, let us consider as true, the proposition that our souls are subject to the cosmic law of karma, both good and bad. (Paramahansa Yogananda, Autobiography of a Yogi)

When speaking of the soul, I am referring to that part of us that has a certain/specific level of consciousness. The term consciousness is used in the manner that Dr. David R. Hawkins used it, (Hawkins, 1995, 2001, 2003 to name but a few of his writings). In my understanding, it refers to the individual’s level of awareness of the Divine. Hawkins’ arbitrary scale ranges from 0 to 1,000 and it is logarithmic. A bacterium may have a consciousness level of 1, whereas a fully enlightened, embodied being has a level of 1,000. Individuals such a Jesus, Buddha, and Krishna are examples of the enlightened ones. Souls incarnate into the physical, astral and causal worlds for the purpose of clearing their karma and returning to full realization of Divine Consciousness, which some refer to as the state of enlightenment. The shaman’s work can help facilitate the raising of a person’s level of consciousness by helping to clear some of a person’s karmic proclivities/attachments. In light of the above mentioned, I shall now address the practical applications of a shaman’s work in light of the proposition that we are beings comprised of spirit/soul, mind, and body. First, the indigenous, energy medicine practitioners view symptoms from a four level perspective:

  1. literal symptom or problem

  2. symbolic aspect of the problem

  3. mythic/metaphoric aspect

  4. energetic source(s) of the problem. 

Shamans consider the energetic level the true source that causes and perpetuates the problem state and as such, shamans’ interventions are designed to remove those energetic sources. This is very different than the typical allopathic/contemporary medicine approaches that typically address the symptom.  Consider a weed you want to remove from your garden. It will regrow if you only remove its leaves. It will not regrow if you remove its root. Modern medicine typically addresses the leaves (the symptoms), whereas the shaman addresses the roots. Of course, it is beneficial, at times, to use conventional medicine interventions such as angioplasty, knee replacements, appendectomies, etc. Such procedures then buy the person time, so to speak, during which he/she can address the energetic sources that caused the symptom(s) in the first place. So the theory goes. Fortunately, both the medicine man and the patient are more interested in and concerned about the results of the interventions than the theories. My teacher, Alberto Villoldo, was fond of saying this about a theory, “Does it grow corn?” In other words, “Show me the results.”

The soul/spirit is comprised of the energetic body. This includes phenomena known as the Luminous Energy Field (LEF), chakras, and meridians. The soul also abides by programs, sometimes called contracts or belief systems.  All these phenomena then inform the mind (both consciously and unconsciously) in turn, drives the course of the body. It works, ultimately, as Descartes’ age-old theory of a finite body inside an infinite mind. The shamans’ interventions clear, repair, and reprogram the LEF, chakras, and meridians. As mentioned, medicine men also retrieve soul parts that have split off, so to speak. Essentially, this is my understanding of what is referred to as energy medicine. Of course, there are many variations of energy medicine and a variety of procedures which are often culturally influenced.

Among the indigenous peoples it is often said, “When you heal the spirit, the body follows.” Consequently, it is relatively common to observe significant improvements in a person’s health and behaviors as a result of these energetic interventions.  For example, I conducted an energetic intervention referred to as the illumination process (Villoldo, 2000) for a woman whose symptom was hemorrhages during her menstrual cycles. These began with the onset of her menses and continued to the time of our work together when she was 37 years of age. Her physician was using, with moderate success, medications to help stem the degree of her blood loss. (Treating the symptom.)

The Illumination included the removal of an imprint, which in this case, was a kind of energetic memory of a past life experience in which her unborn child was cut from her womb by an enemy who attacked her village. Both she and her child died. During one of our session I saw an image of the sword (the imprint) which was contained in her Luminous Energy Field (LEF). Part of the energetic healing included the removal of this sword from her LEF. Within a period of two months, she had observed a significant decrease in bleeding and her physician eventually weaned her off the medication regimen. This is an example of what is meant by the saying: “When you heal the spirit the body follows.” To repeat, we are spiritual beings in human form, comprised of spirit, mind, and body.

To summarize, the purpose of this article was to introduce the proposition that we humans are truly spiritual beings having human experiences and are comprised of spirit, mind, and body. The shamans address the spirit/soul part of the person, and the soul is an energetic entity. Therefore, the shaman focuses her attention and interventions at the energetic level of symptoms.

As a result, it is then easier for the person to affect changes in his/her emotional, behavioral and physical selves. I have introduced the reader to a number of concepts, such as Luminous Energy Field, chakras, meridians, and imprints, with which he/she might be unfamiliar. I shall define and describe these constructs in greater detail in forthcoming articles.

What is a Shaman/Medicine Man/Woman?

In preparation for writing this article, I reviewed both the notes I had compiled during my training with my teachers and the several dozen books I had read on the topic of shamanism. 

What occurred to me is this: more often than not, what the teachers and writers addressed was more what the shaman/medicine man does and how he/she does it rather than offer a specific definition of the term or construct. This fact is beautifully exampled in the book entitled, Shaman, Healer, Sage, by Alberto Villoldo, Ph.D., one of my first teachers/mentors. In this book I am hard pressed to find an actual definition of what a shaman is, only the multitude of descriptions of what she believes and does in service of herself, others and our world.

To begin, I find Western, contemporary society’s definitions of the term shaman to be limited, somewhat inaccurate, and unhelpful for a sound understanding of what a shaman/medicine man is. 

For example, The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 3rd Edition (1992) defines shaman as: “A member of certain tribal societies who acts as a medium between the world and an invisible spirit world and who practices magic or sorcery for the purpose of healing, divination, and control over natural events.” It indicates the derivation of the term as Russian, Tungas, saman and Sanskrit, sramanas (ascetic).

The same reference defines shamanism as: “1. The animistic religion of certain peoples of northern Asia in which mediation between the visible and spirit worlds is effected by shamans. 2. A similar religion or set of beliefs, especially among certain Native American peoples.” (Animism means: 1. The attribution of conscious life to natural objects or to nature itself. 2. The belief in the existence of spiritual beings that are separable or separate from bodies). The 1969 American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language defined shamanism as: “The religious practices of certain native peoples of northern Asia who believe that good and evil spirits pervade the world and can  be summoned or heard through inspired priests acting as mediums.”

Different forms of shamanism and shamanic practices have been used for tens of thousands of years around the globe.  They were used before any means of global communication, and developed independent from each other but shared the strong relationship with nature and the spirit world.  The roots of all shamanism used both the organized, linear left brain, and also from the right brain, rich with imagination and intuitive knowledge. Thus, there are many similarities of practices and ceremonies globally, but they differ as does the language and culture in which they are practiced.  

It has been and is my experience that Western, Judeo-Christian peoples (versus many Hindi peoples of the East, as but one example) typically view, pejoratively, such terms as: magic, sorcery, divination, evil spirits, and mediums. I myself take issue with terms such as magic and sorcery. To clarify, my mentors noted that the methods used by shamans and sorcerers (in this context, meaning practitioners of darkness) are very similar. What is most important is the intent of the practitioner. That is, the shamans’ intent is to do that which is in the highest good of the Divine, as well as the person they are serving, and also the highest good of all concerned.                                             

The above mentioned definitions also suggest that shamans and shamanism is perhaps limited to Asian and Native North American peoples. In fact, as I had noted earlier, shamanism is a very ancient spiritual practice that is worldwide and practiced by people on every continent. My teachers themselves have said it is anywhere from 5,000 to - 40,000 years old, perhaps older (e.g., 100,000). It is referred to by some as indigenous energy medicine.

I have often been asked, “What is a shaman?” and as often have struggled how best to answer. As a model, I have investigated how other professionals are defined. A yogi, for example, is simply defined as a spiritual teacher. A priest is defined as a “Christian… clergy… authorized to administer the sacraments, a person authorized to perform and administer religious rites.” A physician is a person licensed to practice medicine; a medical doctor. So the yogi teaches, the priest performs and administers, and the physician practices medicine. In other words, each is, in great part, defined by their being: who they are/is what they believe and administers. It seems that’s what they are. 

With this simple insight, I shall define the medicine man/shaman as: a spiritual and energetic healing agent. By healing agent, I mean to acknowledge the shaman’s understanding that he/she is only an instrument, used by Spirit (insert here whatever your conceptualization of a Higher Power is), to help affect healings and/or cures. By Spirit, I mean God, Divine Consciousness, Great Spirit, The All-ness/Oneness, Love, Creator etc., essentially, the One known by thousands of names and yet, The Un-namable. 

Wallace Black Elk

The best of these spiritual and healing agents are the enlightened people, embodied to serve humanity. According to psychiatrist David R. Hawkins, M.D., Ph.D., such enlightened beings are relatively few. I suspect the majority of healers function within a range of awareness of the Divine which determines his/her effectiveness as an instrument.  It is believed that each person is led to the teacher that is most useful to him/her and that said teacher will have a level of consciousness that is most suited to the student. Most importantly the shaman is a person committed to working with Spirit, and variety of emissaries, (e.g., angels, Master Guides, Power Animals) to help affect health, help and happiness (Wallace Black Elk, 1990) for the person, family and community for whom he/she works. 

How and by what means the shaman accomplishes his/her services are the subjects of many, many volumes of writings across the ages and this material will be presented and discussed in forthcoming updates to this blog. However, I shall say this: The medicine man has learned that everything in the cosmoses is connected. Everything in nature has consciousness, even the rocks, trees, creepy crawlers, the finned, the furred, the winged, the four-legged, and two-legged creatures on the Earth.  This is a central and consistent underpinning of shamanism and is shared globally. 

Through altered states of awareness, the shaman develops his/her ability to communicate with these sentient beings and with the beings who reside in other dimensions such as the astral and causal worlds (see for example, Autobiography of a Yogi by Paramahansa Yogananda 1946, 1998). The shaman “mediates between the visible and invisible worlds” (Villoldo, 2002, personal communication.)  The medicine man tunes into the “non-local, undivided consciousness” or “collective unconscious,” as Carl Gustav Jung (a Swiss psychiatrist who founded Analytical Therapy, 1875-1961) referred to it, to access the information useful and needed to help effect the healings and/or cures needed and wanted. To Western people, the term intuitive or psychic might describe this ability. The medicine men and women, the shamans, the yogis all acknowledge that they work with Spirit, the God Head. Some understand their superconscious mind (High Self) taps into Divine omniscience. Others, such as the Lakota medicine men, say that the information they come to know is given to them by personal, helping spirit guides (who are the intermediaries for the Divine).  Villoldo, who studied with and lived among the Q’ero shamans, often said: “When you call Spirit, Spirit comes. However, you must remember, when Spirit calls you are obliged to show up.”  This means you are obliged to work according to Spirit’s time, not yours. This is the shaman’s contract with Spirit. Shamans also journey through time and space at will, often times, to find and retrieve parts of a person’s soul that have left or split off, so to speak, due to traumas it had experienced either in this current incarnation or in past lifetimes. Soul-retrieval is a central practice among shamans. Similarly, medicine men assist souls stuck in the Middle world (a dimension of our material world), to pass on back to the Light. 

In the Q’ero tradition, there are soul parts that are external to us and others (Fluid entities) that are held within a person’s body. Those within are typically close relatives or people with whom the person was close and who passed away from their physical bodies.

All the work that medicine people and shamans do is done in what is referred to as sacred space. After purifying and preparing oneself, the helping spirits, who are of the Divine consciousness (versus those of the darkness or evil spirits), are called into the presence of the healer and patient from the four cardinal directions as well as from above and below. They facilitate the healing or assist in it. More importantly, they are present because the shaman prayed for them to come in and help.

Shamans are also able to conduct healings remotely. That is, by accessing the connectedness of everyone and everything beyond linear time and space, the shaman can diagnose the energetic sources of problems and effect clearings of those energies from a distance, be that 1 mile or 10,000+ miles.

Lastly, for the purposes of this article, I shall note that there are those shamans, yogis, and medicine people who are of such a high level of God-consciousness that merely being in their presence affects healings in others. Such highly evolved souls are relatively few, yet they do exist. (See Yogananda, 1946, 1998 and Hawkins, 2001, 2003.) More commonly, though, one may encounter a healer who is very masterful and whose level of ability can activate the potentials within you, thus enabling you to more easily affect the changes that you are of a mind and will to accomplish.

Past-Life Regression Therapy (PLRT)

I was recently asked by a colleague to submit an article for potential publication in the American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis that addresses, in some way, the use of hypnosis in the treatment of traumatic experiences. 

It then occurred to me that I have yet to speak more directly and thoroughly in this article about the use of what is frequently referred to in the psychotherapy arena as “Past-Life Regression Therapy” or simply, “Past-Life Therapy.” (For simplicity I shall use PLRT as the shorthand throughout this article.)

I define PLRT as the use of hypnotic trance (an altered state of awareness), and the suggestion to go back in time to the lifetime (or lifetimes) in which the person experienced a trauma that is at the source of a current symptom for the purpose of resolving the trauma and thus, resolving the concomitant symptom(s). There are, of course, certain premises inherent in any discussion of PLT which, fortunately, are not necessary to abide in order for the experience to be successful.

Those premises are as follows:

  1. Humans are spiritual beings comprised of body, mind/awareness, soul, and spirit.

  2. Souls can experience traumas.

  3. These traumatic experiences can and do cause symptoms that can be physical, emotional, cognitive (beliefs), and behavioral.  

  4. These traumas can be carried by the soul, into another or other future lifetimes.

  5. Souls can be healed of these traumas thus clearing/healing/curing the symptoms.

  6. Souls are eternal.

  7. Souls reincarnate.

In the research and clinical literature, there are many anecdotal stories about both clinicians and patients who had no concept of and past-lives and/or of soul, nor of reincarnation, who nonetheless observed, encountered, and/or spontaneously experienced, past-life traumas and the concomitant symptom resolutions.

An excellent example of this is evidenced in psychiatrist Brian Weiss’ case of “Catherine” as first published in his book, Many Lives, Many Masters (Weiss, 1988). Following one and a half years of psychotherapy (including psychopharmacology) with no improvement, Dr. Weiss decided to introduce Catherine to self-hypnosis, which he hoped would help her learn to relax and calm herself. Catherine spontaneously accessed a past-life scene as if watching a movie trailer. Neither she nor Dr. Weiss understood what was happening and Dr. Weiss knew that she was not psychotic, i.e., not delusional.

One week later, Catherine returned for her next session and reported significant relief for some of the anxiety and depression she had been plagued by. Dr. Weiss, who had known of some publications regarding PLRT, always considered the phenomenon unreasonable and certainly unscientific and thus, unworthy of consideration. Catherine herself had absolutely no prior knowledge of past-lives, let alone PLRT. Ultimately, Dr. Weiss came to accept and practice PLRT, which he has written about and teaches extensively (Weiss 1988, 1992, 1996, 2000, 2012).

Theoretical Considerations: The theory/theories underpinning PLRT include the above mentioned premises. The narrative description of the theory goes something like this: humans are spiritual beings having human and material/embodied experiences. Certain experiences can be perceived by the person as traumatic, such as death by drowning, fire or fatal battle wounds. The soul remembers and carries these traumas into future lifetimes, which of course implies that reincarnation occurs (Stevenson, 1966; 1977). These traumas can be revisited and also resolved, thus leading to the resolution of the associated symptoms that the person is experiencing in his/her current lifetime (Woolger, 1988).

Hence, a person who drowned may find him/herself phobic about being in water. One who was killed in battle for example, by a sword wound through the back and forward through the heart, might have scars in their current body at the past-life wound sites (Stevenson, 1997). This person might also have chronic back pain or cardiac issues. Others who have died by fire and smoke inhalation may have asthma in his/her current life.

As mentioned above, it is not necessary for a person to believe in past lives, or reincarnation, or the existence of an eternal soul. I, along with a number of my colleagues, have observed that it is only necessary for a person to be open to experiencing past-life regression hypnosis for them to have the experiences which often bring about the resolution of any variety of symptoms.

The results that clinicians and clients have observed and experienced might, of course, be attributed to the phenomenon referred to as placebo. This means that the person’s belief in the PLRT process is what caused the cure, so to speak, not the supposed Past-Life Regression Therapy.

Most important is this, regardless of whether or not past-lives, multiple lifetimes, or reincarnation exists, clinicians and clients have themselves experienced symptom relief after using PLRT. This author himself has experienced the cure of several physical and emotional symptoms through the use of PLRT. For example, a chronic pain in the upper spine area of the back, behind the heart, was cleared when the author remembered being killed by a spear through the back and through the heart in a past-life event.

The Process of Past-Life Regression Therapy Hypnosis: One very popular protocol used in conducting a Past-Life Regression Therapy session is explicated in the appendix of Brian Weiss’ book, Messages from the Masters: Tapping into the Power of Love (Weiss, 2000, pp. 252-258).

Prior to describing the steps of the protocol, it is important to understand certain ground rules so to speak, about who should conduct this therapy, when it should be conducted, and what preparations the client would need for the process to be conducted safely and effectively.

I recommend the lay person seek out a licensed clinician such as a psychologist, psychiatrist, or social worker who has been trained in and is experienced in conducting PLRT. A thorough clinical assessment should be conducted before venturing into a PLRT session. The clinician should explain what hypnosis is, clarify the client’s beliefs about hypnosis, and also discuss the issue as to whether or not the past-life experiences are real or imagined.  Once the therapist has a clear understanding of the symptoms the client wants to address and has determined that the person can safely experience PLRT, then both can proceed with the following:

  1. Rapport and trust have been established between the clinician and the patient.

  2. The steps of the protocol are described to the client.

  3. The therapist and client establish safety procedures in case needed. For example, the therapist advises the client that he/she is able and free to come out of trance anytime he/she desires if the experience were to become too strenuous. 

  4. The therapist guides the client into a trance state by first guiding him/her through a relaxation exercise such as progressive muscle relaxation.

  5. The clinician helps the person deepen the level of trance by using any variety of deepening techniques. For example: “Imagine yourself at the top of a flight of 10 stairs. Then begin walking down the stairs understanding that with each step down you are going more and more deeply into the trance.”

  6. Once at the bottom of the stairs, step out into a garden area and find a relaxing and safe place to sit.

  7. At the back of the property of this garden, see a small step bridge which crosses over a brook. On the opposite side of the brook is a portal through which you will eventually step into and through into the past-life that contains the experiences that are at the source of the symptom(s) you are experiencing in the current life.

  8. Sometimes a person can enter into that past life in an unpleasant experience. Therefore, the clinician reminds the client that he/she can step back by watching the event as one would watch a movie in a theater.

  9. Then the person is guided through any variety of experiences in the lifetime that will help explain the relationships to the current life symptoms.

  10. Another important part of the PLRT process is to help the person to experience the death of the PL character.

  11. Next is to experience the life review process after the death and to learn the importance and relevance of the events of that life and perhaps how those events correlate to the current life symptoms and what solutions can be applied.

  12. The next step is for the clinician to guide the person back to his/her ordinary, alert, waking state, i.e., the person is   reoriented to the normal waking state of awareness.

  13. Then the client and the clinician can discuss/process the experiences and address questions and comments the client might have.

There are often a number of past-lives and experiences to be had during the therapy process, so several PLRT sessions are often common and useful. 

PLRT Case Studies (PLRT)

Katie

The client whom I shall refer to as Katie, (a pseudonym), was the mother of two young children. She began to experience significant anxiety thinking she and the children would be harmed while her husband was away on an extended business trip. More specifically, she imagined a home invasion by a couple of bad people who proceeded to kill her and kidnap the children. This kind of terror was a very atypical experience for her.

During her past-life experience regarding this matter, she saw what appeared to be a field of yellow which turned out to be a desert (sand) landscape. She saw a man lying on the ground due to blows to his face and head. In the distance she saw her (his) two children being kidnapped away on horses by three bandits, never to know the fate of her/his children. Once we had processed these recollections, the terror disintegrated. Additionally, unbeknownst to this therapist, Katie had experienced chronic sinusitis which cleared several weeks after this PL experience. The sinusitis appears to have been a symptom expression of the trauma of the PLRT character’s having had his face/head smashed in. So this is, in part, an example of a physical symptom in one’s current life that was being caused by a trauma experienced by the soul in a body during a past life.

Madison

Madison, 38, was, at the time of treatment, a mother of four children and the primary caretaker of a four year old granddaughter. During the course of her therapy, it was discovered that since her menstrual cycle began, she experienced near hemorrhaging cycles which had been managed through hormone treatments. 

The past life experience revealed a life in which, as a pregnant woman of approximately seven months, her village was raided by Vikings. She was slashed from stem to stern by a Viking’s sword and she and her baby were killed.

Nearly two months following this past-life experience, Madison intuitively felt it was time to have her physician wean her off of the hormone treatment just to see if her body had somehow come to re-set itself, as she presented it to her doctor. In fact, her cycle became normal, i.e., without hemorrhaging-like symptoms.

Doc

Lastly, here is one of the author’s experience of a past-life type that resulted in the elimination of a constellation of symptoms he recalls experiencing since childhood.

For as long as he could remember, Doc would experience the following symptoms whenever he would observe someone losing a loved one in real life or in the movies or losing love object, such as a pet (for example, Timmy, in the “Lassie” TV series, losing Lassie): a severe and painful constriction of the throat; a profound emotion of grief; a felt-sense to sob but no tears would/could flow; then a resulting throbbing headache, all of which would require an hour or two to recede.

In 2003, Doc said good bye to a friend at the end of a relationship. That evening, he spontaneously accessed a past-life experience in which he observed himself as a Native American, holding the head of a loved one who was soon to die. He saw her soul emerge from her eyes as she passed. During the following three days Doc experienced episodic bouts of deep grief, loss, and sobbing. A few months later while watching a movie in which a man lost the love of his life, Doc felt none of the old, chronic symptoms. In fact, he laughed thinking to himself: “You can’t get me with that one anymore.” He has not experienced those symptoms since.

Conclusion: Some of the basic tenants, theories, procedures and examples of Past-Life Therapy have been presented in this article. This was intended to introduce this tool to those of you who have not heard of Past-Life Regression Therapy and to expound a bit further for those of you who have heard of it.  The reader is invited to research this clinical tool as a way of potentially helping to alleviate any variety of symptoms, especially those that have been chronic and which have not responded to contemporary medical or psychological interventions. Click here for References and Research.

An Introduction to Energy Medicine: Ancient Wisdom for Modern Day Solutions

An Introduction to Energy Medicine: 
Ancient Wisdom for Modern Day Solutions
     

Philip L. Accaria, Ph.D., FASCH

Abstract

In this article the reader will be presented with the basic constructs associated with the field of “energy medicine” as derived from a variety of Indigenous/Native, Occidental (Western) and Oriental/Asian cultures. The primary purpose for doing so is to afford the reader an introduction to a variety of “complimentary” interventions that can help facilitate a more efficient and effective use of “traditional” methods such as psycho-therapy. To this end the author will discuss such concepts as: chakras, meridians, the Luminous Energy Field, the “subtle, light” body, intuition, muscle-testing, the Illumination Protocol©, and soul.

Have you ever struggled with a “problem” or symptom that continued no matter what you or your health care professional did in an effort to correct it? For example, have you been experiencing a habit that you believe you want to change or eliminate, know what needs to be done yet continuously fail to achieve your goal?

You can be assured you are in good company. The greater majority of we humans experience such challenges at some point in our lives.

As a Clinical Psychologist, the author has pursued, throughout his career, the tools and methods which demonstrate the most significant levels of effectiveness across the broadest range of people and problems. For a variety of “reasons” he was drawn and led to the energy medicine practices of the indigenous peoples. 

An Introduction to Energy Medicine

In some cultures, indigenous healers refer to themselves as “medicine” men and women. In others they refer to themselves as “shamans.

The literature is replete with references, by scientists, metaphysicians, theologians and philosophers, to the theory that we humans are comprised of “mind, body and spirit.” Many hold the belief that we are “spiritual beings” having human experiences. These theories are, at first glance, diametrically opposed the view held by “materialists” who basically contend that EVERYTHING humans experience is solely based in our brain’s composition and activities. On the other hand, there are those who abide by the theory that we are also comprised of a “subtle” body, i.e., we possess an “energetic” self. This energetic self includes phenomena that are called chakras, meridians, the Luminous Energy Field and a “soul” among other things. The author says “at first glance” because in the field of Quantum Physics there are advances which are bringing these two schools of thought closer together but that’s a topic for another paper. Suffice it to say there is mounting evidence that indicates there is much more to us than the material/physical alone. It appears that the indigenous peoples “knew” of these Quantum Physics principles thousands of years ago (if not tens of thousands). 

We humans are, in addition to material bodies and minds, energy and “informational” systems. As such, we can understand concepts of dis-ease as dis-ruptions in the quantum mechanics of “consciousness” and patterns and data within energy “flows.”

Now, you might be wondering what this means in English. Good. That’s most practical and pragmatic of you. The variety of indigenous healers conceptualize a “problem” as a four-level phenomenon. First there is the “literal” level. Next, there is the “symbolic” level. Thirdly, the “metaphoric” level and lastly, the “energetic” level. The medicine people work at the energetic level, the level that they consider to be the “root” of the problem. Let us demonstrate this Native conceptualization by using an actual clinical case.

A woman consults with a psychologist to whom she has been referred by her physician. She has been experiencing chronic stomach pains which allopathic/conventional Western medicine has been unable to diagnose and treat satisfactorily. This psychologist utilizes the indigenous paradigm and through a variety of intuitive “diagnostic” procedures determines that the stomach pains (the literal level) are correlated to the following: she can not “stomach” swallowing her words (the symbolic level) which she often does vis-à-vis conflicts she has with her Mother-in-Law and with her husband. She feared, and rightly so in retrospect, that were she to speak her mind to her in-law, it would bring to the surface an inherent and significant flaw in her and her husband’s relationship.

On the third level, the mythic/metaphoric, the psychologist intuitively “heard” the word “queen” and understood that the woman was behaving in what we can refer to as the “princess” archetype when she needed to behave instead, as the “queen” of the house. The “Why” or “What” that was causing her to do this was deciphered at the “energetic” level. (This will be described more thoroughly in the “Illumination Protocol” section below.) When these energetic “causes” were, so to speak, cleared it became much easier for her to behave accordingly which ultimately brought her to a resolution of both the relationship issues and her stomach aliments (which cleared completely.)

The Subtle Body

As mentioned above, the indigenous peoples, among others, understand the human being to be comprised of both a physical and subtle/energetic body. For the purpose at hand, let us understand that the subtle/energetic body is comprised of chakras, meridians, a Luminous Energy Field and a “soul.”

Chakras:

The word “chakra” is derived from the Sanskrit, meaning “wheel’ or “disc.”  The yogis of India, as well as indigenous peoples, have utilized the chakra system for thousands of years as an integral part of a broad holistic healing approach. They can be conceptualized as cone-shaped vortices of energy which are “connected” to the spinal cord. Generally, it is held that there are seven primary chakras that represent the connection between the spiritual and the physical and coincide with the body’s endocrine system. They are part of the Luminous Energy Field. When “unbalanced, dysfunctional or blocked” a range of physiological, emotional, thinking and behavioral conditions can become manifested. (Simpson, 1998)

Meridians:

Energy meridians are channels of energy which run up and down the body. Many know of them in the context of the Chinese healing process known as acupuncture.

They can be considered the “veins and arteries of the Luminous Energy Field.” (Villoldo, 2000.)  Villoldo says that the “Medicine people of the Americas know the meridians as ‘rios de luz’, rivers of light, that flow within the luminous body.” (p. 50). Energy is information. It can be blocked, can flow excessively and/or contain “mis-information.” Therefore, re-balancing and re-programming the energy/information in the meridians can help to heal dis-ease. One particularly effect method of “correcting” the meridians is called Thought Field Therapy (Callahan, 1995) which is often applied in the author’s practice. It is very simple to learn and is applicable to a wide variety of symptoms.

Luminous Energy Field:

The Luminous Energy Field (LEF) is an “invisible” energy matrix that surrounds the the physical body and informs the anatomy of the body as well as the mind. When the LEF is healed via the “illumination process” physical, emotional and behavioral symptoms heal more efficiently and enduringly. The medicine people often say: “When we heal the LEF (the spirit), the body follows.”

“The LEF has four layers extending outward from the body. They are: 1. Causal (the Spirit), 2. Psychic (also known as the etheric-the soul), 3. Mental-emotional (the mind) and 4. The Physical (the body). Each layer stores a different quality of energy” (Villoldo, 2000).  As these layers are cleared of “negative imprints” and other “influences,” the sources/roots of a person’s problems are neutralized thus making change “easier.” 

The “Illumination Protocol” ©:

The Illumination Protocol is the author’s variation of the “illumination process” as developed by Alberto Villoldo, a medical anthropologist and psychologist who studied with the Q’ero shamans of Peru for over 35 years (Villoldo, 2000). This protocol involves assessing the presence of soul parts that require healing and retrieval; the releasing of others’ soul parts not belonging to the person being treated; and the “illumination”, i.e., the cleansing, repair and “re-programming” of the chakra that is primarily involved in the “problem” state. This process is typically conducted within an hour’s time and is experienced by the individual as relatively non-intrusive. A person might benefit from two or three such illuminations over the course of a couple of months as these “clearings” are like peeling an onion, i.e. they are done in “layers.”

The illumination process is a central aspect of the energy medicine person’s interventions. Oft times, people will experience rather dramatic shifts especially in the arena of physical ailments, as observed by the author and his colleagues.

Intuition:

Non-local undivided consciousness & Non-local communication

The medicine people, shamans and others of the “energy” medicine paradigm, employ intuition to assess/diagnose information about their patients. Intuition is that form of “knowing”, of perceiving information in ways that may be understood as “non-ordinary.”  By entering an altered state of awareness and using techniques derived from the ancient wisdom of the indigenous energy medicine practices and current perspectives of quantum physics as they pertain to non-local consciousness, the practitioner can “see,” “hear,” and “feel,” that which is not commonly seen, heard and felt. These skills are available to the greater majority of human beings  and as with all skills, the more they are practiced the better one becomes in their use. The author strives to normalize these intuitive skills so as to avoid the “woo-woo” factor, so to speak. These are normal processes inherent in the human being and as such are teachable to all those willing to learn. All that is required is a willingness to learn, an openness to these phenomena, an awareness that they indeed are “real” and of course, a commitment to practicing.

Examples of intuition processes are: clairvoyance (seeing), clairaudience (hearing), clairsentience (feeling kinesthetically), pre-cognitive dreaming, remote viewing and automatic writing to name a few. There are some who would refer to these facilities as “psychic,” a term this author strives to avoid due to the numerous misunderstandings and misuses of the word.

These intuitive processes are the means by which the indigenous medicine people are able to decipher the data that was referred to in the abovementioned illumination process. For example, a medicine woman can “see” and/or feel which chakra is malfunctioning and thus requires the illumination.

A useful question at this point of the discussion would be: “How is the patient to know whether this intuitively gathered information is, in fact, accurate, i.e., true?”, which brings us to the next technique to be reviewed. That is muscle-testing.

Muscle-Testing: 

Muscle-testing (MT) is a procedure by which the practitioner and patient can assess the veracity of any particular proposition/hypothesis that is being proposed. MT was popularized in the early 1960s when chiropractor George Goodheart, the originator of Applied Kinesiology, introduced it to the public as part of his system of healing. In 1979, psychiatrist John Diamond developed Behavioral Kinesiology which also utilized MT as a central tool of his methodology. Psychologist Roger Callahan, the originator of Thought Field Therapy, also employed MT as a central tool of his method.

The principle underlying muscle-testing is simply this: When a person is thinking of a proposition that is true he/she will demonstrate muscle strength. When considering a false proposition, the person will demonstrate muscle weakness. There are a variety of variables that the practitioner must be aware of, such as the patient’s “polarity,” in order to insure the responses are accurate. (A discussion of those variables requires a separate article.) Suffice it to say, when all variables are accounted for, the practitioner and patient can use muscle-testing to determine the accuracy of information. In this article it is the intuited information that is being assessed for accuracy.

To demonstrate this application of muscle-testing let us return to the example of  the medicine woman intuiting that it is the person’s heart chakra that is impaired. She would have the person hold his/her arm out to their side, parallel to the floor, ask the person to maintain that position as she presses down on the outstretched arm while the person holds in his/her mind the proposition: “It is my heart chakra that is compromised.” If the arm strength is strong it means the statement is true and likewise, if the arm strength is weak it means the statement was false.

Therefore, by using muscle-testing, the client is afforded a means by which he/she can ascertain the accuracy of the medicine person’s intuited data assuming of course, that the patient him/herself isn’t also perceiving the same information intuitively which some do.

Soul/Higher Self:

“How does my body know what is true or false?”, you might ask. Another excellent question and the answer of which is contained in volumes of books pertaining to quantum physics, psychology, theology, philosophy, kinesiology, and metaphysics as well as other fields.

In the arena of indigenous medicine practices it is understood that humans possess a soul, a spirit, a Higher Self if you prefer, that is connected into the “Non-local Undivided Consciousness” which the Natives call “Great Spirit.” Those of the Judeau –Christian heritage might use the term God. Dr. Carl Gustav Jung spoke of the “collective unconscious.” Physicist Dr. Amit Goswami refers to this ocean of information as the “Non-local undivided consciousness.” The point is this: we humans know things we consciously do not know we know and it is our souls/ higher selves that are in touch with these data. Muscle-testing is but one indirect way we can “communicate” with our Higher Selves thereby allowing it to effectively guide the treatment/healing process.

It is proposed by those who work in the intuitive realm that the Higher Self has a broader perspective than the human being’s conscious mind alone. It is perhaps both wiser and more connected into the non-local undivided consciousness. Thus it knows things about the person and the universe that are beyond conscious perception itself. The author often uses the following analogue as one way of describing the usefulness of communicating with the Higher Self: Imagine you are in a maze that has 20 foot high hedged walls. You can not see where each path leads. Now imagine that your Higher Self is a friend who is in a helicopter above the maze and is communicating with you by some such device like a cell phone. It can see from above, the paths that will lead you out of the maze more efficiently and easily simply because of its “higher” perspective.

Let us move beyond analogue to an actual example of how the knowledge of the Higher Self can be applied to the treatment process. Kate (not her real name to protect her anonymity) sought therapy for her fear of heights (acrophobia.) She expressed an interest in hypnosis believing this would be the most effective form of treatment. The author introduced Kate to the constructs of the Higher Self and muscle-testing; demonstrated muscle-testing and accessed her Higher Self. They then used muscle-testing to “ask” the Higher Self which intervention would prove most effective vis-à-vis her particular needs. The author then presented four specific interventions: talk therapy, the Illumination Protocol, Thought Field Therapy (TFT) and hypnosis. Kate tested “strong” (true) to the proposition that Thought Field Therapy (meridian therapy) was her best tool. It is very important to note at this point of the discussion that Kate did not know what the Illumination Protocol nor Thought Field Therapy was yet her Higher Self did and responded accordingly. TFT was applied and within 40 minutes Kate’s 35-year fear of heights was eliminated. She was able to lean out a second story window and two weeks later rode a bike over the George Washington bridge while “feeling liberated.”

Thus, it is the author’s opinion the individual’s Higher Self or soul is the expert regarding the person and his/her needs. It knows better than the clinician what is “wrong” and how best to intervene and restore balance. While the clinician might have accurate intuitive hits, it is always wise to double check with the person’s Higher Self before proceeding. In other words, your Higher Self is the “expert” about what is best for you. Think about how many reported experts in the same field of study hold diametrically opposing opinions. How is the lay person to decide which point of view is accurate? This author suggests it is one’s Higher Self/soul that can decipher the truth for each individual person. For that reason he encourages the patient to allow his/her Higher Self to guide the therapeutic work.

Conclusion:

A number of rather complex concepts and procedures have been presented in this paper in a truly basic manner. The highlights of these concepts have been offered for the purpose of introducing the reader to alternative and complimentary methods of healing that are derived from the ancient indigenous cultures and others. Based on the author’s experience and that of his colleagues, it appears that it is not necessary for the patient to “believe” any or all of the constructs that have been iterated; healings occur regardless. Of course these processes work more fluidly when the person does ascribe to the core concepts.

If curious, the reader is encouraged to investigate these ancient, indigenous practices and metaphysical principles and phenomena by perusing the references attached to this article and beginning with the readings that you might be intuitively drawn to.

May you be blessed in your journey always and in all ways. 

About the Author:

Dr. Philip L. Accaria, Ph.D. is a licensed psychologist in the state of New Jersey and has been practicing since 1984. He is Past-president of the American Society of Clinical Hypnosis (ASCH), past Moderator/Chair of the ASCH Board of Governors, and Past-President of the Clinical Hypnosis Society of New Jersey.

Dr. Accaria specializes in the use of indigenous healing practices as applied to a variety of emotional, behavioral and physical challenges. He typically engages the “intuitive” levels of awareness in his diagnostic and clinical interventions. These interventions utilize energetic systems which include the Luminous Energy Field, chakras, meridians, and the practice of soul-retrieval and soul release.  In his practice he addresses the client’s mind, body and spiritual selves.

Philip has trained to the “advanced” levels of Thought Field Therapy, Spiritual Response Therapy, Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing, is a Reiki Master and has been practicing hypnosis since 1984. His studies in indigenous  practices began in 1992 with the works of Lakota medicine man Wallace Black Elk and training in indigenous healing practices with Dr. Alberto Villoldo, Ph.D., of the Four Winds Society; with Greenland shaman Angaangaq and the Hawaiian indigenous paradigm, Ho’oponopono, with Dr. Ihaleakala Hew Len, Ph.D.

Dr. Accaria has been conducting workshops in hypnosis, indigenous healing practices, energy medicine and ideo-motor signaling techniques throughout the country since the early 1990s.