Sacred Energies of the Sun and Moon: Shamanic Rites of Curanderismo
Autor Erika Buenaflor M.A., J.D.en Limba Engleză Paperback – 5 aug 2020
• Details shamanic rituals and practices for each period of the day, including dawn, sunrise, noon, sunset, and midnight, to best harness the energies of the sun, night sun, and moon for specific purposes, such as divination, journeying with animal spirit guides, or spiritual wisdom
• Incorporates shamanic breathwork, dreamwork, mantra chanting, mudras, dancing and movement, toning, chakra work, crystals, herbs, and limpias (shamanic cleanses)
• Explores how nighttime energies are affected by the phases of the moon, offering specific practices for each phase
Ancient Mesoamerican shamans and modern practitioners of curanderismo--a Latin American shamanic healing practice--divide each day and night into distinct periods based on the sacred rhythms of the sun and moon, with each time offering opportunities to connect with specific celestial energies for healing and transformation.
In this hands-on guide to working with the sacred energies of the sun, night sun, and moon, curandera Erika Buenaflor details the rites, rituals, and deities for each part of the day and night and explores the sacred tools and techniques used by ancient Mesoamerican shamans for harnessing solar and lunar energies. She explains how the sun is the source of soul energy that heals, animates, strengthens, and revitalizes us on many levels, while night energies are transformative and conducive for connecting with nonordinary realms. She explores rituals for dawn, sunrise, and midmorning to harness the energies of creation and new beginnings; for noon and afternoon to promote peak strength and spiritual wisdom; for sunset and dusk to bring about transformation, perform divination, and journey with animal spirit guides; and for midnight and predawn to facilitate shamanic dreamwork, connect with the ancestors, make offerings, and regenerate at the deepest levels. She also explores how nighttime energies are affected by the phases of the moon and offers specific practices for each phase.
By intentionally tuning our activities to the rhythms of the sun and moon, we can invite in their sacred energies of abundance and healing for more healthy, creative, mindful, and happy lives.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781591433781
ISBN-10: 1591433789
Pagini: 200
Ilustrații: Includes 8-page color insert and 3 b&w illustrations
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Inner Traditions/Bear & Company
Colecția Bear & Company
ISBN-10: 1591433789
Pagini: 200
Ilustrații: Includes 8-page color insert and 3 b&w illustrations
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Inner Traditions/Bear & Company
Colecția Bear & Company
Notă biografică
Erika Buenaflor, M.A., J.D., has a master’s degree in religious studies with a focus on Mesoamerican shamanism from the University of California at Riverside. A practicing curandera for more than 20 years, descended from a long line of grandmother curanderas, she has studied with curanderas/os in Mexico, Peru, and Los Angeles and gives presentations on curanderismo in many settings, including at UCLA. The author of Cleansing Rites of Curanderismo and Curanderismo Soul Retrieval, she lives in Tujunga, California.
Extras
Chapter 3. Dawn, Sunrise, and Morning: Rites of Creation and Coming into Being
The period of dawn was generally understood as a time of creation of the sun and the world that the Mexica and Maya lived in. The time of dawn was also identified with the creation of maize and life itself. It marked a time of nascency, rebirth, and resurrection. It was also when the young sun deity made its daily resurrection out of the Underworld, rose with the souls of royal ancestors, brave warriors, gods, and other supernatural beings, and traveled through an Upperworld floral paradise, the sun’s path during the day. The Upperworld floral paradise or “Flower World” was a place where the souls of the brave and fortunate would spend all of eternity in happiness and bliss. While some mythological variations existed, it was generally believed that brave warriors and royal ancestors would begin their journey with the resurrected sun at dawn. Brave warriors and idealized rulers and leaders coupled with the feathered serpent swept the way for the sun ensuring that it would reach its daily zenith.
Recommended Rites
Working with the Energies of Dawn
For the ancient Mexica and Maya, dawn was associated with creation, rebirth, revitalization, resurrection, brave warriors, ideal virtuous leaders and rulers, and was also a time to engage in diligent ceremonial offerings. Because creation and rejuvenation energies are ripe at dawn, mantras, meditations, trance journeys, limpias, and any other manifestation work concerning bringing something into being, creating, or recreating something are ideal.
To access the sacred essence energies of dawn you can, of course, go beyond the recommended rites and create your own rites and infuse the meanings, tools, activities, and/or regalia associated with dawn. Here is a list of sacred items, meanings, and activities associated with dawn and a sun god of dawn:
• Creation
• Rebirth
• Opening pathways
• Rejuvenation
• Jade
• Flowers
• Engaging in diligent offerings to enlist divine assistance
• Breathwork
• Poetry and spoken word
• Eagle paraphernalia
• Sun deity, Xochipilli, who is associated with poetry, fertility, the rainy season, a red parrot helmet, yellow and/or red face paint, white around the mouth, the jeweled nose bar of solar gods, flowers, bees, bee deities, bats, butterflies, and hummingbirds.
Sample Exercise: Baños with Flowers for Inspiration and Happiness
Water limpias were one of the most prevalent and revered limpia rites by the ancient Mesoamerican shamans. Bathing in water, being cleansed by water, and entering water fostered pivotal life transitions, including birth, adolescence, accession of shaman rulers, death, renewal, and resurrection. Taking a baño in conjunction with connecting to a sunrise or doing so at the time of sunrise imprints the intention of the baño onto our auric fields, which is particularly helpful if we need to strengthen our energy fields for that day and move any energetic blocks or stagnant energies. Remember, baños also cleanse and revitalize the mind, body, and spirit.
For this baño, you will need:
• a bathtub, or a small kid-sized pool
• a cup of Epsom salt
• a bundle of any dry herbs (all herbs have cleansing properties) to cleanse your space
• a handful (your hand) of fresh flowers, or half a handful of dry flowers. Keep in mind that you can use a combination of flowers, depending on what you feel you need Most flowers invite good fortune and happiness, and here are some of their other gifts:
• Calendulas (Marigolds): clear energetic toxins stemming from thoughts and feelings, ours or our loved ones. Greatly enhance happiness, overall health, and alleviate depression. Accelerates any kind of healing process.
• Chamomile: reverses misfortunes to great fortune. Enhances our energy fields. Promotes peace, harmony, prosperity, and positivity. Soothes and balances energy fields.
• Daisies: have divinatory qualities concerning love. They increase self-awareness, creativity, and inner strength. Help to get stagnant energies and situations moving.
• Lavender: helps to clear monkey chatter, stress, confusion, and disharmony. Helps to be in divine alignment in all areas of our life. Reminds us of our true divine self and clears pathways within our life and energy fields, so we can realize equanimity. Attracts sensuous and playful love. Enhances our energy field, and helps to gracefully release guilt and shame.
• Roses: very powerful source for purification. Help to strengthen our energy fields, and enhance self-love. Calms tense energies, and attracts love.
Start by cleaning and cleansing the bathroom or wherever you are placing the kid-sized pool. One simple way to cleanse a space is to smudge it with a bundle of dry herbs. Communicate with the spirit essence of flowers prior to using them, and thank them for helping to purify and rejuvenate you. To avoid clogging your drain, place the flowers in either a clean twelve-cup coffee or tea maker to make concentrated tea. A handful of dry flowers (squeeze in twice as many if the flowers are fresh) should yield five to seven pots; you can tell you have extracted what you can from the flowers when the water becomes very light. Place the cup of Epsom salt and the prepared flower water in the tub or pool.
Once in the tub or pool, connect with the spirit essence of the water and flowers, and thank them for providing you with an overall cleanse, rejuvenation, and more inspiration and happiness in your life. While in the water, strengthen your intention by calmly focusing on it and being grateful for it. When you feel you are complete and done with the baño, prepare to exit the tub and thank the sun, water, and the spirit of the flowers one last time. Afterward, wash off with cold water. The cold water further clears away any residual unwanted energies. Hot- and cold-water hydrotherapy also has great benefits for the body, boosting circulation, reducing stress, and stimulating the removal of toxins from the organs.
The period of dawn was generally understood as a time of creation of the sun and the world that the Mexica and Maya lived in. The time of dawn was also identified with the creation of maize and life itself. It marked a time of nascency, rebirth, and resurrection. It was also when the young sun deity made its daily resurrection out of the Underworld, rose with the souls of royal ancestors, brave warriors, gods, and other supernatural beings, and traveled through an Upperworld floral paradise, the sun’s path during the day. The Upperworld floral paradise or “Flower World” was a place where the souls of the brave and fortunate would spend all of eternity in happiness and bliss. While some mythological variations existed, it was generally believed that brave warriors and royal ancestors would begin their journey with the resurrected sun at dawn. Brave warriors and idealized rulers and leaders coupled with the feathered serpent swept the way for the sun ensuring that it would reach its daily zenith.
Recommended Rites
Working with the Energies of Dawn
For the ancient Mexica and Maya, dawn was associated with creation, rebirth, revitalization, resurrection, brave warriors, ideal virtuous leaders and rulers, and was also a time to engage in diligent ceremonial offerings. Because creation and rejuvenation energies are ripe at dawn, mantras, meditations, trance journeys, limpias, and any other manifestation work concerning bringing something into being, creating, or recreating something are ideal.
To access the sacred essence energies of dawn you can, of course, go beyond the recommended rites and create your own rites and infuse the meanings, tools, activities, and/or regalia associated with dawn. Here is a list of sacred items, meanings, and activities associated with dawn and a sun god of dawn:
• Creation
• Rebirth
• Opening pathways
• Rejuvenation
• Jade
• Flowers
• Engaging in diligent offerings to enlist divine assistance
• Breathwork
• Poetry and spoken word
• Eagle paraphernalia
• Sun deity, Xochipilli, who is associated with poetry, fertility, the rainy season, a red parrot helmet, yellow and/or red face paint, white around the mouth, the jeweled nose bar of solar gods, flowers, bees, bee deities, bats, butterflies, and hummingbirds.
Sample Exercise: Baños with Flowers for Inspiration and Happiness
Water limpias were one of the most prevalent and revered limpia rites by the ancient Mesoamerican shamans. Bathing in water, being cleansed by water, and entering water fostered pivotal life transitions, including birth, adolescence, accession of shaman rulers, death, renewal, and resurrection. Taking a baño in conjunction with connecting to a sunrise or doing so at the time of sunrise imprints the intention of the baño onto our auric fields, which is particularly helpful if we need to strengthen our energy fields for that day and move any energetic blocks or stagnant energies. Remember, baños also cleanse and revitalize the mind, body, and spirit.
For this baño, you will need:
• a bathtub, or a small kid-sized pool
• a cup of Epsom salt
• a bundle of any dry herbs (all herbs have cleansing properties) to cleanse your space
• a handful (your hand) of fresh flowers, or half a handful of dry flowers. Keep in mind that you can use a combination of flowers, depending on what you feel you need Most flowers invite good fortune and happiness, and here are some of their other gifts:
• Calendulas (Marigolds): clear energetic toxins stemming from thoughts and feelings, ours or our loved ones. Greatly enhance happiness, overall health, and alleviate depression. Accelerates any kind of healing process.
• Chamomile: reverses misfortunes to great fortune. Enhances our energy fields. Promotes peace, harmony, prosperity, and positivity. Soothes and balances energy fields.
• Daisies: have divinatory qualities concerning love. They increase self-awareness, creativity, and inner strength. Help to get stagnant energies and situations moving.
• Lavender: helps to clear monkey chatter, stress, confusion, and disharmony. Helps to be in divine alignment in all areas of our life. Reminds us of our true divine self and clears pathways within our life and energy fields, so we can realize equanimity. Attracts sensuous and playful love. Enhances our energy field, and helps to gracefully release guilt and shame.
• Roses: very powerful source for purification. Help to strengthen our energy fields, and enhance self-love. Calms tense energies, and attracts love.
Start by cleaning and cleansing the bathroom or wherever you are placing the kid-sized pool. One simple way to cleanse a space is to smudge it with a bundle of dry herbs. Communicate with the spirit essence of flowers prior to using them, and thank them for helping to purify and rejuvenate you. To avoid clogging your drain, place the flowers in either a clean twelve-cup coffee or tea maker to make concentrated tea. A handful of dry flowers (squeeze in twice as many if the flowers are fresh) should yield five to seven pots; you can tell you have extracted what you can from the flowers when the water becomes very light. Place the cup of Epsom salt and the prepared flower water in the tub or pool.
Once in the tub or pool, connect with the spirit essence of the water and flowers, and thank them for providing you with an overall cleanse, rejuvenation, and more inspiration and happiness in your life. While in the water, strengthen your intention by calmly focusing on it and being grateful for it. When you feel you are complete and done with the baño, prepare to exit the tub and thank the sun, water, and the spirit of the flowers one last time. Afterward, wash off with cold water. The cold water further clears away any residual unwanted energies. Hot- and cold-water hydrotherapy also has great benefits for the body, boosting circulation, reducing stress, and stimulating the removal of toxins from the organs.
Cuprins
Introduction to Ancient Mesoamerican Shamanic Solar and Lunar Rites
1 Intertwining the Energies of the Sun and Moon The Sacred in Ancient Mexica and Maya Daily Life
2 Mesoamerican Solar and Lunar Deities Reflections of Sacred Energies
3 Dawn, Sunrise, and Morning Rites of Creation and Coming into Being
4 High Noon and Afternoon Rites of Power, Leadership, and Release
5 Sunset, Dusk, and Nightfall Rites of Transformation
6 Midnight and Predawn Intersections with Nonordinary Realms
7 Rites for Lunar Phases New, Waxing, Full, and Waning Moons
Notes
Bibliography
Index
1 Intertwining the Energies of the Sun and Moon The Sacred in Ancient Mexica and Maya Daily Life
2 Mesoamerican Solar and Lunar Deities Reflections of Sacred Energies
3 Dawn, Sunrise, and Morning Rites of Creation and Coming into Being
4 High Noon and Afternoon Rites of Power, Leadership, and Release
5 Sunset, Dusk, and Nightfall Rites of Transformation
6 Midnight and Predawn Intersections with Nonordinary Realms
7 Rites for Lunar Phases New, Waxing, Full, and Waning Moons
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Recenzii
“Once again, Erika Buenaflor has provided us with a marvelous understanding of the ancient shamanic mysteries of Mesoamerica. All ancient pre-Columbian civilizations utilized the movements of the sun, moon, and stars to understand their earthly existence. Sacred Energies of the Sun and Moon allows us to glimpse behind the veil of the mundane to view the esoteric synchronization of the heavens as they influence our health and everyday life.”
“Erika is the real deal. As a millennial Latina looking to reconnect with my spiritual roots, she has been a go-to resource for me and many others like me. She’s very knowledgeable about the various types of spiritual modalities, and the time and dedication she devotes to learning and researching these ancient practices is a feat unto itself. Anyone looking to learn more about traditional and indigenous spirituality should read Erika’s books.”
“In Sacred Energies of the Sun and Moon, Erika Buenaflor does a superb job of blending a well-documented history of Mesoamerican curanderismo and shamanic beliefs while also providing a practical guide for modern souls to bring the energy of the sun and moon into their daily life.”
“Now more than ever we look to the sun and the moon to guide us through unprecedented times. I am grateful for the gift of this book, allowing us to connect to our ancient Mesoamerican indigenous traditions to provide healing and wisdom at a time when it is greatly needed.”
“What’s fun about this book is that you can follow along through the seasons and develop your own rituals as you see fit that are in alignment with these seasons and cycles…Buenaflor’s guide to working with the sacred energies of the sun, night sun, and moon also provides us with powerful sacred tools and techniques that we can use for harnessing solar and lunar energies.”
"It's hard to find a more detailed account of the beliefs that underpin Mexican shamanic practices. For those who are serious about learning these traditions, this is an excellent resource. It's serious reading and should be done with time and attention."
“Erika is the real deal. As a millennial Latina looking to reconnect with my spiritual roots, she has been a go-to resource for me and many others like me. She’s very knowledgeable about the various types of spiritual modalities, and the time and dedication she devotes to learning and researching these ancient practices is a feat unto itself. Anyone looking to learn more about traditional and indigenous spirituality should read Erika’s books.”
“In Sacred Energies of the Sun and Moon, Erika Buenaflor does a superb job of blending a well-documented history of Mesoamerican curanderismo and shamanic beliefs while also providing a practical guide for modern souls to bring the energy of the sun and moon into their daily life.”
“Now more than ever we look to the sun and the moon to guide us through unprecedented times. I am grateful for the gift of this book, allowing us to connect to our ancient Mesoamerican indigenous traditions to provide healing and wisdom at a time when it is greatly needed.”
“What’s fun about this book is that you can follow along through the seasons and develop your own rituals as you see fit that are in alignment with these seasons and cycles…Buenaflor’s guide to working with the sacred energies of the sun, night sun, and moon also provides us with powerful sacred tools and techniques that we can use for harnessing solar and lunar energies.”
"It's hard to find a more detailed account of the beliefs that underpin Mexican shamanic practices. For those who are serious about learning these traditions, this is an excellent resource. It's serious reading and should be done with time and attention."
Descriere
A practical guide to ancient Mesoamerican solar and lunar rites for healing and transformation.