Because of the marvel of the internet, we can share this to potentially every human on Earth. This understanding is possibly the best there is out there. It nicely explains the success of
Ayahuasca therapy as well.
We are truly blessed to have this and again it shows the way forward to the optimization of our natural communities on a global basis and the potential power on the Rule of Twelve.
All communities bring up their own healers or shamans who learn to connect spiritually. Sharing their protocols globally can make the whole network a global engine for healing. This can also lead directly to mass shaman meditation as well which can ultimately empower a mass consciousness in acts of creation as well as has been hinted at in our cultural sources.
.
A 60,000-year-old cure for depression
Traditional healers have been
entrusted with the well-being of indigenous Australian communities for
as long as their culture has been alive – yet surprisingly little is
known of them.
By Bonita Grima
30 September 2019
By Bonita Grima
30 September 2019
http://www.bbc.com/travel/story/20190929-a-60000-year-old-cure-for-depression?
There I was, on a cold but bright day in
late autumn, wearing nothing but my bathing suit, lying on a pile of
kangaroo skins and engulfed in plumes of smouldering leaves from a
peppermint tree by the banks of a sacred river.
Kwoorabup has been
a place of ceremony for thousands of years. The river, located near the
small town of Denmark, 360km south-east of Western Australia’s capital,
Perth, was given its name by the local Noongar people, who believe it
was formed by the Wagyl, a giant serpent from the creation period known
as the Dreaming.
Most people journey to this wild coastal stretch
of Western Australia’s Great Southern region to visit vineyards, sample
delicious produce and holiday by its strip of stunning beaches, but I
was there to have my spirit rebalanced by the local medicine man, Joey
Williams.
Australia’s indigenous Aboriginal people have the oldest living culture on Earth. For around 60,000 years, their intricate understanding of ecology ensured survival, and their physical, spiritual, mental and emotional well-being was achieved by maintaining healthy, balanced relationships with all living and non-living things.
At the heart of their
communities were traditional healers. They have been respected and
entrusted with the well-being of Aboriginal communities for as long as
the culture has been alive, yet still today surprisingly little is known
of them. The few healers who remain, of which Williams is one, have
extensive knowledge of Aboriginal culture and are believed to possess
supernatural abilities. Their role is to treat physical, mental and
spiritual ailments using bush medicine, smoking ceremonies and spirit
realignment – the latter being a common remedy for depression, or what
indigenous Australians call “sickness of the spirit”.
In 2017, the World Health Organization published a study
stating the total number of people living with depression in 2015 was
estimated to exceed 300 million – an increase of more than 18.4% since
2005.
More recently, the Australian Medical Association announced their agreement
with other leading global health organisations, declaring climate
change a “health emergency” that will cause a higher incidence of mental
ill-health, among other health-related issues. With modern living an
apparent threat to both mental well-being and the planet – and having
personally battled with depression myself – I had wondered whether
answers could be found by looking back to the wisdom of the world’s
oldest continuous civilisation.
An Aboriginal elder and mubarrn,
meaning “medicine” or “lore” man in the local Noongar language,
Williams told me his healing ability has been passed down through his
ancestral lineage.
For him, and other Aboriginal healers, the most
important first step in relation to healing is the ability to reconnect
to the land, since for indigenous Australians, connection to country
represents connection to their culture. For this reason, we’d started
the healing ceremony the previous day in the Stirling Range National Park,
a 90-minute drive north of Kwoorabup, to experience a reconnection
ceremony at an ancient sacred site on the traditional lands of the
Koreng tribe to which he belongs.
Western Australia’s only southern mountain range
is an area of extraordinary beauty. It’s one of the few places in the
state that gets snow, and spring sees it dotted with an array of
brightly coloured wildflowers. Home to 1,500 species, many growing
nowhere else, it’s one of the world’s most important areas for flora.
Many
of these native plants have medicinal properties, and because Williams
spent his early childhood living off the land with family, it’s no
wonder that he, now in his late 50s, refers to the area as his
“supermarket” and “pharmacy”.
Wading through knee-high grass,
Williams showed me how to dig for bloodroot (good for numbing toothache)
and gather resin formed from the oozing red antiseptic sap of a marri
tree, which strangely resembled the very thing it is known for healing –
an open wound. “It cures stomach ache too,” he said.
As we walked, Williams demonstrated that to him
and other indigenous Australians, the land is very much alive, with
songlines (cultural memory codes that hold knowledge of a place and
define the responsibilities attached to kinship and lore) scattered
across its skin. After singing the specific songline attached to the
spot we were standing, Williams “read” the land to me, pointing out
peaks like chapters. “There’s Bulla Meile, the hill of eyes,” he said.
More commonly known as Bluff Knoll, southern Western Australia‘s highest
peak is where the Koreng people believe they return after death. “And
straight out in front of us is Talyuberlup. See her face, breast and
stomach?” he asked, tracing curves in the air. “Meaning beautiful woman
sleeping. She’s the protector of this range.”
Following his gaze,
the undulating countryside did indeed look like an expecting mother
resting, and served as a reminder that Aboriginal people see the land as
a “mother” and a guide for reciprocal wellness.
Back in the car,
we continued on to Wickelenup, a semi-dry salt lake that is a “power
ground”, a place where the Koreng people have performed ceremonial
reconnection rites for thousands of years. Wickelenup means “lake of
many colours” and it’s named for the ochre pits resting beside it. These
large deposits of clay earth produce pigments ranging from pale yellows
to deep reds, which, when painted on the body during a ceremony,
represent the important connection that indigenous Australians have with
the land.
I only have to listen to you for half an hour and I know you
Entering
Wickelenup, Williams used clapsticks and what he called a “protection
song” to summon his ancestors for the protection and blessing of our
steps upon the Earth. After crossing a bed of clay that looked as if
giant tins of red and yellow paint had been dropped from the sky, he led
me to an oddly shaped chunk of volcanic rock that he used as a platform
for grinding ochre. Williams stood with his eyes closed and sang the
songline belonging to his family, the Kaarl Poorlanger, meaning “people
of fire”, before mixing ochre on the stone and painting a
russet-coloured pigment onto my skin in a technique known as “smudging”.
“This is your mark, your connection to this land. You might wash it off later but I know it’s there… and so will you,” he said.
Looking
at the symbol on my arm, I asked why he had chosen what looked like
ripples in water. “I didn’t,” he said. “You chose it in your mind.”
Sensing my confusion, Williams elaborated. “I only have to listen to you
for half an hour and I know you.”
Whether healers truly possess any psychic
ability, it seems a key skill Aboriginal people have honed over
thousands of years is an advanced way of listening.
Elder Miriam-Rose Ungunmerr-Baumann, an Aboriginal activist, educator and artist from Australia’s Northern Territory, believes “dadirri is the Aboriginal gift” the world is thirsting for.
Meaning
“inner deep listening and quiet still awareness” in her
Ngangikurungkurr language, dadirri is a form of mindfulness and
reciprocal empathy we can develop with the land, each other and
ourselves, according to Ungunmerr-Baumann. “We call on it and it calls
to us… It is something like what you call ‘contemplation’,” she writes on her website.
For
indigenous Australians, this spiritual listening practice provides a
way to observe and act according to the natural seasons and cycles in a
way the modern world seems to have forgotten. “We watch the bush foods
and wait for them to ripen before we gather them. When a relation dies,
we wait a long time with the sorrow. We own our grief and allow it to
heal slowly,” she told me.
While much ancient Aboriginal wisdom and culture
has already been lost, elders such as Ungunmerr-Baumann are striving to
keep what’s left alive, but it’s not an easy task. When the First Fleet
of British settlers arrived in Australia in 1788, Australia’s
indigenous population was thought to be around 750,000. Ten years later,
it was estimated to have dropped by 90%, due to the introduction of new
diseases and violent clashes with the European colonisers. Today,
indigenous Australians make up just 3.3% of the population. The forced
separation of families and removal of Aboriginal people from their
traditional lands, lore and practices affected the passing of cultural
knowledge and led to the intergenerational trauma that is still being
experienced today.
But one woman advocating for greater
recognition of traditional Aboriginal healing principles, practices and
medicine is Dr Francesca Panzironi, a human rights academic from Rome.
The CEO of Australia’s first organisation of Aboriginal traditional
healers, Panzironi formed Anangu Ngangkari Tjutaku Aboriginal
Corporation (ANTAC), with Ngangkari (healers of Australia’s central
desert areas) in 2012.
“For indigenous people, it’s about
reconnecting to culture and accessing healing techniques that are
different from Western medicine,” Panzironi said. “Western medicine
looks at the body from a mechanistic perspective, whereas healers
highlight everyone has a spirit that intimately links to the body and
emotions.”
Although traditional Aboriginal medicine is not
recognised as an alternative medicine in Australia (due to difficulty
regulating spiritual practices and the lack of testing of bush
medicines), Ngangkaris are recognised in South Australian legislation
through the Mental Health Act of 2009, and ANTAC now has healers working
alongside Western doctors and mental health experts in some public
hospitals. They provide “complementary” treatments to medical care for
indigenous Australians – something especially beneficial for people
recovering from intergenerational trauma, stemming from colonisation.
Panzironi
says there has been increased interest from non-indigenous people, too,
who are dissatisfied with the mainstream model and are looking for
alternatives. “We had a middle-aged woman who reduced her intake of
antidepressants significantly over a six-month period of regular pampuni
(a massage technique used for spirit realignment by the Ngangkari,
particularly in the stomach, which is thought to be connected to the
mind), in consultation with her GP. Both the woman and her doctor
noticed improvement in her mental health,” she said.
Currently
ANTAC has a mobile clinic allowing Ngangkaris to travel to patients in
areas of Australia where access to their services are non-existent, but
Panzironi would like to see hospital programmes similar to the one in
South Australia rolled out nationwide. “The goal is to have Aboriginal
traditional medicine recognised as an alternative medicine and to make
healers commonplace, as a viable choice for everyone through Medicare
[Australia’s universal health care system],” she told me.
Back at Kwoorabup, Williams was preparing for
the final stage of my spirit realignment ceremony. After using smoke to
cleanse and protect our surroundings from bad spirits, as is the
traditional ceremonial practice among Aboriginal people, he placed a
small stone upon my navel – a tool, he said, to absorb my vibration or
spirit.
“We’re all made up of vibration,” Williams said. “It’s
connected at birth through the umbilical cord. It’s the essence of who
we are.” Through his water vibrational healing ceremony, something that
is unique to mubarrn of the area, he explained that I’d be able hear my
spirit amplified when he placed the stone in the river. “High vibration
means anxiety,” Williams said. “Low vibration is depression. I’ll take
your vibration and balance it by releasing it through a portal I’ll open
in your back.”
We’re all made up of vibration – it’s the essence of who we are
I
had known the water would be cold, but that still hadn’t prepared me
for the shock I felt when it came time to immerse myself in the river.
Floating on my back, with Williams holding me, I tried to relax and
listen to my “vibration” with the stone now held against my spine, but
my shuddering body wouldn’t cooperate.
Pain from the freezing
water intensified and I was also experiencing discomfort because I was
unused to feeling supported. An irrational fear came over me – if I
didn’t break free, to move by myself in a way I was used to, I might
sink. But then I felt a strange force pushing up from under me and
realised it wasn’t just Williams supporting me, but the river itself.
Doing
as Williams asked – to relinquish control and acknowledge pain and
trust – I tipped my head back and focused on the warmth of the sun’s
rays. I remembered something I’d read earlier by Ungunmerr-Baumann. “We
cannot hurry the river. We have to move with its current and understand
its ways,” she’d written. Moments later, much to my disbelief, my ears
filled with a sound like the motor of a distant power boat, growing
louder and resonating within – sounding a lot like anxiety, according to
Williams’ earlier description. Letting go, I breathed out and went
under.
From my own experience, recovering from
depression is a little like resurfacing from a cold river; thoughts like
colours and sounds seem brighter, louder, clearer. And even if there’s
no magic fix for mental illness, it seems indigenous Australians have
much to teach us about developing greater awareness and reciprocity with
our planet for our physical and emotional survival – if we only take
the time to listen.
“You need to ask, who you are, why you’re
here, where you’re going,” Ungunmerr-Baumann told me. “We know who we
are as Aboriginal people. It’s in our language, dreaming, country. We’re
waiting for all people to listen and hear what we hear so that we can
connect and belong together.”
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