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Ayahuasca: A Strange Brew
Posted on Wednesday, February 06, 2008 (CST) by Thoth
In an affluent corner of encinitas, just north of San Diego, a young medicine man named Lobo Siete Truenos sits cross-legged on the polished wood floors of a backyard temple. Here in this suburban sanctuary, behind the gates of a faux-Spanish villa, just past the manicured lawn and an artificial lagoon, he’s carefully unpacking a collection of stones, feathers and oils that he’ll use for an all-night spiritual odyssey that will kick off after sunset.
If all goes as planned, Truenos’ nine participants—all seeking his psychedelic “doctoring”—will sip a murky, foul-tasting potion and then wait, eyes closed in the dark, for it to take effect. Wooziness may be followed by nausea, then probably vomiting. For many, a kaleidoscopic array of geometric patterns could emerge. Others may be greeted by friendly plant-like creatures, gnomes, elves or even a giant anaconda—known by indigenous tribes as Mother Ayahuasca, omniscient ruler of the plant kingdom—who communicates telepathically. And the really lucky ones may be treated to a cinematic review of their lives, each scene illustrating a moral failing.
“It’s a deep process,” Truenos says, as he places his precious stones on a tapestry woven with wild serpentine patterns. “It’s certainly not a game. It takes a lot of purifying to serve this medicine.” Truenos, 34, is precise about his tools because, when they’re correctly assembled, they constitute what he calls “the fire altar of the eagle and the condor.”
But these
instruments are just supporting players for the evening’s star
attraction, an inky fluid that Truenos has stored in three plastic
drinking bottles.
This liquid is known
variously as hoasca, yagé, caapi and daime, but in the U.S. it’s most
commonly called ayahuasca. (The word, which comes from the ancient
Incan language Quechua, means “vine of the spirits” or “vine of the
soul.”) Tribes of Central and South America—Shipibo, Kofan and Tukanos
among them—have used the drug for hundreds of years or more in their
spiritual practices. In Ecuador, Brazil and Peru, the drug is legal and
attracts many pilgrims to ayahuasca ceremonies every year.
The brew was introduced to
pop culture in 1963, when Beat writers Allen Ginsberg and William S.
Burroughs published their collected correspondence on their ayahuasca
experiences in “The Yage Letters.”
In the U.S., ayahuasca
remained for years a largely underground phenomenon that, like peyote
and psilocybin mushrooms, attracted a following of academics,
journalists, psychiatrists and other soul-searching intellectuals. Now,
thanks in part to a 2006 Supreme Court ruling, ayahuasca (pronounced
EYE-yah-WAH-skah) appears to be gaining in popularity. East Coast
writers have generated interest among the intelligentsia, and online
head shops are selling ingredients for making the ayahuasca brew. At
the same time, some scientific studies suggest that ayahuasca has
legitimate uses as an alternative psychotropic medicine that can
abolish depression, cure addiction and improve brain function.
For ayahuasqueros such as
Truenos and the eclectic mix of button-down professionals and New Age
acolytes joining him on this night, the potion may be a conduit to
higher consciousness. Who exactly are these psychotropic explorers?
Truenos won’t reveal much about them, except to say that the owners of
the home in which they are meeting are retirees (young ones, it
appears) and that participants typically include doctors, lawyers,
celebrities, New Age healers and academics. They’re working folks, he
says. “People from all walks of life.”
For them, the
vision-inducing elixir made from Amazonian jungle vines and leaves
opens doors to parallel realities where mystical creatures reign.
Because ayahuasca must be exactingly prepared and administered to
achieve the desired benefits, a cadre of itinerant shamans such as
Truenos has emerged, roaming the U.S. to host marathon candlelight
ceremonies in yoga studios, private homes and remote open spaces, and
charging as much as $200 a person for each session.
The concoction itself is
said to taste so vile that most people fight their gag reflex to
swallow it. Devotees liken the flavor to forest rot and bile, dirty
socks and raw sewage. Vomiting is so common that indigenous shamans
often refer to the ceremony as la purga, or the purge. And ayahuasca
can severely test the commitment of its followers: The potion often
reveals its celebrated wisdoms only after repeat encounters. The
payoff, adherents say, can be life-altering. Debilitating illnesses
such as chronic depression or addiction may disappear after just one
session, some say. Others say they shed their egos for a night, finally
seeing their lives with a startling clarity.
With that kind of
reputation, ayahuasca has predictably intrigued celebrities known for
charting the supra-conscious: Oliver Stone, Sting and Tori Amos have
sampled it and openly discussed their experiences. “It’s quite an
ordeal,” Sting told Rolling Stone in 1998. Amos talked on BBC Radio 4
in 2005 about how she envisioned having a love affair with the devil
during one ayahuasca encounter.
In Peru, ayahuasca
ceremonies are so common that the nation’s tourism bureau tracks the
number of visitors seeking the sacred brew. But no one needs to travel
to Peru to experience ayahuasca in 2008. A community, shepherded by
ayahuasca shamans, has begun to emerge in the United States. It
initially established itself in New Mexico. And now—in an act of
psychedelic entrepreneurship and under the aegis of his spiritual and
religious society, Aurora Bahá—Truenos is bringing the ayahuasca
ceremony to Southern California.
Ayahuasca traditionally is
made from the boiled or soaked bark and stems of Banisteriopsis
caapi—also known as the ayahuasca vine—in combination with the leaves
of Psychotria viridis (a bush that contains the alkaloids needed to
produce ayahuasca’s psychoactive compound, dimethyltryptamine, or DMT).
But ayahuasca is no
recreational drug. Unlike a drag on a marijuana joint or a snort of
cocaine, even a single encounter with ayahuasca can be life-threatening
under some circumstances. It poses serious risks when taken with
certain medications, such as SSRI antidepressants; reputable shamans
strictly prohibit the use of the beverage by anyone taking these drugs.
Some also demand abstinence from alcohol before a ceremony. A Canadian
woman, albeit with advanced diabetes mellitus and cardiovascular
disease, died in 2001 after an ayahuasca ceremony. An autopsy gave the
official cause of death as fatal nicotine poisoning due to tobacco
mixed with the ayahuasca preparation, an unusual method of brewing the
drink. But ayahuasca’s supporters consider the risks associated with
the brew easily avoidable with strict adherence to their shamans’
orders. The rewards, they say, are worth the risks.
“It’s totally new, unlike
LSD, unlike [psychedelic] mushrooms, unlike anything else,” says artist
Joel Harris, a Santa Clarita native who first heard about the brew from
his roommate in the U.S. Marines in 1998 when they were stationed at
Camp Lejeune, N.C. A couple of years ago, Harris says, he sold his
possessions, decamped to Peru and took up ayahuasca as a
quasi-spiritual practice.
“It brings your awareness
to a place where it’s understood that you are connected to everything
on Earth,” he says. “If everyone had a chance to do ayahuasca, the
entire reality would shift and we would be living in peace.”
Journalist Erik Davis, a
longtime chronicler of emerging religious practices and author of the
2006 book “Visionary State: A Journey Through California’s Spiritual
Landscape,” gives Harris’ comments more context. “For a variety of
reasons,” Davis says, “with some negative side effects, ayahuasca has
been able to enter into Western culture in a way that preserves a
ritual format and a spiritual intention and gives it a much more
potentially transformative effect. Psychedelic mushrooms can take you
just as far out, but the way they’ve been adapted by Westerners has
been more informal, which means they have the potential to be used in
much more erratic ways.”
New York writer Daniel
Pinchbeck brought ayahuasca to the attention of liberal thinkers,
detailing his mind-blowing journeys with the brew (and numerous other
hallucinogens) in a pair of books: 2002’s “Breaking Open the Head: A
Psychedelic Journey Into the Heart of Contemporary Shamanism” and
2006’s “2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl.” “When I published my first
book in 2002 and I spoke to audiences, 50% to 80% of the people hadn’t
heard of ayahuasca,” Pinchbeck says. “Now everywhere I go, everyone is
familiar with it.”
Truenos, a former
comparative religion student and computer engineer, is relatively new
on the ayahuasca circuit. And he’s unusually candid about his practice
compared with other ayahuasqueros. Most established ayahuasqueros
operate in secret, speaking in code on the phone for fear of attracting
too much scrutiny from the authorities. Federal law classified one of
ayahuasca’s components, DMT, as a controlled substance in 1970.
However, Truenos suggests that he does have the U.S. Supreme Court to
fall back on, at least for the moment. In February 2006, the court
ruled (in Gonzales vs. O Centro Espirita Beneficente União do Vegetal)
that practitioners of the U.S. branch of the Brazil-based Christian
spiritist group União do Vegetal—which uses hoasca, the traditional
brew that others call ayahuasca, as a sacrament—have the right to
legally consume the beverage under the Religious Freedom Restoration
Act of 1993. That law aims to prevent the federal government from
“substantially burdening” a person’s free exercise of religion, the
court said.
Truenos took the court
decision as a green light. He and his wife, Gabriella, have been
leading ceremonies for several years. They haven’t consulted attorneys;
instead they take their orders from the “Creator,” he says.
“We have been operating
completely above the radar because we understood that in this country,
if any church is given protection or recognition by the government,
that recognition or protection is given uniformly, or it’d be
unconstitutional,” Truenos says.
And now the couple, who
sometimes live in Austin, Texas, have become a pair of jet-setting
ayahuasca missionaries. Tonight’s ceremony in Encinitas was preceded,
Truenos says, by a few days of “doctoring” in the Bahamas. After the
gathering they’ll be off to minister to wounded souls in Topanga Canyon
on the occasion of the winter solstice.
As Truenos sees it, the
legal decision by the nation’s highest court, the media’s percolating
interest and his rising profile as a shaman are all part of a grand
supernatural plan. The Divine Mother, he says, is laying the groundwork
to prepare the developed world for “the great coming of age of
humanity.”
With his scruffy beard,
long white robe and skullcap, Truenos looks a bit like a
post-conversion Cat Stevens. He speaks in the colorful, metaphor-rich
language of Native American tribal elders. With just an hour to go
before tonight’s ritual, he explains his reasons for going public with
his practice. “The medicine wants to be properly represented,” he says,
delicately placing the containers of murky ayahuasca on a sacred mat, a
tapestry woven by Peruvian women during an ayahuasca ceremony. “It
wants to be known in an integral way.”
All this heavy-duty
mysticism is more than a little incongruous amid the nouveau wealth of
Encinitas. But he deflects any suggestion that by “doctoring” the
wealthy he’s neglecting the needy.
“We live in different times
than our predecessors,” Truenos says. “There has been a promise
throughout every culture that there would be a moment in humanity’s
history where we would have social and economic justice. One of the
things the fire altar states is that this day that has been promised
has arrived, and so with it all of the various hallmarks are sure to be
emerging in humanity. This includes a spiritual solution to humanity’s
economic problems so there isn’t a disparity between the poor and the
wealthy.”
This sort of response is
typical of Truenos, who gives few straight answers about his background
but plenty of mystic filigree. Indeed, over the course of several
conversations, his story became increasingly fluid, evolving with every
telling. The covenant of his spiritual society, Aurora Bahá, a baroque
document posted at www.aurorabaha.org detailing the tenants of his
faith, is also ever-changing. Though he established his society’s
covenant in 2005, he said it “continues to go through revisions.” What
Truenos will reveal is that he was born in the Dominican Republic, is
of Lebanese, Basque and Taino descent and has lived in the northeastern
U.S. He prefers to keep his birth name private. He left home at 15, he
says, because of “a spiritual crisis.” A “personal crisis” followed at
23, after which he returned home to attend engineering school at
Clarkson University in upstate New York. His adopted name, Lobo Siete
Truenos, means Wolf Seven Thunders; medicine men in northern Mexico
gave him the name “Lobo,” he says. Truenos was introduced to ayahuasca
in 2001, and after a series of ceremonies, he journeyed to Peru to be
closer to native ayahuasca culture. Later, by a strange confluence of
events he declines to detail, he became a voting systems supervisor for
New Mexico during the 2004 election.
In any case, his life as a
bureaucrat ended abruptly. In 2005, he established Aurora Bahá, which
shares some principles, such as spiritual unity and the unification of
mankind, with the Baha’i faith. However, Aurora Bahá is independent of
the Baha’i organization, which has about 5 million members worldwide.
Now Truenos has devoted his life to holding ayahuasca ceremonies
wherever he is called.
“What ayahuasca provided to
me, initially, was a sense of connectedness that I didn’t even realize
I was missing,” he said during an interview several weeks before the
Encinitas ceremony. “That connectedness to all life, to all things, an
opportunity to know myself more deeply as a mirror of my most inner
tendencies and motivations and intentions. It’s very profound in that
way. It also gave me a direct avenue for receiving answers to questions
that I couldn’t find anywhere else.”
He believes that, in
addition to carrying out the will of the Divine Mother, he has been
tapped to help fulfill a prophecy that has been expressed by all the
world’s religions. That prophecy will see the indigenous peoples of
North and South America united, he says.
“This could never be a
recreational compound,” says Dr. Charles Grob, head of adolescent and
child psychiatry at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center in Torrance. “It’s too
unpredictable and dangerous.” But Grob, one of a handful of scientists
who has studied ayahuasca, thinks there may be some legitimate medical
uses for it. In 1993, he led a team of researchers that conducted the
first medical study of its long-term effects on 15 members of the
Brazilian ayahuasca church União do Vegetal. The team found that some
church members experienced remission of their addictions, depression or
anxiety disorders without recurrence. In the same study, published in
1996 in the Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, pharmacologist J.C.
Callaway discovered an increased density of serotonin reuptake sites in
the blood platelets of habitual ayahuasca drinkers, suggesting an
antidepressant effect similar to what is now achieved by prescription
drugs such as Prozac and Zoloft.
“I was suffering from
severe depression,” says Xthas Hoy, 32, a high school math teacher who
says he has taken ayahuasca hundreds of times in the nine years since
he has joined PaDeva, an ayahuasca church with Wiccan and pagan
influences in New Mexico. “I went through the entire pharmacy,
everything from Wellbutrin, Zoloft, Xanax and Prozac,” Hoy says.
“Within hours of the first time I drank ayahuasca, I’ve never had a
recurrence again. From that moment on, there really was no question
that this was my path.” (Hoy is now a priest offering ayahuasca
ceremonies for a suggested donation of $75 to $300 per person.)
Michael Shermer, editor of
Skeptic magazine, counters that ayahuasca’s effectiveness in treating
depression isn’t exactly groundbreaking. Science shows, he says, that
any serious jolt to the system—shock therapy included—can bring the
mind out of depression. That doesn’t mean ayahuasca treatment is the
wave of the future.
Nor are ayahuasca’s
quasi-religious effects any great revelation, Shermer says. History is
rife with strange rituals believed to inspire divine intervention. “In
a way, the ayahuasca phenomenon taps into a lot of what religion is.
There’s the social aspects of religion, and then there’s the
transcendent, spiritual aspects to it.” There’s no reason, he says,
that ayahuasca wouldn’t trigger feelings of transcendence any more than
deep meditative prayer. “The monks used to self-flagellate to change
their brain chemistry.”
But all the medical
skepticism in the world may not counteract the upsurge in grass-roots
interest in ayahuasca that the Internet has propelled in the last five
years. The Burning Man-friendly social networking website Tribe has its
own ayahuasca subgroup. Erowid, a sort of Wikipedia of psychedelics,
tells visitors everything they need to know about the brew. And
aspiring ayahuasqueros can order Banisteriopsis caapi and Psychotria
viridis directly from the online head shop Azarius for about $22 to $30
per 50 grams.
Among the more outspoken
academic ayahuasca converts is British journalist and author Graham
Hancock, who was researching a book on human origins (“Supernatural:
Meetings With the Ancient Teachers of Mankind,” published in 2006) when
he stumbled on what he perceived to be uniform patterns in the cave
drawings of primitive man. He came to the conclusion that the
phenomenon was inspired by the sudden discovery of hallucinogenic
plants. This led Hancock to ayahuasca, which he says he has taken 26
times since 2003; he credits it with improving his life.
Still, Hancock tempers this
praise with a warning. “It is extremely powerful,” he says. “Its
effects can be deeply disturbing, and there may be some short-term
trauma, almost like a post-traumatic shock disorder, with coming to
terms with very disturbing insights about yourself.”
So what has it done for him? “I’m a better husband and father,” Hancock says. “My behavior is much more examined.”
Inside the Encinitas
backyard temple, Truenos pulls out two feathers and an eagle’s wing.
The red-tailed hawk feather represents love and laughter, he says. The
pheasant feather stands for mercy. And the eagle’s wing is used to fan
ayahuasca drinkers who are “having a hard time” during the ceremony. He
stresses that these feathers aren’t artifacts—they’re medicine. “It’s
more than symbolism,” he says.
Truenos’ ceremonies borrow
heavily from indigenous practice. To prepare for his ayahuasca
drinkers, he pulled an all-nighter, clearing the ceremonial space of
negative energies with tobacco smoke. He had already soaked and boiled
the plants down to the dark essence of ayahuasca.
Now that the fire altar is
ready, he leaves the temple to eat a plate of fish and rice in his
guest quarters. The ceremony participants will arrive soon, and he
seems to be psyching himself up. Truenos mentions a recent private
ayahuasca session in which a participant experienced “a trust crisis,”
refusing to believe Truenos could heal him. Mother Ayahuasca admonished
the man for such self-delusion, leaving him writhing on the floor,
wracked with emotion.
Despite this harrowing
episode, Truenos believes ayahuasca’s dark reputation is exaggerated.
It is transformative and healing, he says, a cure for the “cancer of
indifference,” a remedy for our “failures in integrity.” But it’s even
more than that. “Some people,” he says, “need to be frightened by the
way they live their lives.”
Copyright: Los Angeles Times
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