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Spiritual Reawakening
by Hank Wesselman, Ph.D.
It
is of interest that the current spiritual reawakening is mainly happening
outside the carefully patrolled borders of our organized religions. It appears
to be cutting across socioeconomic levels of achievement and status, and is
transcending cultural, political, and ethnic boundaries as well. It's not
surprising, therefore, that this widespread movement includes a growing revival
of interest in shamanism.
Growing Interest In Shamanism
By using the shamanic method, each person is gifted with their freedom, their
sovereignty, and their right to develop spiritually. In doing so, each of us
becomes our own teacher, our own priestess or priest, on our own prophet,
enabling us to receive spiritual revelations directly from the highest sources
-- ourselves.
This is an appealing proposition to Westerners, and virtually everyone in the
transformational community knows that it's possible to connect with the
dimensional realities where all the mysteries, great and small, become known.
This is the direct path of the mystic at its absolute best. This is the
sacred way that leads each of us into the experience of self-empowerment and
self-perception, without the need for any particular organized religious or
spiritual structure to do it for us.
In the same breath, let me add that it helps to have some structural
foundation in the beginning, and most of us find one that fits -- whether
Islamic, Christian, Jewish, Hindu, Buddhist, or Jain.
The exploration of the nature of reality, as well as the mystery of who we
are and what we're doing here, is the substrate of the quest. It's not about
clearing up these mysteries. It's about making these mysteries clear.
When we experience the spiritual mysteries directly, we make them our own.
And although
it's possible to do this in the church or the temple, the zendo or the mosque,
the challenge is to accomplish it out in the world at large -- in the
supermarket or the bank, the law office or the fast-food joint, in our families,
in our friendships, and in our alliances. It is in this manner that we bring the
mysteries into our everyday lives, and by association, into our relationships
with everyone, everywhere -- forever.
At its inception, this inquiry into the mystery is intensely personal. Yet as
it progresses, it leads the seeker inevitably toward a universal and ultimately
altruistic perspective, one that takes us straight into the irreversible vortex
of spiritual enlightenment. This progression, once begun, changes us profoundly
and forever because it conveys to each of us the experience of authentic
initiation.
This
article was excerpted from The Journey to the Sacred Garden, ©2003, by
Hank Wesselman.
Reprinted with permission of the publisher, Hay House. http://www.hayhouse.com
Info/Order this book.
About the Author
Anthropologist
Hank Wesselman, Ph.D., received his doctoral degree from the University of
California at Berkeley and has worked with an international group of scientists
for much of the past 30 years, exploring Eastern Africa's Great Rift Valley in
search of answers to the mystery of human origins. Born in New York, Dr.
Wesselman served in the U.S. Peace Corps and has taught for Kiriji Memorial
College and Adeola Odutola College in Nigeria; the University of California at
San Diego; the West Hawaii branch of the University of Hawaii at Hilo; and
California State University at Sacramento. He currently resides in Northern
California, where he teaches at American River College and Sierra College and
offers experiential workshops and presentations in core shamanism worldwide. He
is the author of Spiritwalker, Medicinemaker, and Visionseeker. Visit his
website at
www.sharedwisdom.com
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