Hi Everyone! I am excited to be here to bring you an excerpt from Lori Morrison's book, The Shaman's Guide to the Power of Animals.
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The Shaman's Guide to
Power Animals
by Lori Morrison
Excerpted
from The Shaman’s Guide to Power Animals. Published by Four Jaguars Press.
Copyright © by Lori Morrison. https://lorimorrison.com
It
was a rainy day in the Pacific Northwest. I lifted my five-year-old body into
my father’s delivery van. Our cargo was buttermilk pancake mix, maple syrup,
bacon, potatoes, carrots, and canned goods. We were heading to my family’s
logging camp on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington State in the early 1960s.
The road narrowed after we got to the Quinault Indian Reservation. Because over
one hundred inches of rain fall there each year, the fir trees towered above us
like a cathedral as we drove between them. Moss hung like lace from their
branches. My father slowed the vehicle to allow a family of Elk to cross the
road.
This
trip is my first memory of being out in the woods far away from the bustle of
civilization. Although dedicated to logging, my father’s heart was so grateful
for the forests that he was always proud of his efforts to ensure they were
replenished after clearing the land. Many of the trees he planted on the
Olympic Peninsula are mature and thriving fifty years later. His heart walked a
tightrope between human development and preservation, a complicated balancing
act in those early years of logging.
Continuing
down the logging road with its rain-cut crevices, we soon arrived at the camp.
Young and old loggers smiled as we pulled up to the makeshift kitchen ready to
provide them the ingredients for their next meals. My father jumped out the
driver’s side and called for some help to unload the van. After greeting us,
the cooks checked items off the list of things they had ordered by radio a
couple days before. Invited to sit down to a lumberjack breakfast, seven
plate-size pancakes appeared on the table in front of me. I did my best to dig
into them, but my stomach was swiftly overwhelmed. For his part, my father
chowed down heartily. We’d been driving for several hours.
After
breakfast my father took me by the hand and we walked along the banks of the
Quinault River, me more successfully than him, as my weight was perfect to
prevent me from sinking deeply into the clay and mud of the shoreline. Arriving
at the edge, I was awestruck. Thousands of bright coral Salmon were in the
water flip-flopping and struggling to make their way upstream to their spawning
grounds. My father pointed upstream to a community of Bear engaged in a feeding
frenzy. They had no interest in us as their focus was on the mass migration of
Fish that was taking place.
This
was the first moment in which I realized that something greater and wiser than
me existed beyond the walls of my colorful nursery full of stuffed animals.
There was a natural power ready to be discovered out in the world.
On
the way back home, we bounced down the same dirt road and this time we saw a
Duckling that was alone on the side of the road. I remember my mind wondering
if this fluffy creature was a sign from nature intended for us. My father
stopped the van and got out and, after much searching for Duck’s mother,
realized it had been abandoned. He picked up the tiny Duck, put it in an empty
carton and handed it to me. I felt so blessed by this gift from the forest as I
held the box with the Duckling on my lap all the way home.
During
my childhood I often spent time in nature alone. In those days, a young girl
could venture about the bustling logging town of Aberdeen, Washington, on Grays
Harbor in safety. Our neighbor had a large Koi pond where I would sit for hours
watching pairs of Dragonfly dart about as several Koi peeked out from under the
lotuses. Frogs would sit waiting for the next insect to land on their lily
pads. The pond was a microcosmic world of its own, the world of the water
spirits.
Life
changed as I grew older. My connection to nature diminished as I embraced a
more materialistic view of the world. Other than an occasional zoo visit, or a
Sunday evening spent watching Wild Kingdom on television, the animal world was
a distant thought or interest.
Moving
to El Salvador in my late twenties changed that, as I became the keeper of
eighty acres of land on the slopes of a dormant volcanic crater that held Lake
Ilopango. I was handed my first machete and bought myself a good pair of sturdy
boots, and with my civil engineer husband, Tino, started to open a road through
the peninsula that we owned. Months of adventure ensued as we darted to avoid
Snake, peeked at Panther and Fox, helped Armadillos make their way, discovered
an audience of Iguanas watching us from the trees, and enjoyed the curiosity of
a multitude of tropical birds. In the late afternoon, Vultures would prepare
for the hunt and Opossums would climb up the
palm
trees for the night. Agoutis would feed on the tender vegetation and Duck,
Egret, Kingfisher, Owl, and other creatures abounded on and around the lake.
Every
night, Tino and I would drive our boat to a cliff where trees hung over the
water to see the arrival of hundreds of birds who would sleep in its branches
overnight. I was steeped in the circle of life; the animal kingdom was my
neighborhood. Our dedication to the protection of this property evolved into
maintaining a private sanctuary for many animals that were brought to us after
being rescued from being offered for sale as pets in the central market.
Our
love of wildlife took us on many other adventures. We traveled to Yellowstone
National Park in the United States—another volcano! —and had thrilling
experiences there with Bear and Buffalo. In Alaska, we flew by helicopter to
the top of glaciers and spent time with Brown Bears that we discovered on Dog
sleds as we ventured into the snowy banks near Juneau. We watched Whales in
Prince Rupert Sound and enjoyed Seals floating on chunks of ice. More travels
took us to Antarctica where we saw pods of Killer Whale and Leopard Seal, and I
spent a day sitting on the beach in the Falkland Islands with a colony of
Penguin.
Shortly
after that, my husband and I took a trip that truly captivated me and deepened, even more, my perception of the animal world. We went to Africa. With local
trackers for our guides, we went off the beaten path to find a male Leopard.
Giraffe galloped alongside our jeep and Rhinoceros and Water Buffalo often
stood only a few feet away. One day I sat for hours watching a female Leopard
and her two cubs playing in the sunshine. During an outdoor lunch, my meal was
stolen by a Baboon.
The
moment that was most profound was when seven Lionesses joined us, moving
stealthily alongside our open jeep as we moved along slowly. I could have
reached out and touched them, although that would not have been a good idea. As
the Lions were in stalking mode, I sat insanely still. Suddenly a Lioness took
off perpendicularly to us, while the others stopped in front of the jeep and
waited. Moments later, a herd of Gazelle came running in front of us, right
into the trap that had
been
set. One Gazelle couldn’t escape the ambush and became the victim of a feeding
frenzy that I reluctantly watched. When finished, the seven Lionesses all
lifted their bloody faces from the carcass and walked off.
Our
next stop was Botswana, where I enjoyed watching Elephant swimming across the
river from us with their trunks like snorkels peeking out of the surface of the
water. Staying in a tent, a Hippopotamus decided to sleep next to us all
evening, which made for a very nervous slumber party. We floated in a boat on
the Okavango River for hours, watching the arrival of Zebra and observing how
the massive Alligator in the river protected their babies, which would swim
happily by our craft. The morning we arrived in Johannesburg for the return
flight home, I got teary about leaving. I had just had three weeks of a major
hakuna matata (no problems) moment and I would never be the same again.
That trip was the ultimate immersion into another world, and I had the
realization that there was so much more to the animal kingdom than I understood
with my relative oblivion to the natural
world
beyond my garden walls.
I
took home with me from Africa to El Salvador the sacred wisdom that when
something dies it gives a new life to another and that, from the smallest
insect to the largest mammal, each of us is participating in the balance of
nature. We are all connected. The animals understood this, while we humans are
the least aware of our role in this dynamic existence. The insight that
everything is connected including the minerals, trees, and plants shook my
human foundation. My ego shrunk,
becoming
small and insignificant. This was the first of many steps toward a spiritual
awakening.
After
a major shamanic initiation by ancestral spirits in 2010, I was able to see,
hear, and experience animal spirits. At my home on the edge of Lake Ilopango my
ordinary reality and perceptions cracked open and the spirits of four Jaguar
became my teachers through a challenging shamanic initiation. After that, a
Haitian shaman performed a power animal ceremony with me and blew a Lion spirit
into my heart chakra, which, to this day, is my constant companion. This
spiritual event was the accumulation of a journey into the Lower World, the
place where the spirits of animals reside.
My
experience with Lion has been more than remarkable. Its guidance and teachings
have been beyond what any shaman or earthly being could have ever taught me.
Lion is constantly teaching; I never leave her school. We have learned to
merge, and I have come to accept her powers so that I may help people heal.
This partnership continues to amaze me. Lion’s eyes are like x-rays into the
body of the sick. Lion’s powerful spine supports me to take on negative energy,
chewing it up and spitting it out of me and those who seek our healing powers.
Lion completely wipes away fear, as if with the flip of a switch. I am never
alone. Our relationship is one of great honor and respect for both of us. Lion
has learned my hardiness and my weaknesses and uses everything she finds to our
advantage.
At
times, I have called in other animal spirits to help me, such as Condor to give
me a wider view of the world, Snake to transform energy, Beetle to fine tune my
psychic powers, and numerous Birds that continue to arrive with messages from
the deceased for their loved ones. I have had Hawk land on branches above my
head, Fox appear after leaving a drumming circle, and Deer peer into my office
window during a healing session. The spirit world is alive and well through the
generosity and concern that the animals show for us as humans, even if we do
not yet see our role in the natural order as they see theirs. By opening our
hearts to Power Animals, we will come to know ourselves
and
our place in the dynamic circle of life.
About the Author:
Lori Morrison is
the author of The Shaman's Guide to Power Animals. She is a best-selling
author, inspirationalist and mystic. She is part of a rare breed of lightning
shamans who have received a spontaneous awakening of shamanic knowledge. Lori
first journeyed into the shamanic underworld in 2010 where she found the spiritual
realm of Power Animals. Her teachers
were Mayan Ancestors who took her through a two year initiation with the
spirits of four Jaguar. Her later intimate connection with Lion, given to her
by a Haitian shaman has been an extraordinary experience and has enhanced
greatly her healing powers. By merging and forming a sacred relationship with
animal spirits she is able to support her clients with insight and change
through her cutting edge shamanic counseling practice in Sedona, Arizona where
she resides. For more information, please visit https://lorimorrison.com and
follow Lori on Facebook and
Twitter.
Happy Reading!
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