Eyedea and Abilities by skye rossi on Flickr.
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@dopaminedoses
Eyedea and Abilities by skye rossi on Flickr.
The blue deer is part of Huichol culture, as is the sacred peyote.
Carlos Castenada, thru his mentor, Yaqui Indian, don Juan Matus (a pseudonym to protect his privacy), introduced us to the non-ordinary realities personified in Mescalito, the spirit of peyote. Castaneda stated that don Juan Matus was a Indian nagual, a leader of a party of sorcerers.and the last in a line going back to the times of the Toltecs.
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im SCREAMIBG
YOU ARE KIDDING ME
“veronica, you look like hell”
“Breathe. Sunflower. Rainbow. 450. Three to the right. Four to the left.”
(Stranger Things, 2017)
I like this photo of Carlos Castenada because he looks like some young college kid on his way to a date in 1967 - and most people think of him as some strange, hippie philosopher, out in some desert, high on something.
Born in 1925 in Peru, anthropologist Carlos Castaneda wrote a total of 15 books, which sold 8 million copies worldwide and were published in 17 different languages. In his writing,
Castaneda describes the teaching of Don Juan, a Yaqui sorcerer and shaman. His works helped define the 1960’s and usher in the New Age movement. Even after his mysterious death in California in1998, his books continue to inspire and influence his many devoted fans.
His The Teachings of Don Juan: A Yaqui Way of Knowledge is still widely read.
The shamans of ancient Mexico, according to don Juan, described intent as a perennial force that permeates the entire universe-a force that is aware of itself to the point of responding to the beckoning or to the command of shamans. By means of intent, those shamans were capable of unleashing not only all the human possibilities of perceiving, but all the human possibilities of action. Through intent, they realized the most far-fetched formulations.
Carlos Castenada - Magical Passes; The Practical Wisdom of the Shamans of Ancient Mexico (via subcognition)
Then The Eyes.
Rambova and Valentino, 32.3 x 22.7 cm
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