Tony Littlehawk, Cherokee

Shamanic Perspectives 4 – Shamanic Case Study

Shamanic Case Study, Shamanic Perspectives, Shamanic Healing, Case Studies, Octavia Brooks, Tony Littlehawk, CherokeeShamans use spiritual technologies to improve a client’s life and relieve symptoms

See my prior post about these tools. The course that a Shamanic healing session takes may seem totally unrelated to the symptoms, however the client experiences relief. Here I share a shamanic case study to better understand these experiences.

In my presentation, I shared a case study about a client with long-standing back pain.  The pain was caused by a spiritual duty from a past life.  His tribe was suffering their ending due to starvation and drought.  They chose him for a special role and did a powerful ritual.  They tasked him with going into the future to bring back resources for their survival.  It was complicated to unravel over two sessions.  The tribe was not destined to survive so my client and I made many prayers and offerings to ease the pain of their passing.  Secondly, my guides assisted me with releasing the binding from the ritual, which though it was not originally intended to be curse, it had corrupted and was functioning as a curse (a profound binding of energy).  After healing, clearing and raising the vibration of these energies, my client’s back pain reduced dramatically from the release of this obligation that he could not fulfill.

 

In a classic soul-retrieval shamanic case study, my client was a musician who struggled to find his muse when he wanted to create.  We finally found the creative part of him, totally estranged and very far away.  My client had made a drunken comment about having so many creative ideas he almost hated it.  From this, his muse got in a snit and left!  In the Shamanic session, he asked his muse for forgiveness and when their relationship was healed, his muse came back.  From that point forward, he had a balanced relationship with his creativity – produced a book, a new band, and several events the following year!

 

Shamanism is not for everyone…clients need to have an open mind about what may happen.  

See my post describing the profession of Shamanism here.

 

Most Shamans are respectful of clients’ spiritual beliefs and traditions … and … we work with spirit guides so the sessions can be unusual.  For example, my guides often speak or sing in a spirit language to assist with the healing process. (Ha ha, yes I can translate!)  I also work with Mother Mary, Amma Ji, and the arch angels.  In all the sessions I have done, my guides collaborate harmoniously with the client’s guides, gods, and ancestors for the client’s highest good.

Counselors may wish to refer to a Shaman if their client isn’t responding well to standard modalities.  See the post on how Shamans and Counselors can collaborate.

Shamans and Counselors, shamanic healing, energy healing, shamanic practice, guided journey, shamanic perspectives

Shamans can find the hidden root cause for the persistent symptoms in the present lifetime or in a past life.  When the Shaman resolves these underlying spiritual and energetic issues, the client’s symptoms start to move and become unstuck, allowing them to finally evolve past old issues.

 

Find the whole  45-minute presentation here, where you can also download and share the slides and audio!

Shaman, Shamanic Healing, What is a Shaman, Shamanic healing practices, octavia brooks, recovery, addiction

 

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