Reality Is Just an Illusion
133 pages
English

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133 pages
English

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Description

Join former businessman and long-time professional psychic Chuck Coburn as he searches deep in the rain forest of Ecuador for a shaman of a headhunting tribe- and encounters the mystical realms of angels, spirit guides, sacred sites and psychic healers.

With down-to-earth humor, Coburn melds amazing true stories of his personal journey with teachings of metaphysical laws, including how to activate your own natural psychic abilities.

Learn the three step process for manifesting your desires.
Overcome the obstacles of fear and limitation
Explore the shamanic arts of healing, psychonavigation, non-ordinary reality and time journeying
Open the lines of communication between you and your spirit guides

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Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 21 février 2013
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781456602826
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0375€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

The World of Shamans, Ghosts and Spirit Guides

Chuck Coburn
 
1999
Llewellyn Publications
Saint Paul, Minnesota 55164-0383, U.S.A.


Reality Is Just an Illusion© 1999 by Chuck Coburn. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever, including Internet usage, without written permission from Llewellyn Publications except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
 
Published in eBook format by eBookIt.com
http://www.eBookIt.com
 
Interior design, editing and typesetting: Kjersti Monson
Cover design: Michael Matheny
Cover photo: Susan Ruggiero
 
ISBN-13: 978-1-4566-0282-6
 
Llewellyn Worldwide does not participate in, endorse, or have any authority or responsibility concerning p rivate business transactions between our authors and the public.
All mail addressed to the author is forwarded but the publisher cannot, unless specifically instructed by the author, give out an address or phone number.
 
 
Llewellyn Publications
A Division of Llewellyn Worldwide, Ltd.
P.O. Box 64383, Dept. K155-4
St. Paul, MN 55164-0383
 


I was placed on my back in pitch-black darkness...
I soon realized that I was being drawn into the shaman's state of awareness. Everything in the darkness began to feel strangely familiar while simultaneously remaining distant and foreign.
Then I saw them.
Snakes... a pit of a countless number of very large snakes, all slowly slithering and moving past each other....
The shaman touched my upper body and I was certain that he was about to put a live snake on my chest. My heart was beating rapidly now, busily pumping a full year's supply of adrenaline throughout my body in mere seconds. I was convinced that the shaman possessed the ability to read my mind and was about to confront my fear of snakes by the most direct means possible....

"In Reality Is Just an Illusion, Chuck Coburn takes his readers on a provocative world-wide tour in search of unorthodox wisdom. The touchstones of this voyage...are curiosity, spirituality, and humor."
—Dr. Stanley Krippner, Saybrook Institute,
Co-author, The Mythic Path
"This book describes the amazing personal experience which led former businessman Chuck Coburn into a full-time career as a professional psychic. Coburn recounts his odyssey in a very readable story which is both lighthearted and deeply moving."
— Robert Van de Castle, Professor Emeritus,
University of Virginia
"Humor is a wonderful teacher, and it is Chuck Coburn's ally in his appeal to develop our natural intuition and live more creative and passionate lives."
— Robert Moss, Author of Conscious Dreaming:
A Spiritual Path for Everyday Life
 


 
 
Also by the Author
Funny You Should Say That . . .
Seed Center, 1995
 


It is not uncommon to be apprehensive and fearful of new events and experiences as they suddenly challenge our otherwise complacent lives. It is this resistance to new and unfamiliar situations that often prohibits our growth.
This book is about confronting and dissipating the fear of opening to our inherent psychic abilities as we move into new levels of spirituality and metaphysical understanding.
With special thanks . . .
This book is dedicated to my good friend—let's call him Jack—as well as to all of my other friends and family members who read (and in some cases even bought) my last book—and, since then, have lobbied hard to get their names mentioned in this one . . .
. . . and to my Dad who had to leave before being able to read either.
 
Foreword by John Perkins
Businessman and ecologist John Perkins draws extensively from three decades of experience as a consultant to the United Nations, World Bank, and Fortune 500 companies as well as his time as President and CEO of a major U.S. energy company committed to environmentally beneficial technologies. A leader in developing ways to balance business interests with ecological and social concerns, Perkins created the Pollution Offset Lease for Earth (POLE) program and has collaborated with numerous shamans to found a worldwide grass roots movement: Dream Change Coalition. He served as U.S. Representative to the U.N. Energy Commission during the 1970s. A bridge between cultures, Perkins pioneered the integration of modern and traditional transformational methods and has taught at universities on four continents. His highly acclaimed books include Shapeshifting; The World Is As You Dream It; The Stress-Free Habit; and Psychonavigation.

Outside the stone temple, the Andes Mountains were cloaked in darkness. Inside, a fire blazed. It warmed the chill air and the sixteen North Americans who sat in a circle around it. The shaman smiled. His ancient eyes moved slowly, taking in each of his guests. His legs were crossed and his back was against the wall.
Taita Alberto, a member of an indigenous Quechua-speaking culture that traces its traditions back to a time long before the Incas, chanted softly. Iyarina, his twenty-two-year-old daughter and a shaman in training, entered the room and sat next to him. A centuries-old tradition encourages young people to study under elder shamans of the opposite sex. She cradled her infant son in her arms.
The nine women and seven men who had journeyed from the United States included psychologists, physicians, teachers, business­men, and a writer. They had taken this incredible journey because they wanted to learn about energy, healing, and the wisdom and rituals of the shamans who live in the mountains and rain forests of South America.
"We are entering the Fifth Pachacuti." Taita Alberto's voice was low and soft. ''A magical time when the Condor and Eagle will mate.”
"What is a Pachacuti?" someone asked.
"According to legends that go back long before the Spaniards, a Pachacuti is a period of time lasting about five hundred years. The legends predicted that the Fourth Pachacuti would be a time of conflict. It began at the end of the 1400s. Our forefathers prophesied that the Fifth Pachacuti, which is starting now, will be an era of union and partnership, of sharing, a time when the Condor of the South will mate with the Eagle of the North." He stood up and walked to the fire. "The Eagle is an aggressive and materialistic animal, a bird of prey; the Condor is spiritual, a good environmentalist who eats carrion. They have much to share and teach each other."
"It is why we are here,” Chuck (the writer) said.
Taita Alberto's eyes held his. "It's why you are here, my brother, and why we open our doors and our hearts to you.”
His words took me back to a meeting several years earlier, deep in the Amazon rain forest, with shamans from the Shuar tribe.
When I first lived with them in the late 1960s, the Shuar were noted for the ferocity of their warriors and their custom of shrinking the heads of slain enemies. By 1992, they had become very concerned about the destruction of the forests around them. When I offered my help, one of their shamans spoke the thoughts of many. "The world is as you dream it," he told me. "Your people of the North dreamed about big factories, cars, and lots of money. Your dream came true and now you understand it is a nightmare of pollution that is destroying life as we know it. You must change your dream. Your people must shapeshift. We can help you. We can teach you and your people to dream Earth-honoring dreams."
The Shuar believe that the Earth is our true mother, that every­ thing we need comes from her, and that we must sacrifice whatever is required to take care of her. The four elements are sacred. The goddess of the Earth, Nunkui, lives in close harmony with the goddess of the waters, Tsunkqui, the sun god, Etsaa, who brought fire, and the wind, Nase. Each alone is very powerful. Together, they are invincible. A fire is always kept burning in a Shuar lodge—day and night—because its energy attracts the good spirits. Rain and wind are welcomed even when they interfere with daily activities. The staple food of the Shuar, manioc root, is never harvested without first singing to Nunkui and obtaining her permission.
"You know," the Shuar shaman continued, pointing into the jungle, "the spirits are all around us. Out there in the air." He bent down and pressed his hands into the earth. "Here, Nunkui. And here." He raised his palms to the sun. "When we leave this life, we shapeshift through many stages. At last we all become the rain."
I thought about that night as I sat in the high Andes watching Iyarina prepare this group of Northerners to be healed and taught by her great grandfather. These men and women had already experienced so much. During the six days they had spent in Ecuador, they had shapeshifted. In a physical sense, they had traveled into the jungle and lived with the Shuar. They had hiked through dense jungles to the Sacred Waterfall where, according to legend, the first man and woman were created. They had taken dugout canoes down rivers that were formed in Andean glaciers and would become the mighty Amazon. Yet, their experiences had gone far beyond the physical. They had participated in all-night psychonavigational journeys led by the Shuar shaman who had spoken to me of dream change back in 1992. They had drawn upon powers and skills that previously they could not have guessed they possessed. And now here they were back in the high Andes, seated in a circle in an Incan temple, next to the highest active volcano in the world, just a few miles from the Equator. The Quechua live very differently from the Shuar; yet their ideas about the power of the dream and the need to restore balance to the Earth/human relationship are similar.
Taita Alberto performed several healings that night. He cured one U.S. psychologist of a lower back pain that had plagued her for a decade, another of migraine headaches, and a third of an intestinal disorder. He "cleansed" and energized eight more. Despite his age, he was rem

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