Shamanic Healing is a Spiritual practice, dating back to the Paleolithic period.
Shamanism is not a religion; however, several religions might have evolved from shamanic cultures.
The definition of Shaman
Shamanism involves a practitioner (called Shaman) who is the healer and spiritual guide.
The term “shaman” originates from the word samān from a Tungusic language and is connected to the Tungus root sā, meaning “to know”. So, the term shaman translates to “the one who knows”.
Shaman interacts with both the visible world of matter and the invisible world of energy aiming to bring deep healing to all creation.
They work on the spiritual level and heal physical, emotional/mental, psychic, and spiritual disorders.
At this highest level of creation (the Spiritual level) everything appears as energy that carries information.
Traumatic events in life create bundles of dark energy in the energy field and may cause soul loss.
How do the shamans heal?
Shamans shift their state of awareness using several meditation techniques (such as breathwork, drumming, rattling) to “see” what is going on with an issue on the energetic level.
In this altered state of consciousness, the trauma, stories, memories, and experiences appear as bundles of toxic energy and fragmented soul parts.
Shamans create a sacred space of unconditional love and acceptance so that the clients feel safe and calm. They usually call this valuable process “holding space”.
Then, they remove all the toxic energies of trauma from the energy field or travel to your life’s timeline to retrieve your fragmented soul parts.
Have you ever thought “What do I really need when I am feeling terrible?”.
The answer is simple. You need a space of unconditional acceptance, love, and protection along with guidance to heal the root causes of trauma and suffering.
Shamanic Healing and Shamans provide exactly these two attributes so that profound healing and transformation can happen.