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- An Evening with San Pedro
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- An Evening with San Pedro
An Evening with San Pedro
- By John David Balla
- Published 08/17/2008
- Tales from the PsychotropicSphere , The Woo Woo Chronicles
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John David Balla
John David Balla is a corporate dropout, freelance writer, marketer, web designer, business consultant, and volunteer committed to spiritual principles and practices.
Among his current activities, Mr. Balla is an Internet business consultant, strategist, copywriter, web designer and marketer. He services both large and small business alike and assists them in achieving their revenue goals.
Dubbed, Project Eagle/Condor, Mr. Balla is working with the indigenous people of Peru, including shamans, college students and entrepreneurs to better leverage the Internet so that people who are looking for their unique services can indeed find them, all while maintaining the integrity of their heritage.
Mr. Balla also has his own online column and website, dubbed "The Woo Woo Chronicles." He also regularly advises small business and entrepreneurs on marketing strategies and best practices. In addition, he is currently working on a novel/screenplay, entitled, "Beyond the American Dream."
View all articles by John David BallaPisaq. Peru, August 2-3 2008
Less known than its Amazonian counterpart, Ayahuasca, San Pedro (named after St. Peter, who is said to hold the keys to heaven) has been celebrated and ritualized for its medicinal and spiritual properties for over 3,000 years in he high Andes of Peru and Ecuador.
Now, with the blessings of San Pedro shamans Otorongo and Edwardo, who performed the all night ceremony, what a San Pedro ceremony is, how it is conducted, as well as an investigation into the truths and myths are presented.
As you will see in the film, captions are used liberally to not only explain the context of what is happening, but to also summarize the scientific evidence, conventional myths, as well as anecdotal findings and claims about the psychotropic cactus, yet leaves the viewer to form their own conclusions, and short of that, to gain a new appreciation for compelling spiritual practices that fall outside conventional belief.
(To participate in an authentic San Pedro ceremony, and for complete spiritual and archeological tours of Peru, I highly recommend Luceros Tour. They have extraordinary access to Q'ero elders and can arrange many "off the beaten path" expeditions that few tourists, and even locals, ever see)
As an individual with a history of alcoholism, at least as it is understood in conventional and clinical terms, I was curious to see if "a cure" which the plant's advocates claim has any merit. Bear in mind, however, this was not the primary concern I brought to the ceremony, for I never considered my "handicap" to define who I am. After all, I am yet to meet a diabetic, cancer survivor, heart attack victim, amputee, epileptic, arthritic, hemophiliac, or even a poor golfer, to define themselves by what makes achieving success or well being more difficult. Recall that Michael Jordan was cut from his high-school basketball team, later to become the best basketball player in history, and Franklin Delano Roosevelt became President of the United States despite the extreme stigma of polio.
In this context, we all have one handicap or another, something that doesn't preclude becoming the person we want to be, only making if more difficult. I entered the ceremony in this spirit, to discover the "nocebos" (belief that I can't do this or that because of getting a "raw deal" from some omnipotent, omniscient force), remove their victimizing underpinnings, and enter a placebo conscious, one based on intuitive truth, rather than wishful thinking.
Rather than a promotion of San Pedro per se, the film aspires to be an attestation to the placebo effect as put in the context of this writing, and the vital importance of building a community of trust through rituals designed to place no room for judgement and other divisions that promote "right versus wrong" ego-consciousness, culminating in the blossoming of heart consciousness, which indeed, holds the keys to our own personal utopia, and paradoxically obliterates the very notion of self interest.
I for one, have never met a paradox I didn't like, for it is the divine's way of exposing the heretofore mysteries of truth.
