| An Interview with Isa Gucciardi |
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Q. What brought you to this line of work? A. The beauty of nature has always been an inspiration to me. From the time I was a very young child, I had trouble reconciling the fact that most humans seem to have difficulty appreciating or understanding the sanity and organization of nature which seems so fundamental to my observations. Through all of the subjects I teach - from Integrated Energy Medicine, Depth Hypnosis, Applied Shamanism to Buddhist Psychology - I am always endeavoring to help people move into a place where they can begin to appreciate the beauty of the world which supports us. I think it is the desire to open people to this beauty and to align myself more fully with it that brought me here. Q. Who are your biggest teachers? Q. How do you define Shamanism?
A. Shamanism
is a set of practices which bring us more fully into concert with the
wisdom of the Earth. The Earth is a teacher whose lessons are
ever-deepening to her students. By learning how to hold and participate
in transformative processes the way she does, we can enter into a
profound and expansive dance with her. Shamanic practice provides many
avenues to understanding how the Earth heals. It allows us to become
her apprentice in a very direct and instructive way.
I
know there are many forms of shamanism which have become laden with
cultural, political or social considerations or forms of shamanic
practice which direct the Earth's power into these types of
considerations. These practices are of interest to me only insofar as I
must understand them in order to help those who are tangled in these
types of practices emerge from them.
Q. How can we all bring shamanism into our daily lives more fluidly? Q. What books inspire you?
A. Music
has always inspired me more than the written word, but I have always
been an avid reader. As a child, I was a voracious reader of
biographies and autobiographies of Native Americans. As a young
teenager, Edward Hall's books documenting the arbitrary nature of
culturally-determined conceptions of time, persona and behavior were
very inspiring to me. I had travelled around from place to place and
observed the arbitrary relationships people had to reality. Practices
which were taboo in one place were honored in another. His writings
helped me organize and articulate my experience in a most helpful way.
I was also very inspired by the writings of Alice Bailey and other
Theosophists as a youngster. I consider myself a bit of connoisseuse of
channelled material, and I have learned a lot through the channels of
Jane Roberts and Eve Pierrokis. As an adult, Carl Jung's writings have
provided much understanding to me.
Throughout my life,
I have
constantly tried to understand the writings of His Holiness the Dalai
Lama at all the levels he addresses. Most recently, Robert Thurman's
book, Inner Revolution, touched something very deep within me.
Q. What words of wisdom can you impart to our readers?
A. I
think it is very important for people to seek to develop a clear
pathway to that which inspires and motivates them at the deepest level.
It is important for everyone to do whatever work they have to do to
clear the obscurations they have to understanding what this inspiration
and motivation might be. Nothing else really matters. It is the work
that we do in this direction that we take with us when we die. We must
honor our good fortune to be born at a moment where we have so many
ways of understanding who we really are. We should not waste a moment.
We must take advantage of every opportunity presented to us to become
more fully who we are and to tear away or transform those things
which keep us from seeing ourselves clearly. If we can learn to honor
that which lies in our hearts, we will be able to meet and honor the
Earth the way she has always met and honored us.
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