Everybody Wants to be a Shaman: Here’s What it Really Takes

Everyone Wants to be a Shaman

Ever notice how folks these days have a dose or two of Ayahuasca and suddenly have visions of pouring her themselves? It makes sense, really, that so many would be enamored with the idea of carrying a sacred plant medicine and being a catalyst for thousands to heal. It’s a sexy, deviant, sacred, and highly appealing path. The reality is that very few actually complete the training and do the work to be a legitimate, safe, and experience Plant Medicine carrier. So let’s explore this alluring lifestyle and discuss what it really takes to be an Ayahuasquera or Ayahuasquero.

My Calling to Serve Ayahuasca

A dozen years ago, when I first drank this incredible medicine, it was hardly all the rage. I felt like a fringe-dancer to have even discovered this process, and certainly an odd duck for my crazy-mad-love of the jungle and her medicines. Cultish peeps in underground culture like Carlos Castaneda had made their shamanic mark, and of course William S. Burroughs gets the gold star for brining in the awareness of Aya through his book The Yage Letters

But it wasn't exactly commonplace to emerge from a successful corporate career and announce that one wanted to study an ancient South American healing practice and drink a boatload of psychotropic plants for a living.

That didn’t stop me.

In my very first ceremony, I remember watching my Peruvian maestro with endless reverence and respect. The songs he sang were like portals into another world. I could feel their power without knowing a thing about what each word meant. The entire ritualistic nature of the ceremony felt so sacred and amazing. And when he did the doctoring, I was mesmerized.

I didn’t know what the hell he was doing, but I knew I wanted to do it too.

My mind had a lot to say in return. I had a spiritual teacher back then that told me everyone either has a depressive or a grandiose ego. It’s the same energy (a lack of self-worth / insecurity), but it expresses itself differently. Mine is depressive and self-deprecating. So she emphatically questioned why a white girl from Montana who was a bona-fide emotional mess and was making a video game about sexual conquests thought she could deal the darkest parts of humanity. And heal them, no less.

The truth was, I knew nothing about the process. But I was willing to learn.

And most importantly, I felt a calling. I felt it to my core.

The Plants Choose the Us. This is Imperative.

I spent the next decade doing everything - and I mean everything - to manifest this vision. I spent months in the jungle. I worked with one teacher for 2 years, and then let him go knowing that wasn’t the lineage I was supposed to learn. He had taught me HIS way, not Ayahuasca’s way, and I kept refining in my vision of what a shaman was.

I sat with many other facilitators and honestly got increasingly discouraged around how no one felt right as a teacher. I knew choosing someone to lead my on this path would be an intimate bond, and it had to feel right. The search was leaving me frustrated and lost.

I connected to yet another healer by a dear Vegas pal. We had a phone conversation. I didn’t like him, but my friend had sat with him and insisted I give it a go. By now I organized a large community, and I wanted them to have access to the medicine. So I agreed to do a cycle.

Within the first 30 seconds of our first ceremony, the moment I heard him sing, I knew this was my Teacher.

After the ceremony, I told him of my wishes to apprentice. I wanted to learn his lineage, which was grounded in the Shipibo and Quechua-Lamista traditions.

He laughed and called me a bimbo.

I didn’t question my calling. This wasn’t the first time a man labeled me as an airhead. I stood my ground. I organized for him; we had multiple very successful cycles. He started to see that maybe I wasn't so daft.

Six months later, he called me to chat. The question was simple and direct: “Do you still want to apprentice on this path?”

Apparently the medicine had been saying my name to him. This man had dozens if not hundreds of people by then who wanted to work with him. But he was asking if I would like to join a very small collection of apprentices because She insisted.

This was a big, huge, divine reminder that it is always the plants that call us. If they don’t agree with our calling to lead or organize or assist in any way, the process is going to suck. It kind of sucks anyway, so I really don't advise adding fuel to the fire.

This is their show. We cannot force our will and desire to serve medicines unless they themselves approve and agree. Doing so results in utter disaster.

It also scared the holy hell out of me. And rightfully so.

What it Takes to Be a Plant Medicine Carrier

I studied with this amazing teacher for many years. But before we shook hands and agreed to the most intense and spiritually intimate partnership, he shared some sage advice:

This process, he told me, will ask everything of me. I had to be willing to sacrifice every attachment, and move through every conceivable fear. Ayahuasca had to be more important than my husband, my stepson – my life. Because if she wasn’t, it would show, and all those things would be taken anyway.

Being a shaman is not a job, it's your entire world. It's what you eat/breathe/sleep/shit/scream/cry/live for. And if it isn't, it will eat you alive.

But then, you can never know how true this is until you commit.

Is it Your Ego, or are the Plants Really Calling You?

Everywhere I look, more souls are stepping up to a calling or an ego-centric desire to be a shaman.

How does one know the difference? Ask the plants. If it’s meant to be, a teacher will appear. It’s that simple. The way will illuminate. You’ll feel supported, and witness magical synchronicities. If you’re forcing it, that will become very apparent too.

But here’s where things get dicey; remember that Ayahuasca (and all the sacred plants) are rooted in the Now, not a future vision we might have for ourselves. In all actuality, most people called to lead ceremonies will not actually make it. And those that do will likely not carry the power of a vessel worthy of the label “shaman.” Not because we’re all a bunch of yahoos, but because this path requires a level of dedication, discipline, and full-on mental strength that most of us just don't have to give.

So the plants, they call a lot of us. Not because we’re all meant to be shamans, but because we’re meant to dive in and try; to let this process alchemically evolve us while we are in turn of service to the planet.

This is a friendly reminder that our lives are about the journeys, never the destinations.

You want to know if someone who is studying the process is headed for a huge downfall? Watch for attachments and identification. Watch for an obsession with being an image, but an inability to do all the work. Watch for the inclination to take credit for the healings.

The idea of being a shaman is oh-so romantic. I’ve been in ceremonies where people healed cancer and diabetes and PTSD, where others worked through an entire lineage of pain and drama and came out the other side glowing. Who wouldn’t want to be the one leading that journey through hell to heaven? It’s miraculous and glorious and amazing and everything I – and many others – want our lives to represent.

It’s a noble cause and I honor everyone who has ever heeded the calling. But I do want to keep it real. I do want to speak the things that no one ever voiced to me.

Know These Things Before You Commit to The Path

Do you love darkness? Like reallllllly freaking love it?

If not, run away. Run far, far away.

Becoming a shaman involves going into your darkness, and it never looks like you expect it to.
Devoting yourself to this path will take everything you’ve ever learned about yourself and the world and turn it inside out. At times, this will be exhilarating. But no matter how strong and wise and grounded and happy you are, you will find the space deep inside that holds the container of doubt, terror, and resistance. Or rather, Ayahuasca will find it. That’s part of her commitment to you; this darkness has to be dealt with or you will be unknowingly passing it on to others.

And that is a near-continual process. The moment you think you've got the darkside under wraps, it will come and annihilate you again.

If you don’t deal with your shadow, you will either be an ineffective facilitator, a delusional ego, or a mess of repressed emotions. Probably all of the above.

You cannot work with these energies and not have a home inside the darkness. If you can befriend that space, and work with it, then anything is possible. This has to be a truth in every cell of your being, not just something you intellectually espouse. We can all give lip service to how beautiful the darkness is. But visit your legitimate version of hell and then tell me how awesome it was.

Seriously, I cannot emphasize this enough. Be prepared to intimately merge with your shadow.

As much as we all say we can handle that, that we WANT to handle that, we can’t know what we’re asking for until we’re there. It manifests differently for all of us; that’s part of the glorious mystery. 

Still Committed to Leading a Ceremony? Do This Next

Put in the time before you call yourself an Ayahuasca healer. Please don't be someone that sits 10 times and then makes the declaration that you understand this medicine. I promise you, you never will. It takes years and years of working with her for almost everyone to adequately hold space for others in a safe way.

Don't rush this. It's life or death.

Traditionally, an apprenticeship to becoming an Ayahuasca healer takes at least 8-12 years; much like the path to being a Western doctor.

To all these well-meaning souls who have worked with the medicine for a hundred ceremonies or so over the course of a few years, and have now declared you are leading ceremonies – you are not a shaman. You may be someone who loves the medicine, you may be full of wisdom and compassion, but you do not learn to be a vessel for the most powerful energies by declaring it so.

It's also hard (almost impossible) to do this work by teaching yourself. As tempting as that may be, I have yet to meet anyone with a clear enough relationship with their ego that they can go it alone into the great unknown and be grounded enough to guide others. We all need someone to reflect and validate our integrity; to look into our shadow and see what we are not able to. I’m sure it’s possible in that anything is possible, but it’s so rare my advice is – give up that fantasy.

I'm not being dramatic - if you’ve been working with this medicine, you know the power she has. You know that a righteous ego can lead people to a very destructive, traumatic, and potentially deadly place. Just ask James Arthur Ray.

If you don’t know that, please never ever pour a dose of this medicine for another trusting soul.

Good intentions don’t save us. Your pure and loving heart is a foundational must-have to be a powerful vessel, but it doesn’t take the place of actual in-the-field training. And it doesn’t take the place of watching and learning from a Maestro.

So if you have the calling, find a teacher to guide you. That’s one of the best ways we receive validation from the plants that this is our authentic path. You know the expression: When the student is ready, the teacher appears.

The level of humility required to do this work is also something I could never describe. That’s another reason why it’s crucial to be humble enough to learn from someone else. This is an ancient lineage you are stepping into; please have the reverence to trust someone who has been there, and who feels called to show you the way.

If the teacher doesn’t appear, it’s just not your time. It’s nothing personal, and it doesn’t mean you’re not capable. It just means it’s not yet for the highest good that you take this on. And if you do so anyway, there will be repercussions. This is not a place where your mind can force an agenda. Any attempt to do so will end in some really heavy shit. So keep sitting, keep doing your work, keep checking in on your calling, and trust that the process will take you to the highest good for all.

When you do find your teacher, it will be one of the most intimate and bonded relationships you will ever know, even if you barely speak to each other. A good teacher will never tell you how to do a thing in the circle; he or she will only let you first follow their lead, and later on, deepen your relationship with the medicine so you can discover your special gifts.

It starts as a mimicry so that you can get grounded in an energetic pathway, and eventually, you’ll get to find your own voice. But first, you must be ready to do the work. And yee gawds is there a LOT of work.

Endless ceremonies. All-in Master Plant Dietas that will also test every bit of your physical, mental, and emotional strength. Repeated experiences to fall deeper into humility. And all that sacrifice I mentioned before.

And that’s just year one.

The Best Job is the Most Challenging One

If you don't love serving this medicine, and you don’t love it all with every cell of your being, you will burn out. Or succumb to the marvelous magnetism of the darkness, which equates to destruction on some level. Sexual advances, money obsession, power lust – the list is long.

So long, in fact, that even those that earn the title often earn the loss of it too. We are human, after all.

You know what? It’s OK regardless. It’s the experience that matters, not how the story ends. Everything you learn in these spaces is integral to playing big in your life, regardless what role you are called to play. The goal for each of us is not to be attached to an idea of who we are, but to simply be it. To be so soul-connected that even a monstrous, grandiose ego can let go of a vision when it doesn’t feel aligned with truth.

If the plants are calling, answer. Stay dedicated to your truth no matter what. Find and root out attachments within your identity like it’s a garden you have to frequently weed. Always carry the intent to do good; to help yourself and humanity.

These are the final words of advice, but they are the biggest ones to carry with you:

Never forget that it’s the medicine that gives you power. Ceremonies are never the shaman’s show, they are the plant’s show. Forget that for a moment, and all hell can break loose. Stay in that alignment, and you can transmute the most heinous of illnesses and blockages and bring them to the light.

Being a shaman is a partnership with divinity. As such, it is subject to change in every moment. Stay connected to truth, and don’t forget to enjoy the ride.

Do you have the calling to lead ceremony? If you want support or advice in your journey, reach out anytime! 

About the Author

Tina “Kat” Courtney is a traditionally trained Ayahuasquera and Huachumera; she apprenticed for over a decade in the Shipibo-Conibo and Quechua-Lamista traditions. She’s the author of Plant Medicine Mystery School Vol 1: The Superhero Healing Powers of Psychotropic Plants. Kat is a pioneer in the Psychedelic Integration space, as well as an expert in cultivating life-changing relationships with plant spirits. She leads Master Plant Diets both in person and remotely, and is available for coaching and consult about this and all shamanic topics. Kat is also a certified Death Doula honored to help people make peace with the inevitable and beautiful transition into the afterlife. She has spent her adult life cultivating a bonded and trusting relationship with the darkness, and she’d love to help you do the same.

Previous
Previous

I was Arrested for Ayahuasca. The Decriminalization Movement is Putting Shamans in Danger.

Next
Next

Kambo, The Frog Prince: A Healing Story