KRIPPNER Et Al. 2000A
KRIPPNER Et Al. 2000A
KRIPPNER Et Al. 2000A
ABSTRACT: There has been little rigorous research on the spiritual content of
ayahuasca sessions, despite the tribal use of this herbal concoction and the existence of
three Brazilian churches in which ayahuasca is considered a sacrament. The Casto
Spirituality Scoring System, a reliable measure designed to identify spiritual content in
dream reports, was utilized to answer the following question: "Is it possible to identify
spiritual content in ayahuasca reports?" This system was found to be feasible in
identifying "spiritual objects," "spiritual characters," "spiritual settings," "spiritual
activities," "spiritual emotions," and "spiritual experiences" in ayahuasca reports taken
from pertinent literature. The Casto system defines "spiritual" as one's focus on, and/or
reverence, openness, and connectedness to something of significance believed to be
beyond one's full understanding and/or individual existence.
For millennia, indigenous cultures have used plant preparations in their spiritual
ceremonies[1] to communicate with other-worldly spirits as well as to maintain their
linkage with the natural world. Western culture severed this connection when Zoroaster
banned the Haoma plant, when the Eleusinian rituals in Greece fell in disrepute, and
when witches were persecuted by the Inquisition, in part because of their utilization of
mind-altering substances. Western theologians and philosophers spoke of the necessity
of humankind to dominate and manipulate nature; this "modern" worldview supplanted
the "premodern" worldview with the latter's position that human beings were part of
nature, and separated from it at their peril.
What philosophers refer to as the "modern" worldview is responsible for
impressive advances in technology, industry, and scientific discovery. However, it has
not prevented (and may even have been partially responsible for) unprecedented
fragmentation, nihilism, and devastation. As Berman (1984) states: "Western life seems
to be drifting toward increasing entropy, economic and technological chaos, ecological
disaster, and ultimately, psychic dismemberment and disintegration" (p. 1). However,
the epoch of "modernity" may be in the process of being supplanted by the era of
"postmodernity." Some writers (e.g., Gergen, 1994) see "postmodernism" as a welcome
corrective to the excesses of "modernism," replacing its mechanistic and reductionistic
assumptions and activities with those that are more organic and holistic in nature.
Metzner (1999b) calls for an "ecological postmodernism" that would include
the ecological context of human life in psychology and other areas of contemporary
inquiry. Drawing on such diverse sources as Native American rituals, the goddess
cultures of pagan Europe, and the visions of Hildegarde von Bingen, Metzner holds that
human beings must find their rightful place not as rulers, but as participants in the
integral and interdependent community of all life (p. 166). Metzner sees modern
Western civilization's "war on Nature" as an exteriorization of intrapsychic conflicts, the
"shadow side" of its preoccupation with its own imbalance and separation. For Metzner,
human overpopulation, addiction to fossil fuels, preoccupation with material goods, and
the resulting environmental degradation are psychopathological symptoms of a
dissociation from the natural world. He sees the spread of religious rituals based on
sacred plants as an aspect of "ecological postmodernism" that would contribute to
sustainability, symbiosis, and the preservation of all life forms.
Reich, Oser, and Scarlett (1999) correctly point out that in postmodern times, the
concept of spiritual development has come to mean something different than religious
development. Indeed, several research studies have indicated a relationship between
waking spiritual incidents and positive outcomes in individuals' lives, such as
psychological well-being and improved psychological attitudes (e.g., Hood, 1974; Kaas,
Friedman, Lesserman, Zuttermeister, & Benson, 1991; Pollner, 1989) as well as
individuals' relationship to the world, e.g. investigating the purpose of life and their
place in that purpose (e.g., Grof, 1988, p. 265; James, 1902/1958, p. 389). Contributing
to this literature has been varied reports of purported spiritual experiences triggered by
mind-altering brews and concoctions derived from plants. These experiences have been
described, in the literature, through first person accounts, historical anecdotes, and
ethnographic accounts.
AYAHUASCA
Furst (1976) suggests that the ritual use of mind-altering substances in the upper
Amazon dates back to at least 3000 B.C.E. Serious Western research into the nature of
these preparations began with the expeditions of Richard Spruce, an ethnobotanist who
explored the Amazon and the Andes between 1849 and 1864; among the species he
discovered was the Banisteriopsis caapi jungle vine (Rudgley, 1995, p. 64). In 1855 he
observed that concoctions containing elements of this vine were ingested ritually.
Reichel-Dolmatoff's (1972, pp. 97-102) informants told him that concoctions containing
this plant are used to "travel" to "other worlds" to visit their tribal divinities. In addition
to the term ayahuasca, the brew is called yage(e'), caapi, kahpi, cadana, pinde, natem,
natena, rami, and a variety of other names, depending on the tribe that uses it (Rudgley,
1993, p. 65; Schinzinger, 1999, p. 8). The term hoasca has been introduced not only to
describe the sacred brew used by one of the ayahuasca-based religious groups in Brazil,
but also as a descriptor in the ethnopharmacological literature (e.g., Callaway et al.,
1999). Artifacts from Ecuador indicate that ayahuasca was known and used by
indigenous groups there as far back as 2000 B.C.E.
The universal ingredient in all of these concoctions is Banisteriopsis caapi, often
called the "vine of the souls," but other plants such as Psychotria viridis, a leafy bush,
must be added to potentiate its effect. However, some formulae are unique to one group
of Indians residing in the Amazon and Orinoco River Basins, or even to a single
shaman. Another factor compounding the accounting of the brews is the diversity in
methods of preparations. The most commonly recorded processes involve either
infusing Banisteriopsis bark in cold water or boiling the bark and/or the stems for long
periods of time, adding other ingredients as is deemed appropriate (de Rios, 1975).
The chemical N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT) is found in several Amazonian
plants (including Psychotria viridis), but it has no psychotropic effects when taken
orally. This is due to the monoamine oxidase enzyme found in human saliva, which
breaks down the chemical, rendering it inactive. The Banisteriopsis vine contains a
variety of harmala alkaloids, type-A monoamine oxidase (MAO-A) inhibitors that are
found throughout the body and counteract the effects of this enzyme, allowing DMT
(and other substances normally inactive) to flow freely, binding to serotonergic sites in
the brain. In addition to conferring activity on DMT, MAO-A inhibition may contribute
to actions of other psychoactive substances sometimes found in the beverages
(Callaway et al., 1999). For these reasons, thousands of plants have been used to
produce ayahuasca brews with various effects.
For example, Rudgley (1993) has described the use of an ayahuasca-based
concoction, caapi, by the Tukano Indians of the Colombian northwest Amazon.
Consumption is restricted to males, and for specific ceremonies such as funerals, the
diagnosis of ailments, and shamanic vision quests (p. 67). Several pieces of the fresh
ingredients are cut, and then mashed to a pulp in a wooden trough to which cold water
is then added. The mixture is strained and transferred to a specially decorated ceramic
vessel, ideally made by an elderly woman, polished by a phallic-shaped stone,
"purified" by tobacco smoke, and used exclusively for the drink by participants who
have prepared themselves by a prescribed diet and a period of sexual abstinence.
Ingestion is preceded by a recitation of creation myths and genealogies, accompanied by
the sounds of a rattle and, later, flutes, whistles, singing, and dancing. The experient's
report usually begins with a description of phosphenes (circles, triangles, spirals, and
other neurologically-based images) and later of such culturally-conditioned imagery as
jaguars, snakes, and mythical landscapes (Reichel-Dolmatoff, 1987). The resulting
condition is considered superior to one's ordinary state of consciousness, and is reflected
in artistic decorations, architectural designs, and the decorations found on Tukano
pottery and musical instruments. Rudgley (1993) observes that the imagery reinforces
key concepts and values in the Tukano cultural belief system.
Luna (1992), while conducting field work in the Peruvian Amazon in 1985, met
don Pablo Amaringo, a former mestizo shamanic healer who showed him a series of
exquisitely detailed landscapes he had painted. When asked how he had learned to
paint, don Pablo replied that under the influence of ayahuasca he had been shown by
the spirits how to combine colors to produce a panoply of hues. Luna was familiar with
artwork stimulated by similar brews, and asked don Pablo if he would paint some of his
ayahuasca visualizations. A few days later, don Pablo completed the first two such
paintings, most of which related to Amazonian shamanism. Eventually, the two men
collaborated on a book, Ayahuasca Visions (Luna & Amaringo 1991), which explores
the iconography of 49 paintings which present hundred of animals, plants, spirits, and
mythological beings. A comparison of don Pablo's work with that produced by the
Takano (Reichel-Dolmatoff, 1978), the Siona (Langdon, 1992), the Canelos Quicha
(Whitten, 1981), and the Shipibo (Gebhardt-Sayer, 1984) demonstrates that the images
are influenced by the individual's cultural background. As such, they provide a great
deal of relevant information about the artist's culture and its guiding mythology (Luna &
Amaringo 1991, pp. 43-44).
Dobkin de Rios (1992, p. 158) has chronicled the ritual use of ayahuasca by an
urban shaman, Hildebrando, better known as don Hilde. Dobkin de Rios interviewed
each of the 97 men and women seen by don Hilde during her field work in Pucallpa,
Peru, the site of his office. She observed that the client plays an active role in the
ayahuasca ritual: "Intrinsic to the drug effect is the power of the plant to evoke
expressive experiences equal in force and drama to the best theatre available anywhere.
The ayahuasca client's particular experience during the healing ritual is multifold -- he
[or she] is actor, playwright, stage director, costumier, make-up artist and even
musician. A fast-moving, brilliant kaleidoscope of colours, forms, geometric patterns,
movement and counterpoint provides the most unique experience most individuals ever
encounter in normal waking consciousness. This effect is produced entirely from within
the individual's own psyche. The stage manager throughout this is the healer. Through
music, chants, whistling, or even percussion sounds, he [or she] evokes patterned
visions which are important to the client. Again, these visions have been canalized by
the client's culture. From his earliest years, the Amazonian city resident or farmer hears
discussions of ayahuasca use, listens while people who have partaken in these sessions
analyze them in retrospect, and determines whether there has been an appropriate
response to the drug. Dobkin de Rios (1992, p. 156) concludes that "the stereotyping of
drug visions is not unusual" because there are specific expectations surrounding the
session.
In Peru it is common for allopathic physicians to refer some of their patients to
ayahuasceros (i.e., shamans who use ayahuasca) when they are unable to make a
diagnosis, identify a problem, or find a cure. The ayahuasceros sing sacred songs or
icaros, which call forth spirits who, in turn, are thought to attempt healing (Dobkin de
Rios, 1992). In addition to the use of ayahuasca by Indian tribes through the Amazon
(Schultes & Hofmann, 1980) the brew is utilized in at least three organized religious
groups that consider it a sacrament: Santo Daime, Uniao do Vegetal, and Barquinha.
Apart from the indigenous population, it has been estimated that there are at least
15,000 monthly users of ayahuasca within the urban populations of South America
(Callaway et al., 1999). In 1987, the use of such beverages within a religious context
was officially recognized and protected by law in Brazil, after lengthy investigations
into its alleged threats to national security and public health (Ott, 1994). This was the
first time in 1,600 years that a government had granted permission to its non-indigenous
citizens to use a mind-altering substance in a religious context (McKenna, Callaway, &
Grob, 1998).
Santo Daime traces its origins to Raimundo Irineu Serra, a 7-foot-tall Brazilian
rubber tapper of African-Brazilian descent, who was born in the state of Maranhao in
1882. At the age of 20, Serra traveled to Acre, Brazil, to participate in the booming
rubber trade. En route, he encountered several native tribes that allowed him to witness
the manufacture of the ayahuasca brew. In one of his sessions with the natives, a
woman calling herself the "Queen of the Forest" appeared to him. Irineu, who came
from a Christian background, identified her with the Virgin Mary. The lady told him to
enter the rainforest alone to prepare and drink the ayahuasca brew for eight days.
Subsequent instructions were to spread her message throughout the world. ayahuasca
was to be called, "daime" (i.e., "give me," as in "give me love, give me light, give me
strength"), because the lady insisted that this beverage was the sacred blood of Jesus
Christ, and that it would give light, love, and strength to all who would use it.
When Irineu left the rainforest, he brought with him a complete structure for a
Daime ceremony that consisted of a syncretic mixture of Amazonian, African, and
esoteric Christian elements. The central focus for these Santo Daime ceremonies was
the singing of hymns, which he claimed to have "received" while within the "force" of
the Daime. In the 1930s, Irineu assembled a congregation in Rio Branco, in the
Brazilian state of Acre. He could not read, write, or transcribe music but his hymns were
soon put into written form by his followers. He became known as "Master Irineu," the
first great leader of the Santo Daime movement.
Initially, Santo Daime was a rural phenomenon (Richman, 1990-1991, p. 39). In
recent decades, however, Santo Daime has maintained its centers in the rainforests and
has established new assemblies in Brazilian urban areas (Larsen, 2000).
One of us (JS) has pent several months in Ceu do Mapia, a Daime community of
several hundred people located in the southwest Amazon, on a tributary of the Purus
River. Ceu do Mapia is equipped with a small hospital, a school, and a bevy of small
wooden houses; rice, beans, and manioc are grown locally, chicken are bred and a few
cows are raised for their milk, while bananas, cashew fruits, and lemons can be found in
the nearby village. A large star-shaped church has been built at the village's center, but
small, focused healing takes place in a smaller building called the "Star House." Feito,
the ritualistic preparation of Daime, is a communal event, month-long festivals are held
twice a year, while healing ceremonies are scheduled when needed.
The Star House is not the only place where spirit guides are incorporated or
"channeled." "White Table" works are held twice monthly (on the 7th and 27th of each
month) at the church. There are several terreros where Umbanda works occur, and a
"Santa Casa" (or "Holy House") has been built where a great deal of healing through
mediumship occurs. The spirits incorporated are not always benign; often, suffering,
rebellious, or malignant spirits appear. A unique element of UmbaDaime (the synthesis
of Umbanda and Santo Daime) is that these spirits are "illuminated" by giving them
ayahuasca.
There are an estimated 5,000 Daime members in Brazil (as well another 2,000-
3,000 overseas members). There are several doctrinal groups, and many types of Santo
Daime ceremonies. Typically, the ceremonies take place in church settings with a six-
pointed table in the center. The ceremonies are typically called "works," because
participants attempt to work on their own spiritual evolution during each session.
"Celebration works" are differentiated from "concentration works" and "healing works."
Each "celebration work" involves a period of highly structured singing and dancing,
followed by an hour intermission, and concludes with another period of singing and
dancing. Maracas, drums, guitars, and other instruments may be heard during the
ceremonies. The songs and musical rhythms are designed to help participants focus on
their "inner work," aided by such symbols as the sun, moon, stars, the Star of David,
and pictures of the Christian saints and Daime founders. In some centers, elements of
other African-Brazilian religions such as Umbanda, as well as such spiritistic beliefs as
those based on the writings of Allan Kardec, have found their way into the ceremonies.
Every few hours, participants have the opportunity to imbibe the ayahuasca brew.
Master Irineu's group grew steadily; many people followed him because he
developed a reputation as a great healer. In the early 1950s, one of his most avid
followers claimed to receive another series of visions from the Queen of the Forest,
ordering him to establish a new branch of the Daime doctrine which incorporated more
elements of Umbanda. This man became known as Master Daniel and his church was
named Barquinha (or "Little Boat").
During his first burracheira (i.e., the altered state of consciousness induced by
ayahuasca), Gabriel was taken to the forest and shown how to identify the two plants
used to prepare the tea. On the very next day, he and his son gathered the plants,
prepared the tea, and drank it again with his wife. Over the next few years, Gabriel
established the teachings given to him in the burracheira, combining them with his
Portuguese Catholic roots, and the years he spent as a leader of Umbanda. He was also
exposed to the writings of the French spiritualist, Allan Kardec, and the teachings of the
Bolivian and Brazilian Indians with whom he tapped rubber and drank ayahuasca.
Presently, UDV claims some 6,000 members who are distributed among at least 60
nucleos throughout Brazil (Luna & White, 2000; Metzner, 1999b).
UDV ceremonies focus around a table, with the Mestres (Masters) sitting in the
middle. A series of chamadas or "calls" open the ceremony. Sacred readings from the
writings of the church founders are read; often the "Mestres will give their reflections
on these texts. A large portion of ayahuasca is served at the beginning of the ceremony,
and then participants sit in silent meditation, sometimes with recorded music played in
the background. Some Mestres sing hymns from the church repertoire. In the second
half of the ceremony, participants share their reactions or ask the Mestres questions
about the session. Men and women were separated until the mid-1980s, and this practice
persists in some congregations or nucleos. UDV sponsored the International Conference
of Hoasca Studies in Rio de Janeiro in 1995, an event that attracted an international
audience and received wide media coverage.
Master Irineu and Master Gabriel both died in 1971; they both tapped rubber in
the same region but apparently never met. We(SK and JS) met an associate of Master
Daniel, a Padrinho (or "godfather") of Barquinha, in 1996 in Manaus at the 15th
conference of the International Transpersonal Association. The theme of the conference
was "Technologies of the Sacred," and all three ayahuasca-based religions were
discussed by several of the participants.
Grob et al. (1996) conducted a study of 15 male UDV church members, 11 of
whom had diagnoses of alcohol abuse disorders and phobic disorders, with such
symptoms as binge drinking and violent behavior before regular use of the tea. These
subjects were interviewed three times over a two week period, and compared with 15
members of an age-matched control group of 15 non-UDV members. No harmful
sequelae were observed and the 11 UDV members with pathological diagnoses had all
remitted. A pharmacokinetic study of the same 15 Uniao do Vegetal church members
by Callaway et al. (1999) found "no signs of physical or psychological deterioration,"
and concluded that "the regular use of hoasca in a ceremonial context seems to increase
one's ability to psychologically adapt to the larger process of life" (p. 255).
In the summer of 1993, a group of biomedical researchers from the United
States, Finland, and Brazil, met in the Amazonian city of Manaus to investigate the
psychological and biomedical effects of ayahuasca. They conducted their study with
members of the UDV church in Manaus who had used the substance regularly for at
least 10 years. No negative effects were observed, but an increased density of serotonin
uptake sites in blood platelets was detected (Callaway et al, 1994). The latter result was
paradoxical because most psychotropic substances decrease serotonin. However, it
provides a clue as to the therapeutic effects of ayahuasca because the serotonin system
is deficient in violent alcoholics (Grob et al., 1996). Psychologically, the team found
their subjects to be "more relaxed" than non-UDV members, and demonstrated "more
purpose and direction in their lives," and a greater concern for the preservation of the
natural environment. A "hallucinogenic rating scale" was constructed, which placed
ayahuasca on the mild end of the spectrum in contrast to intravenous DMT which was
on the opposite pole.
However, this scale did not address the phenomenological contents of the
ayahuasca sessions. What was needed was a different kind of research procedure that
would make such a contribution. We decided upon content analysis to accomplish this
objective because this method has been developed to systematically and objectively
identify characteristics and themes of communications or documents and the relative
extent to which these characteristics and themes pervade a given communication or
document (Berg, 1989, p. 106; Holsti, 1968, pp. 597, 601; Weber, 1990, p. 9).
RESEARCH QUESTION
As there has been little rigorous research on the spiritual content of ayahuasca
sessions, this research study was designed to answer the following question: "Is it
possible to identify spiritual content in ayahuasca reports, and if so, how?"
DEFINITION OF TERMS
Several definitions were employed in this research study and guided its focus:
"Transpersonal studies" can be defined as disciplined inquiries into those
observed or reported human behaviors and experiences in which one's sense of identity
appears to extend beyond its ordinary limits to encompass wider, broader, or deeper
aspects of human, life, and/or the cosmos including purported divine elements of
creation (Krippner, 1997).
The "divine" was defined as that which is regarded as holy (belonging to,
derived from, or associated with religious or spiritual powers) and sacred (that which is
dedicated to or worthy of veneration or worship) (American Heritage Dictionary,
1993), thus deserving the highest respect. The locus of the divine can be either outside
of oneself, as when it has the nature of a superhuman entity or a deity, or within oneself,
as when it is thought to reside within one's "inner," "deeper," and/or "higher" self.
"Reverence," in this research, was defined as an attitude or feeling of profound awe and
respect (American Heritage Dictionary, 1993).
Achterberg and Lawlis (1980) define "imagery," as "the internal experience of a
perceptual event in the absence of the actual external stimuli" (p. 27). Therefore,
imagery in ayahuasca experiences does not have to be visual, but can be auditory,
olfactory, gustatory, or kinesthetic as well.
"Spiritual" was defined as one's focus on, and/or reverence, openness, and
connectedness to something of significance believed to be beyond one's full
understanding and/or individual existence (American Heritage Dictionary, 1993; Elkins,
Hedstrom, Hughes, Leaf, & Saunders, 1988; Krippner & Welch, 1992, pp. 5, 122;
Shafranske & Gorsuch, 1984, p. 233). There is an overlap between "spiritual"
experiences and those referred to as "transpersonal," "mystical," or "religious," but these
are not regarded as synonyms. In "transpersonal" experiences, one's sense of identity
appears to extend beyond its ordinary limits; in "mystical" experiences, this extension
appears to unite with something considered "divine," "sacred," or "holy"; in other
words, all "mystical" experiences are "transpersonal," but not all "transpersonal"
experiences are "mystical." In "religious" experiences there is a reported contact with
something that an organized body of believers considers to be "divine," "sacred," or
"holy."
Definitions of "spiritual" and "religious," and of "spirituality" and "religion" are
often similar. For example, James (1902/1958) defines "religion" as "feelings, acts, and
experiences of individual men [and women] in their solitude, so far as they apprehend
themselves to stand in relation to whatever they may consider divine" (p. 42). However,
this definition is very much like the definition of "spiritual" as given above, especially
in its implied link between beliefs and action. Therefore, for clarity's sake, "religion" or
"religious" was distinguished in this research from "spiritual" as pertaining to, and
adherence to, an organized system of beliefs about the divine, and the observance by a
body of believers of rituals, rites, and requirements of that organized system of beliefs
(American Heritage Dictionary, 1993).
"Shamans" can be defined as socially-sanctioned practitioners who deliberately
alter their conscious functioning to obtain information not ordinary available to their
peers, using this information in the service of their community (Krippner & Welch,
1992).
The term "entheogenic" has come into use to describe substances that purport to
release one's "inner divinity" (Roberts, 1999, p. 24). As such, the term is considered by
many to be more precise that the terms "psychedelic" (i.e., "mind-manifesting") and
"hallucinogenic" (i.e., "mind-wandering"). Many writers claim that the latter term is not
appropriate for ayahuasca sessions, few of which produce full-blown hallucinations.
However, "psychedelic" can be viewed as an umbrella term that encompasses
substances that evoke "entheogenic" experiences as well as the "sensory-perceptual,"
"psychological-recollective/analytic," and "symbolic-mythic," levels of experience
described by Masters and Houston (1966), and the "biographical-recollective" and
"perinatal" levels of experience described by Grof (1985). Masters and Houston's
"religious-integral" and Grof's "transpersonal" levels of experience could be regarded as
"entheogenic," but not everyone who ingests ayahuasca reaches those levels. In the
meantime, a case can be made for using such terms as "entheogenic" to describe
experiences rather than substances, because not everyone ingesting ayahuasca and
similar plant concoctions will have an "entheogenic," "transpersonal," or "spiritual"
experience.(note 2)
INSTRUMENTATION
Hall and Van de Castle's system of dream content analysis, with its
predetermined categories and subcategories, is frequently used to detect common and
recurring elements in dreams. While Hall and Van de Castle's (1966) categories do not
include spiritual categories per se, they do include categories that sometimes contain
spiritual content items, e.g., physical surroundings, characters, social interactions,
activities, achievement outcomes, environmental press, emotions, descriptive elements.
The reliability of scoring, or consistency of measurement, was found by Hall and Van
de Castle to be 73% for physical surroundings, 76% for characters, 70% for social
interactions, 85% for activities, and 63% for emotions. Hall and Van de Castle's
original normative data has been replicated in other studies; for example, Hall,
Domhoff, Blick, and Weesner (1982) found few differences between the normative data
of Hall and Van de Castle's original research and their own participants.
Kira Lynn Casto developed a "spirituality scoring system" to supplement Hall
and Van de Castle's work (Casto, 1995)(Figure 1). Named the "Casto Spirituality
Scoring System" (CSSS), she modified several categories in Hall and Van de Castle's
(1966) system to identify spiritual content. Their "objects" category was altered to
"Spiritual Objects"; their "Characters" category was altered to "Spiritual Characters";
their "Settings" category was altered to "Spiritual Settings"; their "Activities" category
was altered to "Spiritual Activities"; their "Emotions" category was altered to "Spiritual
Emotions."
Hood's (1975) Mysticism Scale was used to develop a "Spiritual Experiences"
category yielding several possibilities, i.e., experiences in which there is a sense of
direct contact, communion, or union with something considered to be ultimate reality,
God, or the divine; experiences in which one's sense of identity temporarily reaches
beyond or extends past his or her ordinary personal identity to include an expanded
perspective of humanity and/or the universe; experiences where one appears to enter a
sacred realm or condition that goes beyond the ordinary boundaries of space and linear
time.
The difference between "activities" and "experiences" is similar to the
psychological differentiation between behavior (i.e., externally observable actions,
including verbal behavior) and experience (i.e., lived events that are phenomenological
reported). The phrase, "I was angry at God" would be scored for "spiritual emotion."
The phrase, "I told God that I was angry" would be scored for both "spiritual emotion"
and "spiritual activity." The phrase, "I was angry at God, and this reaction produced a
red glow in my heart that sent intense heat throughout my body" would be scored for
"spiritual emotion" and "spiritual experience." The phrase, "I told God that I was angry,
and this reaction produced a red glow in my heart that sent intense heat throughout my
body" would be scored for "spiritual emotion," "spiritual activity," and "spiritual
experience."
Some dreams contain religious content but not spiritual content. A Brazilian
woman reported that, in her dream, I found a place with perfumes and soaps. There
were some gifts that I had received from my older brother. Someone gave me a
little car and a doll. Someone else showed me a chain made of sandalwood which
was very sweet-smelling. I received two blue envelopes that were sealed. Then I
designed a chapel, a little church in a unique style which would be used only for
weddings. This dream could be scored for "religious content" because of its references
to a chapel, church, and weddings. However, none of these meet the criteria for
"spiritual content" as outlined in the CSSS.
Figure 1:
Casto Spirituality Scoring System
SPIRITUAL OBJECTS: Objects used for focus, and reverence, to open and connect
one to something of significance that is believed to be beyond one's full understanding
and/or individual existence.
RELIABILITY
The scores of two judges using the CSSS had been compared before this study
was initiated (Casto, Krippner, & Tartz, 1999). A content item was not judged to be
"spiritual" unless it had received scores from both judges. Each dream was compared
for presence or absence of each content category. Kappas (correlations) reported by the
two judges using the CSSS were .946 for "spiritual objects," .943 for "spiritual
characters," .918 for "spiritual settings," .946 for "spiritual activities," .993 for "spiritual
emotions," and .929 for "spiritual experiences." The reliability of the CSSS as a whole
was .946, which indicates high reliability between scorers. An agreement between
raters was counted if either both raters scored a spiritual dream element for a particular
dream or both raters did not score a spiritual dream element for a particular dream.
PROCEDURE
For this pilot study, the three of us collected a small sample of ayahuasca
session reports, subjecting them to analysis with the CSSS. Both indigenous accounts
and those obtained from ayahuasca church services were included. Some of the reports
were extremely lengthy, so we selected excerpts from the reports that would illustrate
each of the CSSS categories to determine their utility in studying spiritual elements of
ayahuasca sessions.
This study was limited in that the session reports were not selected from a
random selection of experients. Furthermore, like all experiential reports, they are
vulnerable to faulty memory, distortion, or outright fabrication.
This study was delimited to experiential reports available in English, and to
those which occurred in a spiritual setting, either with shamans in South America, in
one of the ayahuasca churches, or in a location organized by an ethnobotanist or
ayahuascero familiar with the "set" and "setting" required for something meaningful to
occur (see Metzner, 1999b, p. 162).
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
notes:
1. The words "ritual" and "ceremony" are used in a variety of ways, but Krippner
(1994) has made the following distinction: "Rituals may be conceptualized as
prescribed, stylized (often symbolic), step-by-step performances of mythic themes;
as such, they attempt to promote social solidarity, provide for life transitions, and
reinforce a society's values, belief systems, and rules of conduct. Rituals are
generally performed in specific places, at definite times, by mandated persons.
Although used interchangeably with 'rite' and 'ceremony' by some writers, it may be
useful to define 'rites' as 'mini-rituals' of passage from one stage to another (e.g.,
puberty rites, funeral rites) and 'ceremonies' as elaborate 'maxi-rituals' that often
include a series of rituals (e.g., coronation ceremonies, four-day Sun Dance
ceremonies)" (p.183). Because the ayahuasca sessions described in this paper are
elaborate events, we have used the term "ceremony" as a descriptor.
2. Masters and Houston's (1966) "sensory-perceptual" and "psychological-
recollective/analytic" levels roughly correspond to Grof's (1985) "biographical-
recollective" level, while their "symbolic-mythic" level resembles Grof's "perinatal"
level which, in turn, reflects his "basic perinatal matrixes" and "systems of
condensed experience." According to Grof, both the "basic perinatal matrixes" and
the "systems of condensed experience" can incorporate "mythic sequences" (p. 97).
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BIOGRAPHIES:
Stanley Krippner, Ph.D., is professor of psychology at Saybrook Graduate School in
San Francisco. A Fellow of the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion, the Society
for the Scientific Study of Sexuality, the American Psychological Association, and the
American Psychological Society, he has conducted field research in Brazil for three
decades where he visited several Santo Daime and Uniao do Vegetal centers. He is the
editor of Dreamtime and Dreamwork, the co-editor of Broken Images, Broken Selves:
Dissociative Narratives in Clinical Practice and Dreamscaping, and the co-author of
Dreamworking, The Mythic Path, and Spiritual Dimensions of Healing. Dr. Krippner is
the past president of the Association for the Study of Dreams, the Association for
Humanistic Psychology, the Parapsychological Association, and the American
Psychological Association's Division of Psychological Hypnosis. He has worked with
shamans and shamanic healers on five continents, and has taken an active role in
protecting the cultural legacy of indigenous peoples.
Joseph Sulla is a psychology student who has taken courses at the University of
California, Santa Cruz, and the University of Hawaii. He has made five expeditions to
various ayahuasca centers in Brazil including Ceu do Mapia, where he learned about
Santo Daime traditions, participated in ceremonies, and studied local herbalism and
Umbanda with Madrinha Maria Alice Freire. Sulla's fieldwork resulted in much of the
historical material appearing in this article.
Publication reference:
Krippner, S., & Sulla, J. (2000). Identifying spiritual content in ayahuasca sessions.
International Journal of Transpersonal Studies, 19, 59-76.