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Drug Use in Shamanistic Cultures

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Title: Drug Use in Shamanistic Cultures


1
Drug Use in Shamanistic Cultures
  • COGS 174
  • Ghoncheh Ayazi Rebecca Nassimi
  • Buzz Bloomfield Sami Michishita
  • Feb.25th, 2010

2
What is a Shaman?
  • Shaman can have various roles
  • Healer
  • Spirit Guide
  • Interpreter
  • The status of a Shaman in society can vary. Some
    people are designated Shaman while others are
    ordinary citizens with Shaman powers.
  • A Shaman will often consume a drug (entheogen) to
    enter a trance to communicate with the spirits or
    better understand the world.
  • Shaman have expert understanding of their culture
    and their surrounding environment. Their cultural
    knowledge of rituals and practices helps preserve
    tradition.

3
Entheogen
  • An entheogen is a drug used for religious or
    ritual purposes. It is often consumed by the
    Shaman and those seeking his aid.
  • Examples of entheogens
  • Iboga by the Bwiti tribe in Africa
  • Mescaline by the Aztecs in South America
  • Peyote by the Native Americans in North America
  • Amanita Muscaria by Siberian Tribes in Siberia

4
Shamans in Siberia
  • Birthplace of Shamanism
  • Ordinary people
  • Amanita Muscaria

5
Amanita Muscaria
  • Amanita Muscaria
  • Native to the Northern Hemisphere
  • Active Ingredients
  • Ibotenic Acid
  • Muscimol
  • NT Receptors
  • GABAa
  • NMDA Glutamate Agonist
  • Effects
  • Hallucinations
  • Sweating
  • Tremors
  • Varying Quality
  • Not distributed evenly throughout the mushroom
    (Cap gt Base)
  • Potentially dangerous

6
Muscimol
  • Product of decarboxlyation of Ibotenic Acid
  • Hippocampus, Cerebellum, Cerebral Cortex
  • Full GABA Agonist
  • Responsible for Hallucinogenic effect

7
Other Uses of Amanita Muscaria
  • Legal
  • Dangerous
  • Early Pesticide (Milk)
  • Vikings Berserker Rage?

8
Aztec Use of Entheogens
9
The Florentine Codex
  • 12 books written 1540-1585 by Aztec natives under
    the supervision of Spanish missionaries
  • Catalogues specifics of everyday Aztec life
  • Extensive records of Aztecs using a plethora of
    plants for supernatural and everyday purposes
  • Titles of Priest or Healer were obtainable by any
    person of noble descent

10
Plant Species and their Respective Uses
  • Ololiúqui (Christmas Vine)
  • Seeds contain LSA, a precursor to LSD
  • Used by priests to communicate with the gods
  • Tlitliltzin (Beach Moonflower)
  • Contains alkaloids with mild hallucinogenic
    effects
  • Used to induce a trance and communicate with the
    dead for the purpose of divination
  • Peyotl (Peyote)
  • Administered to warriors by shaman before battle
    as protection
  • Pipiltzintzintli (possibly Salvia Divinorum)
  • Applied as a poultice
  • Boiled in water and ingested to reduce fatigue

11
The God Mushroom
  • Aztec name Teonanacatl
  • Psilocybin mushroom
  • Eating these mushrooms granted gifts from the
    Mushroom God
  • Clairvoyance
  • Relief from fever and gout
  • Used very extensively
  • Whenever there was singing and dancing,
    mushrooms were to be eaten Florentine Codex
  • Cult of the Mushroom still exists today in
    Central America

12
Use During Sacrificial Feasts
  • Human sacrifices given in honor of Quetzalcoatl
  • Feathered serpent god, creator of mankind
  • Eaten with honey and chocolate for 4 days
  • Attendees would feast on day 1, then eat only
    Teonanacatl for the remaining 3 days.
  • On the 4th day, nobles would choose a slave to
    sacrifice
  • Slave would be displayed in front of entire
    settlement
  • Chest cut open, heart removed and eaten
  • Noble would keep the slaves head for the rest of
    his life

13
Pharmacological Violence?
  • A common symptom of extremely high psilocybin
    doses is dysphoria (unpleasant, anxious,
    irritable and aggressive mood), and vivid
    hallucinations.
  • Florentine Codex documents that many would see
    Quetzalcoatl while on trips, and be absolutely
    terrified
  • He who eats many of these mushrooms sees many
    things which make him afraidhe flees, hangs
    himself, or hurls himself from a cliff-
    Florentine Codex
  • Would these sacrifices occur without the
    influence of psilocybin mushrooms?

14
Additional Influence of Mushrooms
  • The Florentine Codex catalogues over 20 species
    of mushrooms eaten as a staple by the Aztecs
  • Many of these species are highly neurotoxic
  • Cooking and preparation reduces neurotoxicity,
    but not always in its entirety
  • How much of Aztec religion was derived from
    extremely high doses of a huge variety of drugs?

Mictlantecuhtli, ruler of the underworld. Also
something youd see on a bad trip.
15

PEYOTE
Lophophora Williamsii

16
HISTORY
  • Small, spineless cactus naturally growing from
    Rio Grande to Chihuahuan Desert, usually in warm
    climate
  • Entheogen
  • Very slow growing up to 30 years to reach
    flowering stage!
  • Considered endangered

17
HUICHOL Wixáritari
  • Indigenous group of western central Mexico
  • Deities Trinity of Corn, Blue Deer, Peyote, and
    the Eagle.
  • They fought for a long time to avoid Catholic
    influences by Spanish settlers. -
    Rejected priests

18
Huichol practices
  • Paint faces with icons, wear embroidered clothes
    to invoke the presence of ancestors
  • During the dry season, the ceremony included the
    Peyote Dance
  • Brother Blue Deer transforms to Peyote, Mother
    Peyote shot by bows and arrows at dawn
  • Ceremonial officer pilgrimage
  • 5 year term

19
Native Americans
  • Native American Church peyotism (Orig. in
    Oklahoma)
  • Apache people spread it up to what is U.S. area
    from the south
  • Peyotism is an integration of Catholism with
    their own shamanistic religion
  • Weekend rituals from Saturday night 8pm to Sunday
    morning breakfast

20
Pharmacology
  • Crowns sliced off and dried to form mescal
    buttons
  • These buttons are usually chewed and swallowed.
    (or boiled and drank as tea)
  • About 30 of total alkaloid content is mescaline
  • Plus 50-60 other alkaloids
  • So much variation that the ED50, LD50, potency
    are all unknown
  • Season, age, etc.

21
Mescaline
  • Primary active ingredient of peyote
  • Half life 6 hours but some studies suggest that
    it is not metabolized at all before excretion
  • Can be excreted as carboxylic acid form of
    mescaline result of MAO degradation
  • Binds to serotonin receptors as partial agonist
  • Can build cross-tolerance to LSD

22
Effects of Peyote
  • Positive
  • Feelings of insight/access to spiritual ideation
  • kaleidoscope vision of bright colors
  • euphoria
  • increase energy and tactile sensation
  • dreamy feelings
  • feeling of hope
  • Negative
  • Time/reality perception changes
  • restlessness/insomnia
  • unusual body sensations
  • Nausea
  • shortness of breath
  • changes in body temp.
  • inhibition of sex drive
  • paranoia, fear, etc

23
PEYOTE TODAY
  • Schedule I
  • Illegal to sell and possess peyote
  • Native American Church and members are exempt
    from registration
  • Manufacturers/distributers to NA Church are
    required to obtain registration annually.
  • Law varies state to state
  • CALIFORNIA?
  • Still used as medicine to treat alcoholism, drug
    abuse or other social ills

24
Last thoughts
  • Why is it Schedule 1 if we have no scientific
    proof of its addictiveness, especially since
    theres evidence of medical uses?
  • Notice a pattern in western influence invasion
    over these ethnic cultures?
  • Huichol vs. Spanish Catholics
  • Native Americans vs. federal government

25
Iboga and the Bwiti
26
What is Bwiti?
  • A West Central African religion - Gabon
  • The name of the people who practice Bwiti
  • A syncretistic religion composed of animism,
    ancestor worship, and Christianity

27
Iboga
  • Hallucinogenic rootbark of Tabernathe iboga
  • Taken by the Bwiti to produce psychoactive
    effects
  • Psychoactive substance in iboga ibogaine
  • Bark can be pulverized, swallowed, chewed, or
    taken as a pill

28
Pharmacology
  • A dirty drug acts on multiple NT
  • systems 5-HT, DA, GABA
  • Primarily taken orally
  • Low doses for therapeutic effects, high for
  • psychedelic effects
  • Iboga substance tastes like sawdust mixed with
    battery acid
  • Ibogaine is 1 out of 12
  • alkaloids in iboga
  • Oral onset 45 min-3 hrs

29
Iboga use among the Bwiti
  • 2 main uses
  • Small doses used as a stimulant, 3-5mg/kg
  • High doses (gt10 mg) used for Bwiti initiation
    rituals
  • Bwiti rebirth ceremony used required of
    teenagers for group membership

30
Effects and Problems
  • Dreamlike visual hallucinations last 3-4 hours
  • Most intense period may last 24 hours or more
  • Lingering effects 1-2 days after
  • -Ataxia, dry mouth, nausea,
  • vomiting
  • -Heart arrhythmia resulting in
  • 1/300 deaths
  • -Neurotoxic at high doses

31
Therapeutic Applications
  • Reduction or elimination of addiction to opiates,
    etc.
  • Ibogaine scene quadrupled in the last 5 years
  • Ibogaine clinics
  • Therapeutic effects may last up to 3 months
  • Depot binding, ibogaine metabolized slowly
  • Diminishes morphine and cocaine
    self-administration in rats
  • Blocks DA release

32
Something to consider
  • Ibogaine is a Schedule I drug in the U.S. (1967)
  • Unavailable to the majority of addicts worldwide
  • But, it has proven therapeutic effects for
    treating opioid, methamphetamine, nicotine, and
    alcohol addictions
  • If in good hands and used in a clinical setting,
    ibogaine can be a lifesaver

33
Works Cited
  • Ibogaine Therapy A 'Vast, Uncontrolled
    Experiment. Brian Vastag. Science, New Series,
    Vol. 308, No. 5720 (Apr. 15, 2005), pp. 345-346
  • Tabernanthe iboga An African Narcotic Plant of
    Social Importance. Harrison G. Pope, Jr. Economic
    Botany, Vol. 23, No. 2 (Apr. - Jun., 1969), pp.
    174-184
  • Addiction Alleviator? Hallucinogen's Popularity
    Grows. Brian Vastag. Science News, Vol. 173, No.
    1 (Jan. 5, 2008), p. 6

34
Works Cited contd
  • http//peyote.org/
  • http//www.erowid.org/plants/peyote/peyote.shtml
  • http//www.neuroinf.pl/Members/neurofizjo/Article.
    2010-03-17.0423/getFile
  • http//wixarika.mediapark.net/en/assets/pdf/THEHUI
    CHOl-Wixarika.pdf
  • http//www.nativeamericanchurch.net/Native_America
    n_Church/NATIVE_AMERICAN_CHURCH.html

35
Works Cited contd
  • Albert Hoffman, Teonanacatl and Ololiuqui, two
    ancient drugs of Mexico. Bulletin on Narcotics,
    Issue 1, 1971.
  • Elferink, Jan G. R., Flores, Jose A., Kaplan
    Charles D. The use of Plants and Other Natural
    Products for Malevolent Practices Among the
    Aztecs and Their Successors. Estudios de Cultura
    Nahuatl Volume 24, 1994.
  • Mike Hughes, Teonanacatl The Secret History of
    Magic Mushrooms. 30 September, 2010.
  • Sagahun, Bernardino. Historia general de las
    cosas de Nueva Espana. 1590.

36
Works Cited contd
  • Amanita Muscaria and Siberia
  • Nyberg, H. (1992). "Religious use of
    hallucinogenic fungi A comparison between
    Siberian and Mesoamerican Cultures
  • Muscimol
  • S. R. Snodgrass (1978). "Use of 3H-muscimol for
    GABA receptor studies".
  • Berserker Rage
  • Ödman S. (1784) An attempt to Explain the
    Berserk-raging of Ancient Nordic Warriors through
    Natural History
  • Early Pesticide Use
  • Clusius C. (1601). "Genus XII of the pernicious
    mushrooms".
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