In some shamanic cultures, a young potential shaman gets his calling usually from what in the west is known as a psychotic break. Meaning these people exhibit many traits similar to someone who is insane. The difference is they don't get locked up but rather then enter a path of learning to use their mental powers + drugs to do their shamanic work. If they fail they go insane or die or maybe just go back to normal after a while I dunno.
I don't think this is the case with all cultures however I think some the insanity (note i am not saying insanity is a negative thing) starts when they start becoming a shaman because of all the realms they are forced to descend into.
Quote:Umm... have you ever read anything about Buddhism? Your totally wrong. The Buddha himself says that every being has a "Buddha-nature"? Where the hell did you get that? Tell me what a Bodhisattva is?
Who cares what buddha said? All he did was get pissed off because he was a rich spoiled prince who saw that everyone outside his palace was poor and suffering and he got depressed and eventually figured out the only way to get over his depression was to meditate away all his earthly desires. That's what buddhism is based on some rich prince dealing with his depression because he couldn't handle seeing all the poor people.
All buddhism is a psychological tool to deal with ones own psyche and desires. Its also a tool to induce mystical experiences through meditation which is part of dealing with oneself. There doesn't need to be any deeper truth behind it because the mystical experience is powerful enough to shred away most peoples ability to continue questioning what a mystical experience is.