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Czepa
#1 Posted : 2/19/2010 5:24:43 PM

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On this site we have a "Culture and Society" heading but we have no cultrue and society forum which i think we should have. It would be a place to discuss traditions and culture from all different parts of the world, along with general talk about modern society, government, and things that effect us all as part of "the system".
Sir Terrence McKenna: "and what is real: is you, and your friends, and your associations, your highs, your orgasms your hopes your plans your fears... and were told. no. we're unimportant, we're peripherial. get a degree, get a job, get a this, get a that. and then your a player, (but) you dont even want to play that game? (well) you want to re-claim your mind and get it out of the hands of the cultural engineers: who want to turn you into a half-baked moron consuming all this trash thats being manufactured out of the bones of a dying world. ¿where is that at?"

"But now technology throws a curve. and the curve is that we live so long, that we figure out what a scam this is. we figure out that what your supposed to work for isn't worth having, we figure out that our politicians are buffoons, we figure out that professional scientists are reputation building gravitating weasels. we discover that all organizations are corrupted by ambition. we figure. it. out... and as you come to see that you are alienated you realise that culture is not your friend."
 

Live plants. Sustainable, ethically sourced, native American owned.
 
droplet
#2 Posted : 2/20/2010 9:16:14 AM

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good looks
 
droplet
#3 Posted : 2/20/2010 9:20:38 AM

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I've been doing a lot of research on the Shipibo Connibo of Peru. They have some amazing artwork. And I've been writing a lot of research papers on them for ethnographic art history classes and other conceptual painting classes. Perhaps I could add some of the documents, if people are interested in seeing what I've come across in my research. I've been doing alot of research into the visual language direction for my artwork. I think St. Terrence said it best, that "we need to put the art pedal to the metal!"
 
obliguhl
#4 Posted : 2/20/2010 10:19:53 AM

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I'm interested in you papers. There seem to be a lot of monographs on them, but they are all in spanish. They are a fascinating example how a people integrates the entheogenic experience into everday life.

I would like to find out more about the role of woman...they are the ones who are painting the sacred patterns, yet the men are thos who drink ayahuasca. One explanation would be, that men translate the patterns into sound and women just know how to paint a certain sound.
 
droplet
#5 Posted : 2/20/2010 10:50:31 PM

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im pretty sure the women drink it as well, most of the cuaranderos are women. There will usually be one male maestro in the lead and a couple of women singing to back them up depending on how big of a group they are working with. there is also a who range of classes dealing with the ayahuasca exp with them. Vegitalistas, cuaraderos, ayahuasceros, and some others...
I highly recommend this book called "Portals of Power: Shamanism in South America" put out by the university of new mexico press in albuquerwue
 
 
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