Traditional healer found in Latin America, the United States and Southern Europe
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Disco Bahía acaba de lanzar Paradisco y promete revolucionar la escena musical. ¡No te pierdas los detalles de su próximo show en el Lunario y sé de los primeros en vivir esta experiencia única! ¡Prepárate para bailar toda la noche! Con La Malta Free Latín y los Curanderos del sabor para una fiesta que no te puedes perder. ¡La música latina más sabrosa te espera! Roger Vázquez nos da toda la información. ¡Además un espectáculo nunca visto! Ulises Maíz te invita a un viaje sensorial donde la música, la animación y el teatro se fusionan para crear una experiencia única. Conducción: Begoña Lomelí y Sofía Solorzano. Producción: Armando Tiburcio. Sistema Jalisciense de Radio y Televisión. Escucha la música del día dando clic aquí Visita: www.jaliscoradio.com Fecha: 06 de Noviembre del 2024
Listen to Erika L. Sanchez and the No Chingues crew talk about all of the day's chingaderas: · Human Centipede: “Permanent Mouth to Butt is Crazy” · Fecal, Starring Liam Neeson: “Get up in that doo doo!” · Teachers Fighting Students · We Will Not Kink Shame Your Clown Make-Up Kink · No Chingues Survey: Would You Rather? Get Up in that Doodoo, Wear Clown Make-Up Sexually, or Braid Your Armpit Hair? · Curanderos, Herbs, and Generational Wisdom · Dorito Hitler Gets All Up in That Doodoo At McDonald's · Is Agent Orange Responsible For McDonald's Ecoli Outbreak? Who Can Say? · Seduced By Obscene Overconfidence · Big Gutter · Small, Pitiful, Sad, and Self-Hating Latinos For Trump · “It Doesn't Cost $60,000 to Bury a Mexican.” · Immigrant (Dodge) Caravan · A No Chingues Message to Latinos for Trump · White Propaganda Aimed to Literally Divide and Conquer · The Trump Nazi Zombie Analogy · Fuck Kindness and Decorum… These Are, You Know, Nazis. · JD “Jizz Distantly” Vance · Civil War Reenactors Are Scaring the Hoes? · The News Media Wants Trump Back in Office · Floating Island of Garbage · Joe Rogan Spawn And Trump Opening Act, Tony Hinchcliffe · John Leguizamo's PBS Series · Rudy Giuliani · Rest is Resistance · Capybaras · Secret of the River · VOTE! We have no idea what we're doing... but we're keeping it moving with the unearned confidence of a mediocre White man! ¯_(ツ)_/¯ Listen, subscribe, share, and leave a five-star review! (or go to hell). Follow us on Threads , TikTok , Instagram.
Voces del Misterio, en "Habla con Olga" donde Jose Manuel García Bautista nos hablará de curanderos y curandería. Un curandero es un sanador tradicional que utiliza elementos naturales para curar medios tanto físicos como espirituales. Por ello, su posición antropológica puede incorporar también los roles tradicionales del hombre que cura y del chamán.Sus funciones van desde proveer curación a enfermedades mentales, emocionales, físicas y espirituales mediante tratamientos herbolarios y masajes, hasta la purificación del espíritu y la sanación de males mágicos con la ayuda de espíritus o deidades. Voces del Misterio: Los curanderos y la curandería, en "Habla con Olga".
Aunque parece que fue ayer, en realidad han pasado más de cuatro años de la pandemia. Una de las cosas que pasaron fue que la incertidumbre provocó la aparición de determinadas corrientes conspirativas que dudaban de la efectividad de las vacunas y que promovían remedios para la enfermedad tan histriónicos como la lejía. El "padre" de esas teorías es el curandero Josep Pamiés, con quien hablamos y que fue uno de los inspiradores de Miguel Bosé... Como se puede oír, sigue defendiendo sus conspirativas tesis. El tiempo no le ha hecho cambiar de opinión.
No te pierdas los directos de lunes a viernes 10 pm Transmitiendo desde Cd Mante Si quieres hacer tu Donación https://www.buymeacoffee.com/miedoscop ⭐️ Únete a nuestras Redes Sociales ⭐️
Dirige y presenta Juan Carlos Baruque Hernández Sumario del programa LUIS MERINO Con Luis seguiremos andando por esas rutas insólitas británicas dónde el misterio forma parte del vivir cotidiano diario de todos sus habitantes. Con Luis, seguiremos una de las rutas más misteriosas de la vieja lejana Inglaterra, una ruta más conocida como la senda del misterio del Condado de Surrey. GABRIEL WÜLDENMAR ORTIZ Gabriel nos hablará de la presencia de los animales en la biblia y cuál es su papel en el antiguo testamento. Gabriel, nos hablará del Dios creador y de los animales bíblicos. JUAN MIGUEL MARSELLA Juan Miguel, hoy nos hablará de las historias de algunos curanderos que fueron perseguidos en su tiempo y que luego terminaron siendo idolatrados. Juan Miguel nos contara algunas historias de curanderos que terminaron siendo santos. ISRAEL GRASES Israel nos dará varios argumentos que pudieran dar una explicación a las supuestas voces que dicen parecen provenir del supuesto Más Allá. Nuestra Web: https://mundoinsolitoradio.es Contacta: +34 687 39 80 12 - Solo WhatsApp mundoinsolitoradio@hotmail.com Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Il caso di Alex Marangon ci ha scioccato: com'è possibile che si verifichino episodi di questo tipo nel 2024? Un non meglio precisato rito sciamanico, la presenza di curanderos sudamericani, l'uso di sostanze ed erbe dai pericolosissimi effetti psicotropi. Una sorta di Angel Heart (ricordate il capolavoro di Alan Parker con Miky Rourke e Robert DeNiro?) a Vidor, piccolo centro in provincia di Treviso che non arriva nemmeno a 4mila abitanti. E poi l'omertà di tutte le persone che hanno partecipato a questo rito pagano su un territorio consacrato, visto che la riunione di “musica e medicina” si è tenuta nell'ex abbazia di Santa Bona. Ci sono tutti gli elementi di un film giallo, c'è chi ha perfino parlato di vudù (parola in cui non crede nessuno ma che fa sempre tremare tutti…) ma, purtroppo, questa è una storia vera, una storia che è costata la vita a un ragazzo di 25 anni. E non si può parlare di tragica fatalità perché Marangon è stato trovato il 2 luglio su un isolotto del Piave, con la testa fracassata, le costole rotte e il corpo massacrato di colpi e ferite. Insomma, è stato pestato a morte. In questa nuova puntata di TRUE CRIME DIARIES Jacopo Pezzan e Giacomo Brunoro provano a interrogarsi sui sottili confini che separano religiosità e superstizione, TRUE CRIME DIARIES è un podcast di Jacopo Pezzan e Giacomo Brunoro pubblicato da LA CASE Books. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/la-case-books/support
Estas escuchando El Creador de Cosechas Augusto recordaría al sanador que habló al pie de un árbol sanador: El poder viene de la magia, pero no toda la magia es buena, hay ambiciones que rebasan las fronteras del deber y eso no sirve, se pierde en intereses económicos y materiales; entonces les diré que ambicionar el bien de todos fue y será una de las metas de mis antepasados. Esa es la única forma y la legítima tarea de todo poder sanador. Sígueme en Mi Mundo en Palabras
Personas que pretendían pasar por curanderos y chamanes en Sudáfrica utilizaron inteligencia artificial para imitar voces de personas muertas para estafar a clientes. Escucha esta y otras noticias insólitas de la semana.
Hello, my beauties! Welcome back to another episode of The Calling. Today, I'm thrilled to share a deeply enriching conversation with my dear friend and spiritual guide, Keren-Or Atari. Keren-Or is an international healing and spiritual teacher with wisdom stemming from the Curanderos lineage and various inspirations from around the world.SummaryIn this episode, we dive into the importance of intuition, courage, and integrity in our spiritual journey and daily lives. Keren-Or shares her personal experiences and insights on how loyalty to oneself and truth can guide us towards fulfilling our spiritual calling. We explore the different ways people connect with their intuition, whether through visions, feelings, or inner knowing, and the significance of doing inner work to build trust in oneself.We also touch upon the evolving consciousness of younger generations and the importance of community, especially for women, in this new age of leadership. Our conversation highlights the necessity of leading from the heart and the womb, embracing both light and shadow sides of ourselves, and finding harmony in diversity of thought and being.Key TakeawaysThe importance of connecting to intuition and following our spiritual calling.Building trust in oneself through loyalty to truth and integrity.The significance of inner work and self-awareness in personal growth.The evolving consciousness of younger generations and the role of community.Leading with heart and embracing both light and shadow aspects of ourselves.Thank you for joining us on this enlightening journey. May this conversation inspire you to connect more deeply with your intuition, embrace your spiritual calling, and lead with heart and integrity in all areas of your life.Connect with Keren-Or Atari :Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kerenor.atari/?hl=enFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/kerenor.atari/Website: https://www.di-greece2024.com/ Homaya Resource Links: Website: https://homaya.org/ Follow on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/homaya/ Free Light Constitution Quiz: https://homaya-amar.mykajabi.com/light_constitution_quiz Soul Contract Activation Meditations: https://homaya-amar.mykajabi.com/podcast-the-calling
En esta ocasión exploraremos el mundo de los sanadores y curanderos, personajes que han existido a lo largo de la historia y que aún hoy en día generan controversia. ¿Realmente tienen poderes curativos? ¿O se trata de un simple efecto placebo?
A lo largo de la historia, muchos cientos de miles de personas en el mundo han recurrido alguna vez en su vida a los servicios de algún curandero o curandera. La desesperación ante el diagnóstico de una grave enfermedad probablemente incurable, les hace acudir en masa a supuestos sanadores que predican falsas historias milagrosas, y que con el tiempo en el mejor de las ocasiones, les dejan como están, o peor, pero casi siempre con la cuenta corriente haciendo aguas. Lo terrible es que en el peor de esos casos, estos golfos abanderados de una medicina ni siquiera alternativa, precipitan la muerte de ingenuos y cándidos seres desesperados, debido a las barbaridades sanitarias e higiénicas que ejecutan sobre sus cuerpos estos mercenarios traficantes de ilusiones. Dicen que toda generalización acarrea injusticias, pero en el mundo de la sanacion y el curanderismo, los porcentajes de fracasos rondan el 99,98% Esta noche en El Centinela del Misterio y desde los estudios Manu Carballal, conoceremos un poco mejor a algunos de esos pseudo aprendices a sanitarios, empeñados en devolver la esperanza a los enfermos deshauciados por la medicina tradicional. Con Manuel Carballal, Rocío Díaz y Zuleika López. Dirección y Presentación. Carlos Bustos Realización. David Castillo Responsable de Producción. Helen Bustos MetRadioTV Ayudante de Dirección Davinia González Apóyanos, hazte Mecenas y escucha gratis la nueva programación a partir del 15 enero de 2024 en iVoox! El Centinela del Misterio https://go.ivoox.com/sq/300018 Sigue nuestras actividades en https://instagram.com/carlosbustos_centinela?igshid=MzMyNGUyNmU2YQ%3D%3D&utm_source=qr ©️ ®️El Centinela del Misterio 11/01/2024 ESPACIO PATROCINADO POR: www.aquastudio2004.com Sanidad Ambiental. Tratamientos para la erradicación y prevención del COVID-19 y Legionella. 📲 609 676 988 Estudio y presupuesto de sus instalaciones de forma profesional y gratuita. ESPACIO BAJO LA PRODUCCIÓN EJECUTIVA DE MET ESPAÑA PRODUCCIONES AUDIOVISUALES. ¿Quieres hacer crecer tu negocio? Anúnciate en El Centinela del Misterio. Infórmate en el 📲 +34 636 601 031 Queda expresamente prohibida la reproducción total o parcial de este programa/podcast, por cualquier procedimiento, plataforma de difusión, medio de comunicación, así como el tratamiento informático, el alquiler o cualquier otra forma de cesión sin la autorización previa y por escrito de los titulares del copyright y propietarios de los derechos de El Centinela del Misterio. Los colaboradores, asistentes y personas que usan la palabra en el espacio El Centinela del Misterio, se hacen responsables unilateralmente de las opiniones vertidas en el mencionado espacio, y ceden los derechos de su actuación, emisión y redifusión, únicamente a El Centinela del Misterio y a la empresa propietaria de sus derechos. ©️ ®️El Centinela del Misterio 11/01/2024 Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Escucha este episodio bonus del podcast del Free Güey y enterate que es un nahual, seguro tambien tienes una terrorífica historia que contar.
In this episode, we embark on a journey through time and traditions to uncover the profound insights of ancient healers. We delve into the qualities and wisdom that distinguished these individuals as healers and guides, seeking to understand what it truly takes to be a conduit of healing energy. Discover how the knowledge and principles of ancient healers can serve as a beacon of inspiration for our own healing journeys. Let's unravel the secrets that lie within us all and learn how to tap into our innate healing potential. Whether you're a healer at heart or simply curious about the ancient wisdom that can guide us in our modern lives, this episode offers valuable insights and practical tips for aligning with your inner healer. Visit our website: https://www.ancestralknowledge.co/ Upcoming Ayahuasca Retreat in Colombia, South America: https://www.ancestralknowledge.co/akr Free resources to nourish your spiritual journey: https://www.ancestralknowledge.co/free The Path to Integrity: Break through conscious and subconscious conditioning and arrive to the truth of your heart: https://www.ancestralknowledge.co/path-to-integrity Did you enjoy this episode? Please take a moment to leave us a review. Your feedback means the world to us! **** En este episodio, nos embarcamos en un viaje a través del tiempo y las tradiciones para descubrir los profundos conocimientos de los antiguos curanderos. Profundizamos en las cualidades y la sabiduría que distinguieron a estos individuos como sanadores y guías, buscando comprender lo que realmente se necesita para ser un conducto de energía curativa. Descubre cómo el conocimiento y los principios de los antiguos curanderos pueden servir como un faro de inspiración para nuestros propios viajes de curación. Descubramos los secretos que todos llevamos dentro y aprendamos a aprovechar nuestro potencial curativo innato. Si eres un sanador de corazón o simplemente sientes curiosidad por la sabiduría antigua que puede guiarnos en nuestra vida moderna, este episodio ofrece entendimiento valioso y consejos prácticos para alinearte con tu sanador interior. Visite nuestro sitio web: https://www.ancestralknowledge.co/ Próximo retiro de Ayahuasca en Colombia, Sudamérica: https://www.ancestralknowledge.co/akr Recursos gratuitos para nutrir tu viaje espiritual: https://www.ancestralknowledge.co/free El Camino hacia la Integridad: Rompe el condicionamiento consciente y subconsciente y llega a la verdad de tu corazón: https://www.ancestralknowledge.co/path-to-integrity ¿Te gustó este episodio? Tómese un momento para dejarnos una reseña. ¡Sus comentarios significan mucho para nosotros!
Welcome to the Damn Dude Podcast!This is Season 3, Episode 45!- Leading Others to The Light- Taking Our Position- Light Workers, Light Warriors, Curanderos, Shamans, Healers, Energy Workers, Musical Healers, etc. Take Position.- Do I Have A Position To Take?....Absolutely Yes.- How To Discover Your Position In this current Phase in Life.- How Can You Please a Woman If You Cant Do This....- Native To The United States Of America- Shifting from 3D to 4D- Bear ClawLOVE ALLRemember to say 3 things you're Grateful for every morning and every night!- Available on all major platforms!@RealCaliforniaCal@DamnDudePodcasatAvailable on all major platforms: https://damndudepodcast.buzzsprout.com/- Apple Podcasts- Buzzspout- Spotify- Audible- Google Podcasts- Amazon Music- iTunes- Stitcher- iHeart Radio- TuneIn + Alexa- Podcast Addict- PodChaser- Pocket Casts- Deezer- Listen Notes- Player Fm- Podcast Index- Overcast- Castro- Castbox- Podfriend- YouTubeDaaaaaaamn Duuuuuude!!!!!Be sure to leave a 5 Star written review on Apple Podcast/Listen Notes! :)If you love and support the movement and the show, please feel free to make a donation to the Damn Dude Podcast!(link below)Much Love, Love All.To Find #WeCleanPlanet Info:https://www.wecleanplanet.com/To Donate to #WeCleanPlanet:https://www.paypal.com/donate/?cmd=_donations&business=sebastian%40wecleanplanet.com&item_name=Unite+and+Empower+Community+Leaders+for+a+CleanPlanet¤cy_code=USD&source=urlTo Donate to the Damn Dude Podcast:CashApp: $DamnDudePodcastor PayPal:Support the show
How to move from the darkness to the light, protect yourself, and find forgiveness in the trauma; a path to healing and liberation with master shaman Don William. Don William Llerena Murayari, COCAMA – PERUis a Peruvian Curandero of the Cocama lineage. He grew up learning first hand of the medicinal plants of the jungle through his father and grandfather, who were both Curanderos. From the age of 12, William was helping his father, Santiago Llerena, who was primarily a Vegetelista, make remedies for people who were sick in his village. Now he is a highly respected Curandero with over 30 years of experience working with the plants and has had the opportunity to grow communities and bring healing to many people across the globe. He has a unique style, and is a clear channel for the medicine, working with much integrity, humility and compassion. His musical mastery and exquisite visionary paintings are true examples of his profound connection. William says, “the songs that I sing in the healing ceremonies are the fruits of the work with the medicines. That is why when i sing the Icaros, the language of the plants, we can connect directly with the spirit world, entering profoundly until the heart of the earth, the rivers and outer space.”Discover more @iluminamedicina
Noted artist, author and healer, Ernesto Ortiz has devoted his life to exploring and communicating the language of the heart, primal movement and deep inner spaces. Over the past 25 years, Ernesto has taken thousands of people on a journey from physical and emotional inertia to the freedom of ecstasy, from the chaos of the chattering ego-mind to the blessed emptiness of stillness and inner silence. His Workshops and Spiritual Travel Adventures have an electric intensity that unifies the spiritual with the mundane, from the poetic discovery of the soul to the modern approach of ancient shamanic practices. Ernesto is recognized in the holistic, health and metaphysical field as an inspiring facilitator, teacher and therapist. His training began at an early age in Mexico with Curanderos and Shamans and has continued for many years with world renowned teachers in Transpersonal Psychology, Shamanism, Music Therapy, Bodywork and more.
For centuries, communities across Latin America have relied on curanderos — healers who rely on indigenous tradition — for their physical and mental health. Will mainstream American health ever embrace it?Today, we examine the subject. Read the full transcript here.Host: Gustavo ArellanoGuests: L.A. Times utility reporter Karen GarciaMore reading:Some Latinos don't trust Western mental health. That's where curanderos come inCurandera's spell may soothe your soulBringing medicine from the village into the public eye
This week, we have the honor of speaking with Marilu Shinn, Medicine Woman of the Earth and student, Mesa Carrier, and healer of the Q'ero tradition of the High Andes. Marilu was born and raised in Mexico City and grew up in parallel worlds, the contemporary Mexico and the eclipsed, old world of mysticism. She witnessed firsthand her grandmother's Earth-based healing practices, which her grandmother then transmitted to her, along with the deeply embedded use of Plant Medicine & Ancestral Ceremony by the “Curanderos” (healers). In this episode, Marilu offers her powerful wisdom on finding balance in walking the Medicine Path, how to study and practice in a lineage that is not in your bloodline, how to connect more deeply to your Sacred Purpose, what it means to find fulfillment beyond money and recognition, and how to be in service to plant teachers and our indigenous brothers and sisters. Marilu also talks about the Mesa tradition of the High Andes, which she was initiated into, and how it helped her uncover forgotten ancient wisdom and reclaim her ancestral roots. Marilu's inspiring story is an invitation for all of us to lean more deeply into alignment with our highest calling. Join us for this conversation as we learn from her experiences and insights. In This Episode: Marilu Shinn | @marilu.shinn | Kawak Energy Medicine Mariah Gannessa | @mariahgannessa This podcast is brought to you by Four Visions Website | fourvisions.com Instagram| @fourvisionstribe Facebook | Four Visions Youtube | Four Visions Nominate a podcast guest! Intro Music created from music by Juan David Muñoz | @jdmusicesencia Subscribe to the FVM Podcast and leave us a review! iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts This episode is sponsored by The Suma Causay Music Festival.
La pregunta sobre nuestras formas de curación, tratamientos médicos, solución de enfermedades, itinerarios terapéuticos, sistemas de salud, políticas de salud pública, y todo lo que rodea a nuestra salud y medicina, es una pregunta amplia que tiene múltiples formas de responder y entender. En especial cuando no solo hablamos de la medicina -en singular- sino en medicinas -en plural- denotando una multiplicidad presente en la vida diaria de las personas para tratar sus males de salud. Una zona gris en el cuidado de la salud, como lo diría Diego Armus, director del libro “Sanadores, parteras, curanderos y médicas. Las artes de curar en la Argentina moderna”. Para responder la pregunta sobre las formas de usar las medicinas, en el caso argentino, Diego Armus dirige a diversos investigadores de la salud y la medicina (historiadores, científicos sociales, sociólogos, demógrafos, psicólogos, terapista ocupacional, y antropólogos) en un libro que brinda una mirada a esa hibridación de las medicinas en sus usos cotidianos desde los siglos XIX, XX y XXI. Un libro que no se queda con una mirada histórica, sino que trae también casos con repercusiones en el siglo XXI haciendo de esta publicación un aporte a los estudios contemporáneos sobre la salud y la medicina. El libro tiene una clara base histórica que recorre en 14 capítulos las historias de practicantes del “arte de curar” como lo son un espiritista, varias curanderas, un hipnotizador, un manosanta, un médico otorrinolaringólogo, una pediatra, enfermeras, un bacteriólogo, un armonizador, terapeutas alternativos, médicos homeópatas, un cura sanador, una partera new age. En el podcast hablamos con Diego Armus, profesor de historia latinoamericana en el Swarthmor College en EEUU. Doctor en historia de la Universidad de California, en Berkeley. Autor de libros como “La ciudad impura. Salud, tuberculosis y cultura en Buenos Aires 1870-1950” (2007), y co-editor de “The Gray Zones of Medicine. Healers and History in Latin America” (2021)”. Este ultimo libro ya tiene un podcast en New Books Network en inglés (https://newbooksnetwork.com/the-gray-zones-of-medicine) realizado por Lisette Varon Carvajal, el cual invitamos a escuchar también. Para más información del libro: Fondo de Cultura Económica de Argentina: https://fce.com.ar/tienda/salud/sanadores-parteras-curanderos-y-medicas/ Presentador y anfitrión del podcast: Diego A Garzon-Forero Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
La pregunta sobre nuestras formas de curación, tratamientos médicos, solución de enfermedades, itinerarios terapéuticos, sistemas de salud, políticas de salud pública, y todo lo que rodea a nuestra salud y medicina, es una pregunta amplia que tiene múltiples formas de responder y entender. En especial cuando no solo hablamos de la medicina -en singular- sino en medicinas -en plural- denotando una multiplicidad presente en la vida diaria de las personas para tratar sus males de salud. Una zona gris en el cuidado de la salud, como lo diría Diego Armus, director del libro “Sanadores, parteras, curanderos y médicas. Las artes de curar en la Argentina moderna”. Para responder la pregunta sobre las formas de usar las medicinas, en el caso argentino, Diego Armus dirige a diversos investigadores de la salud y la medicina (historiadores, científicos sociales, sociólogos, demógrafos, psicólogos, terapista ocupacional, y antropólogos) en un libro que brinda una mirada a esa hibridación de las medicinas en sus usos cotidianos desde los siglos XIX, XX y XXI. Un libro que no se queda con una mirada histórica, sino que trae también casos con repercusiones en el siglo XXI haciendo de esta publicación un aporte a los estudios contemporáneos sobre la salud y la medicina. El libro tiene una clara base histórica que recorre en 14 capítulos las historias de practicantes del “arte de curar” como lo son un espiritista, varias curanderas, un hipnotizador, un manosanta, un médico otorrinolaringólogo, una pediatra, enfermeras, un bacteriólogo, un armonizador, terapeutas alternativos, médicos homeópatas, un cura sanador, una partera new age. En el podcast hablamos con Diego Armus, profesor de historia latinoamericana en el Swarthmor College en EEUU. Doctor en historia de la Universidad de California, en Berkeley. Autor de libros como “La ciudad impura. Salud, tuberculosis y cultura en Buenos Aires 1870-1950” (2007), y co-editor de “The Gray Zones of Medicine. Healers and History in Latin America” (2021)”. Este ultimo libro ya tiene un podcast en New Books Network en inglés (https://newbooksnetwork.com/the-gray-zones-of-medicine) realizado por Lisette Varon Carvajal, el cual invitamos a escuchar también. Para más información del libro: Fondo de Cultura Económica de Argentina: https://fce.com.ar/tienda/salud/sanadores-parteras-curanderos-y-medicas/ Presentador y anfitrión del podcast: Diego A Garzon-Forero Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
La pregunta sobre nuestras formas de curación, tratamientos médicos, solución de enfermedades, itinerarios terapéuticos, sistemas de salud, políticas de salud pública, y todo lo que rodea a nuestra salud y medicina, es una pregunta amplia que tiene múltiples formas de responder y entender. En especial cuando no solo hablamos de la medicina -en singular- sino en medicinas -en plural- denotando una multiplicidad presente en la vida diaria de las personas para tratar sus males de salud. Una zona gris en el cuidado de la salud, como lo diría Diego Armus, director del libro “Sanadores, parteras, curanderos y médicas. Las artes de curar en la Argentina moderna”. Para responder la pregunta sobre las formas de usar las medicinas, en el caso argentino, Diego Armus dirige a diversos investigadores de la salud y la medicina (historiadores, científicos sociales, sociólogos, demógrafos, psicólogos, terapista ocupacional, y antropólogos) en un libro que brinda una mirada a esa hibridación de las medicinas en sus usos cotidianos desde los siglos XIX, XX y XXI. Un libro que no se queda con una mirada histórica, sino que trae también casos con repercusiones en el siglo XXI haciendo de esta publicación un aporte a los estudios contemporáneos sobre la salud y la medicina. El libro tiene una clara base histórica que recorre en 14 capítulos las historias de practicantes del “arte de curar” como lo son un espiritista, varias curanderas, un hipnotizador, un manosanta, un médico otorrinolaringólogo, una pediatra, enfermeras, un bacteriólogo, un armonizador, terapeutas alternativos, médicos homeópatas, un cura sanador, una partera new age. En el podcast hablamos con Diego Armus, profesor de historia latinoamericana en el Swarthmor College en EEUU. Doctor en historia de la Universidad de California, en Berkeley. Autor de libros como “La ciudad impura. Salud, tuberculosis y cultura en Buenos Aires 1870-1950” (2007), y co-editor de “The Gray Zones of Medicine. Healers and History in Latin America” (2021)”. Este ultimo libro ya tiene un podcast en New Books Network en inglés (https://newbooksnetwork.com/the-gray-zones-of-medicine) realizado por Lisette Varon Carvajal, el cual invitamos a escuchar también. Para más información del libro: Fondo de Cultura Económica de Argentina: https://fce.com.ar/tienda/salud/sanadores-parteras-curanderos-y-medicas/ Presentador y anfitrión del podcast: Diego A Garzon-Forero Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
La pregunta sobre nuestras formas de curación, tratamientos médicos, solución de enfermedades, itinerarios terapéuticos, sistemas de salud, políticas de salud pública, y todo lo que rodea a nuestra salud y medicina, es una pregunta amplia que tiene múltiples formas de responder y entender. En especial cuando no solo hablamos de la medicina -en singular- sino en medicinas -en plural- denotando una multiplicidad presente en la vida diaria de las personas para tratar sus males de salud. Una zona gris en el cuidado de la salud, como lo diría Diego Armus, director del libro “Sanadores, parteras, curanderos y médicas. Las artes de curar en la Argentina moderna”. Para responder la pregunta sobre las formas de usar las medicinas, en el caso argentino, Diego Armus dirige a diversos investigadores de la salud y la medicina (historiadores, científicos sociales, sociólogos, demógrafos, psicólogos, terapista ocupacional, y antropólogos) en un libro que brinda una mirada a esa hibridación de las medicinas en sus usos cotidianos desde los siglos XIX, XX y XXI. Un libro que no se queda con una mirada histórica, sino que trae también casos con repercusiones en el siglo XXI haciendo de esta publicación un aporte a los estudios contemporáneos sobre la salud y la medicina. El libro tiene una clara base histórica que recorre en 14 capítulos las historias de practicantes del “arte de curar” como lo son un espiritista, varias curanderas, un hipnotizador, un manosanta, un médico otorrinolaringólogo, una pediatra, enfermeras, un bacteriólogo, un armonizador, terapeutas alternativos, médicos homeópatas, un cura sanador, una partera new age. En el podcast hablamos con Diego Armus, profesor de historia latinoamericana en el Swarthmor College en EEUU. Doctor en historia de la Universidad de California, en Berkeley. Autor de libros como “La ciudad impura. Salud, tuberculosis y cultura en Buenos Aires 1870-1950” (2007), y co-editor de “The Gray Zones of Medicine. Healers and History in Latin America” (2021)”. Este ultimo libro ya tiene un podcast en New Books Network en inglés (https://newbooksnetwork.com/the-gray-zones-of-medicine) realizado por Lisette Varon Carvajal, el cual invitamos a escuchar también. Para más información del libro: Fondo de Cultura Económica de Argentina: https://fce.com.ar/tienda/salud/sanadores-parteras-curanderos-y-medicas/ Presentador y anfitrión del podcast: Diego A Garzon-Forero Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
La pregunta sobre nuestras formas de curación, tratamientos médicos, solución de enfermedades, itinerarios terapéuticos, sistemas de salud, políticas de salud pública, y todo lo que rodea a nuestra salud y medicina, es una pregunta amplia que tiene múltiples formas de responder y entender. En especial cuando no solo hablamos de la medicina -en singular- sino en medicinas -en plural- denotando una multiplicidad presente en la vida diaria de las personas para tratar sus males de salud. Una zona gris en el cuidado de la salud, como lo diría Diego Armus, director del libro “Sanadores, parteras, curanderos y médicas. Las artes de curar en la Argentina moderna”. Para responder la pregunta sobre las formas de usar las medicinas, en el caso argentino, Diego Armus dirige a diversos investigadores de la salud y la medicina (historiadores, científicos sociales, sociólogos, demógrafos, psicólogos, terapista ocupacional, y antropólogos) en un libro que brinda una mirada a esa hibridación de las medicinas en sus usos cotidianos desde los siglos XIX, XX y XXI. Un libro que no se queda con una mirada histórica, sino que trae también casos con repercusiones en el siglo XXI haciendo de esta publicación un aporte a los estudios contemporáneos sobre la salud y la medicina. El libro tiene una clara base histórica que recorre en 14 capítulos las historias de practicantes del “arte de curar” como lo son un espiritista, varias curanderas, un hipnotizador, un manosanta, un médico otorrinolaringólogo, una pediatra, enfermeras, un bacteriólogo, un armonizador, terapeutas alternativos, médicos homeópatas, un cura sanador, una partera new age. En el podcast hablamos con Diego Armus, profesor de historia latinoamericana en el Swarthmor College en EEUU. Doctor en historia de la Universidad de California, en Berkeley. Autor de libros como “La ciudad impura. Salud, tuberculosis y cultura en Buenos Aires 1870-1950” (2007), y co-editor de “The Gray Zones of Medicine. Healers and History in Latin America” (2021)”. Este ultimo libro ya tiene un podcast en New Books Network en inglés (https://newbooksnetwork.com/the-gray-zones-of-medicine) realizado por Lisette Varon Carvajal, el cual invitamos a escuchar también. Para más información del libro: Fondo de Cultura Económica de Argentina: https://fce.com.ar/tienda/salud/sanadores-parteras-curanderos-y-medicas/ Presentador y anfitrión del podcast: Diego A Garzon-Forero Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
La voz 'Adalid' se deriva del árabe 'delid' que significa mostrador, ya que enseñaba el Camino y lideraba. Un Adalid de Luz es un Guía, un Guerrero de Luz que saca lo mejor de sí mismo y se compromete a expandirlo iluminando todo aquello que se encuentra a su Paso. El Tiempo, es más: su percepción lineal, es una Curiosa Ilusión necesaria para Vivir mientras estemos encarnados en este plano Dual y Multifrecuencial... Esta gran película: "Dèjà Vu" nos permite comprender mucho mejor esa relatividad del elemento Tiempo y sus modificaciones, a través de la investigación de un atentado en un ferry de Nueva Orleans por el Agente Especial de la ATF Dough Carlin, quien no sólo descubrirá la gran paradoja del Tiempo, sino las diferentes posibilidades que de un simple hecho se pueden derivar. En esta película consiguen mostrarlo a través de una máquina, cuyo software: "Blancanieves" (curiosa analogía, ya que este personaje representa la Pureza y el Alma y ya nos está diciendo que es a través de su Energía como una persona puede manipular esa supuesta linealidad del Tiempo para acceder a diferentes momentos, de la misma o de otras Lïneas Temporales, en el mismo plano o en planos paralelos dando así respaldo a la Teoría del Multiverso que tan acertada es) consigue acceder a un "pasado" anterior al atentado. A lo largo de la trama, la complejidad de los detalles y de la relevancia de cada Línea Temporal, ponen de manifiesto que cualquier modificación, por pequeña que sea, altera los eventos de un suceso. Nuestra Mente es ese software que nos permite modificar el Tiempo en la Materia y crear Líneas de Acción Alternativas a la que vivimos físicamente. Que no las experimentemos no significa que no existan, sino que no somos capaces de percibirlas (a menos que nos entrenemos o que hayamos nacido con esa Capacidad ya activada como los Psíquicos, Videntes, Curanderos, etc.), pero ahí están desarrollándose en otros planos. El PODER DEL PENSAMIENTO es tremendamente Poderoso, es más rápido que la Luz y sin embargo, contribuye a Crearla o alejarla, de ahí la imperiosa necesidad de tener una higiene mental y emocional adecuadas para que la Intención de nuestros Actos (sean de la naturaleza: psíquica, emocional, espiritual, física y/ó intencional) sean lo más puros y benévolos posible. Recordad que es nuestro Espíritu lo que nos mantiene con Vida, sin él nuestra Conexión con el Alma ("Blancanieves") no sería posible y únicamente seríamos un amasijo de huesos y vísceras sin Vida... Tirad del Hilo y Expandid vuestra Luz al Máximo, Adalides!! Las opciones son INFINITAS!!! Que todo os impulse en vuestra Búsqueda de la Verdad y, cuando la Encontréis, Convertíos en Ella dando EJEMPLO!!! Abrazo Apretao a todos!! Mi sitio web: https://coraurzon.wixsite.com/laposadafronteriza e-mail de contacto: auriel113@yahoo.com Donativos HILANDO FINO Podcast: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=GEXR5HUV85W5U (((Canción: Spirit of Fire. Música: www.fiftysounds.com/es/))) --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cora-muoz-peas/message
In this episode of The Mama Psychedelia Podcast we dive into Adelina's own journey of coming to a plant medicine path, leaving medical school and finding the healing arts. We explore deeply what multi generational healing looks like, tending to the traumas of the family bloodline, nervous system regulation & ceremony integration. Adelina shares her journey of stepping into motherhood and all that that entailed for her, how ayahuasca can give us avenues to walk down on our healing journey but will not “fix” or “save” us. She shares on her devotional path of study and exploration with the Shipibo lineage in Peru, and what exactly a master plant dieta is. She shares on her pregnancy, her own womb healing, especially post abdominal surgery as a child, and her beautiful birth experience. I love the way Adelina expresses her wisdom. Adelina is a mentor and spiritual practitioner that is deeply dedicated to the feminine healing arts and the wisdom spirits of the sacred master plant teachers. She has held several long standing apprenticeships with deeply immersed elders, shamanic teachers, and Curanderos/as. She specializes in modalities such as Trauma Bodywork, Somatic Experiencing, Ayahuasca Integration, Mind-Body Therapy, Sound Healing, Breathwork, and Dance Movement Therapy. Adelina walks a life of service as a medicine woman and a mother in the shamanic path of the beauty way. Her devotion is rooted in supporting women to clear and heal the traumas that are alive in their bodies-unraveling the stories of the bloodline and awakening to true liberation of creativity, voice, expression, and emotion. She believes in the medicine of embodiment, the wisdom of the feminine temple body, and the power of integration. She focuses on teaching a new language in regulating the nervous system in healthy and supportive ways so that life can be experienced in a path of love. Forever a student, she bows in deep gratitude for life and all that is here to teach her.Resources: Where you can find Adelina: IG: @adelinamvaughn https://www.instagram.com/adelinamvaughn/Linktree : https://linktr.ee/adelinamvaughnWebsite: www.adelinavaughn.comUpcoming Offerings: https://ayahealingretreats.com/event/noya-rao-remote-dieta-feb-16-26-2023/https://ayahealingretreats.com/event/ayahuasca-women-retreat/Mackenzie's offerings: Email: birthkeeperkenz@gmail.comhttps://snipfeed.co/hunnywombIG: @mamapsychedeliahttps://www.instagram.com/mamapsychedelia/@hunnywombdoulahttps://www.instagram.com/hunnywombdoula/Intro Music: Catrin Finch and Seckou Keita - Tabadabangfrom their 2022 album 'Echo'Intro Music "Waters of the Earth" by Satori covered by me, Mackenzie.(For more of her music, check out her Spotify)
Esta es la historia de Bárbara Guerrero, conocida como Doña Pachita, una afamada curandera psíquica mexicana. Una de las chamanas más reconocidas del país debido a su poder para hacer sanar a las personas creyentes de “El Hermanito”. Una mujer rodeada de mitos y leyendas. Esta es una historia que se relaciona profundamente con la de Jacobo Grinberg, el controvertido neurofisiólogo y psicólogo mexicano que desapareció misteriosamente a inicios de la década de los 90.¿Quién fue Pachita? ¿Quiénes son los curanderos psíquicos? ¿Cuáles son los alcances de esta historia real? Lo descubrimos en este episodio de Enigmas Sin Resolver.
What's the difference between brujas (witches) & curanderos (healers)? How do you know someone is performing black magic on you? This week, Erick and Sandra share their encounters with witchcraft, read 7 possible signs of a curse, and narrate stories from people who've been affected by brujeria. Watch this full episode on YouTubeCheck out Que Dijo on Instagram and Tik TokMusic & Sound Effects from https://www.zapsplat.com
Healing and Spirituality in World Cultures with Robert Vetter
Curanderismo is the clarity of the light spiritual world. It works through the power of our mind with the assistance of the light spiritual world. Curanderos have the vision or the knowledge to listen to all things because everything talks to you. Even the earth itself. True curanderismo is all about healing as opposed to … Continue reading "128. Supernatural Healing Through the Power of the Mind: a Tribute to Berta Valdez part 1"
Want to hear and SEE us do spooky Saturdays? Mystery Mondays? Want to hear our shows a week in advance? Want to show some support? We are now on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/LivingWithanEmpath Each subscription helps us afford better quality equipment and supports us! Do not forget to leave a review on Apple podcast! Do you have any questions or just want to send in a story you feel like sharing? Email livingwithanempath@gmail.com Social media: https://www.instagram.com/miayeun/ https://www.instagram.com/livingwithanempath/ https://www.instagram.com/light_goddess_4angels/ https://www.instagram.com/beautifulsoul_bjj_/ Darkest Child by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3615-darkest-child License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/livingwithanempath/support
Carlos Tanner, Founder of The Ayahuasca Foundation joins me to discuss his journey from overcoming an opioid addiction, his journey through Peru, over The Andes, and into The Amazon. We discussed the traditional stories surrounding Ayahuasca, how it was used by the various tribes throughout the western amazon prior to The Spanish Conquest, and after the two cultures met. Carlos shared his knowledge of the metaphysical nature of Ayahuasca and its place in the collective consciousness, this gave way to a discussion about the recent trend or taste in the western English-speaking world for drinking Ayahuasca, a look at our role from a macrocosmic level and advice on how one should go about connecting with Ayahuasca. I also asked Carlos where he recommends people visit in Peru, the actual name of the Jivaro tribe, and what is up with the Shrunken Heads! This has been my favorite conversation in this realm to this date, Carlos is very brilliant and well versed, please discover more about him and ayahuasca here https://www.ayahuascafoundation.org/Share This Episode: https://share.transistor.fm/s/e249be83Join us on TelegramLeave me a message On Telegram!For Exclusive My Family Thinks I'm Crazy Content: Only 3$ get 50+ Bonus Episodes, Sign up on our Patreon For Exclusive Episodes. Check out the S.E.E.E.N.or on Rokfin@MFTICPodcast on Twitter@myfamilythinksimcrazy on Instagram, Follow, Subscribe, Rate, and Review we appreciate you!https://www.myfamilythinksimcrazy.comhttps://altmediaunited.com/my-family-thinks-im-crazy/Listen to Every AMU Podcast with this link. https://lnns.co/pI5xHeyFdfgGET A NEW PODCASTING APP! https://podcastindex.org/appsMUSICAL CREDITSIntro Song by Destiny Lab IntroMusic: WithinBy In This WorldMusic: Caverns of TimeBy AEROPLANESOutroMusic: Chili ChileBy Mikey GeigerMusic: 12 PesosBy Alessandro GugelMusic: Crayzie By Daniel MustoReleased under a Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License Thanks To Soundstripe★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
En México y en America Latina es preponderante la cultura de la sanación a través de un curandero, en este episodio hablamos de esto y más. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Recent global events have unmasked inequitable healthcare systems that disproportionately affect poor Latinx populations along the U.S-Mexico border. Professor Jennifer K. Seman's recent publication offers a brief insight into these inequities by approaching borderlands modes of care from a historical perspective to reveal how two vital practitioners of curanderismo – “An earth-based healing practice that blends elements of Indigenous medicine with folk Catholicism” (1) – served their communities to heal physical and societal ills at the turn of the twentieth century. Borderlands Curanderos: The Worlds of Santa Teresa Urrea and Don Pedrito Jaramillo (University of Texas Press, 2021) follows the biographies of these two Mexican folk healers as they traverse borders during a moment of increased nation-building, as they are implicated in the world of the spiritualist movement, and stand firm in their faith as they are wedged against professional modern medicine. Seman grounds the history of curanderismo in the cross-cultural exchange between European, Native American, and African heritages and practices that depend largely on the belief that there is a connectedness between the mind, body, and spirit. By utilizing institutional and non-institutional archives, newspaper accounts, and built environments in which Santa Teresa and Don Pedrito traversed and are memorialized, Borderlands Curanderos offers a detailed look at their lives. One major thread linking the curanderos is how they negotiated the state and state power during the early 20th century in Mexico and the United States. “It was their extraordinary responses to the failure of institutions that made Santa Teresa and Don Pedro threats – and, in some cases, assets — to the states and institutional authority,” (4) writes Seman. In other words, their medicine did not come from the state, the church, or professional medicine, as argued in her book, but rather from a distinct cultural practice that revitalized the sick. These two healers took on the insurmountable task of tending to people and geographies who were experiencing the aftermath unleashed by settler colonialism and enslavement; or, as Seman would argue, the generational susto brought on by conquerors and settlers (9). Jonathan Cortez is currently the 2021-2023 César Chávez Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Latin American, Latino, and Caribbean Studies at Dartmouth College. You can follow Jonathan on Twitter @joncortz Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/latino-studies
Recent global events have unmasked inequitable healthcare systems that disproportionately affect poor Latinx populations along the U.S-Mexico border. Professor Jennifer K. Seman's recent publication offers a brief insight into these inequities by approaching borderlands modes of care from a historical perspective to reveal how two vital practitioners of curanderismo – “An earth-based healing practice that blends elements of Indigenous medicine with folk Catholicism” (1) – served their communities to heal physical and societal ills at the turn of the twentieth century. Borderlands Curanderos: The Worlds of Santa Teresa Urrea and Don Pedrito Jaramillo (University of Texas Press, 2021) follows the biographies of these two Mexican folk healers as they traverse borders during a moment of increased nation-building, as they are implicated in the world of the spiritualist movement, and stand firm in their faith as they are wedged against professional modern medicine. Seman grounds the history of curanderismo in the cross-cultural exchange between European, Native American, and African heritages and practices that depend largely on the belief that there is a connectedness between the mind, body, and spirit. By utilizing institutional and non-institutional archives, newspaper accounts, and built environments in which Santa Teresa and Don Pedrito traversed and are memorialized, Borderlands Curanderos offers a detailed look at their lives. One major thread linking the curanderos is how they negotiated the state and state power during the early 20th century in Mexico and the United States. “It was their extraordinary responses to the failure of institutions that made Santa Teresa and Don Pedro threats – and, in some cases, assets — to the states and institutional authority,” (4) writes Seman. In other words, their medicine did not come from the state, the church, or professional medicine, as argued in her book, but rather from a distinct cultural practice that revitalized the sick. These two healers took on the insurmountable task of tending to people and geographies who were experiencing the aftermath unleashed by settler colonialism and enslavement; or, as Seman would argue, the generational susto brought on by conquerors and settlers (9). Jonathan Cortez is currently the 2021-2023 César Chávez Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Latin American, Latino, and Caribbean Studies at Dartmouth College. You can follow Jonathan on Twitter @joncortz Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Recent global events have unmasked inequitable healthcare systems that disproportionately affect poor Latinx populations along the U.S-Mexico border. Professor Jennifer K. Seman's recent publication offers a brief insight into these inequities by approaching borderlands modes of care from a historical perspective to reveal how two vital practitioners of curanderismo – “An earth-based healing practice that blends elements of Indigenous medicine with folk Catholicism” (1) – served their communities to heal physical and societal ills at the turn of the twentieth century. Borderlands Curanderos: The Worlds of Santa Teresa Urrea and Don Pedrito Jaramillo (University of Texas Press, 2021) follows the biographies of these two Mexican folk healers as they traverse borders during a moment of increased nation-building, as they are implicated in the world of the spiritualist movement, and stand firm in their faith as they are wedged against professional modern medicine. Seman grounds the history of curanderismo in the cross-cultural exchange between European, Native American, and African heritages and practices that depend largely on the belief that there is a connectedness between the mind, body, and spirit. By utilizing institutional and non-institutional archives, newspaper accounts, and built environments in which Santa Teresa and Don Pedrito traversed and are memorialized, Borderlands Curanderos offers a detailed look at their lives. One major thread linking the curanderos is how they negotiated the state and state power during the early 20th century in Mexico and the United States. “It was their extraordinary responses to the failure of institutions that made Santa Teresa and Don Pedro threats – and, in some cases, assets — to the states and institutional authority,” (4) writes Seman. In other words, their medicine did not come from the state, the church, or professional medicine, as argued in her book, but rather from a distinct cultural practice that revitalized the sick. These two healers took on the insurmountable task of tending to people and geographies who were experiencing the aftermath unleashed by settler colonialism and enslavement; or, as Seman would argue, the generational susto brought on by conquerors and settlers (9). Jonathan Cortez is currently the 2021-2023 César Chávez Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Latin American, Latino, and Caribbean Studies at Dartmouth College. You can follow Jonathan on Twitter @joncortz Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
Recent global events have unmasked inequitable healthcare systems that disproportionately affect poor Latinx populations along the U.S-Mexico border. Professor Jennifer K. Seman's recent publication offers a brief insight into these inequities by approaching borderlands modes of care from a historical perspective to reveal how two vital practitioners of curanderismo – “An earth-based healing practice that blends elements of Indigenous medicine with folk Catholicism” (1) – served their communities to heal physical and societal ills at the turn of the twentieth century. Borderlands Curanderos: The Worlds of Santa Teresa Urrea and Don Pedrito Jaramillo (University of Texas Press, 2021) follows the biographies of these two Mexican folk healers as they traverse borders during a moment of increased nation-building, as they are implicated in the world of the spiritualist movement, and stand firm in their faith as they are wedged against professional modern medicine. Seman grounds the history of curanderismo in the cross-cultural exchange between European, Native American, and African heritages and practices that depend largely on the belief that there is a connectedness between the mind, body, and spirit. By utilizing institutional and non-institutional archives, newspaper accounts, and built environments in which Santa Teresa and Don Pedrito traversed and are memorialized, Borderlands Curanderos offers a detailed look at their lives. One major thread linking the curanderos is how they negotiated the state and state power during the early 20th century in Mexico and the United States. “It was their extraordinary responses to the failure of institutions that made Santa Teresa and Don Pedro threats – and, in some cases, assets — to the states and institutional authority,” (4) writes Seman. In other words, their medicine did not come from the state, the church, or professional medicine, as argued in her book, but rather from a distinct cultural practice that revitalized the sick. These two healers took on the insurmountable task of tending to people and geographies who were experiencing the aftermath unleashed by settler colonialism and enslavement; or, as Seman would argue, the generational susto brought on by conquerors and settlers (9). Jonathan Cortez is currently the 2021-2023 César Chávez Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Latin American, Latino, and Caribbean Studies at Dartmouth College. You can follow Jonathan on Twitter @joncortz Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/latin-american-studies
Recent global events have unmasked inequitable healthcare systems that disproportionately affect poor Latinx populations along the U.S-Mexico border. Professor Jennifer K. Seman's recent publication offers a brief insight into these inequities by approaching borderlands modes of care from a historical perspective to reveal how two vital practitioners of curanderismo – “An earth-based healing practice that blends elements of Indigenous medicine with folk Catholicism” (1) – served their communities to heal physical and societal ills at the turn of the twentieth century. Borderlands Curanderos: The Worlds of Santa Teresa Urrea and Don Pedrito Jaramillo (University of Texas Press, 2021) follows the biographies of these two Mexican folk healers as they traverse borders during a moment of increased nation-building, as they are implicated in the world of the spiritualist movement, and stand firm in their faith as they are wedged against professional modern medicine. Seman grounds the history of curanderismo in the cross-cultural exchange between European, Native American, and African heritages and practices that depend largely on the belief that there is a connectedness between the mind, body, and spirit. By utilizing institutional and non-institutional archives, newspaper accounts, and built environments in which Santa Teresa and Don Pedrito traversed and are memorialized, Borderlands Curanderos offers a detailed look at their lives. One major thread linking the curanderos is how they negotiated the state and state power during the early 20th century in Mexico and the United States. “It was their extraordinary responses to the failure of institutions that made Santa Teresa and Don Pedro threats – and, in some cases, assets — to the states and institutional authority,” (4) writes Seman. In other words, their medicine did not come from the state, the church, or professional medicine, as argued in her book, but rather from a distinct cultural practice that revitalized the sick. These two healers took on the insurmountable task of tending to people and geographies who were experiencing the aftermath unleashed by settler colonialism and enslavement; or, as Seman would argue, the generational susto brought on by conquerors and settlers (9). Jonathan Cortez is currently the 2021-2023 César Chávez Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Latin American, Latino, and Caribbean Studies at Dartmouth College. You can follow Jonathan on Twitter @joncortz Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/medicine
Recent global events have unmasked inequitable healthcare systems that disproportionately affect poor Latinx populations along the U.S-Mexico border. Professor Jennifer K. Seman's recent publication offers a brief insight into these inequities by approaching borderlands modes of care from a historical perspective to reveal how two vital practitioners of curanderismo – “An earth-based healing practice that blends elements of Indigenous medicine with folk Catholicism” (1) – served their communities to heal physical and societal ills at the turn of the twentieth century. Borderlands Curanderos: The Worlds of Santa Teresa Urrea and Don Pedrito Jaramillo (University of Texas Press, 2021) follows the biographies of these two Mexican folk healers as they traverse borders during a moment of increased nation-building, as they are implicated in the world of the spiritualist movement, and stand firm in their faith as they are wedged against professional modern medicine. Seman grounds the history of curanderismo in the cross-cultural exchange between European, Native American, and African heritages and practices that depend largely on the belief that there is a connectedness between the mind, body, and spirit. By utilizing institutional and non-institutional archives, newspaper accounts, and built environments in which Santa Teresa and Don Pedrito traversed and are memorialized, Borderlands Curanderos offers a detailed look at their lives. One major thread linking the curanderos is how they negotiated the state and state power during the early 20th century in Mexico and the United States. “It was their extraordinary responses to the failure of institutions that made Santa Teresa and Don Pedro threats – and, in some cases, assets — to the states and institutional authority,” (4) writes Seman. In other words, their medicine did not come from the state, the church, or professional medicine, as argued in her book, but rather from a distinct cultural practice that revitalized the sick. These two healers took on the insurmountable task of tending to people and geographies who were experiencing the aftermath unleashed by settler colonialism and enslavement; or, as Seman would argue, the generational susto brought on by conquerors and settlers (9). Jonathan Cortez is currently the 2021-2023 César Chávez Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Latin American, Latino, and Caribbean Studies at Dartmouth College. You can follow Jonathan on Twitter @joncortz Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/anthropology
Recent global events have unmasked inequitable healthcare systems that disproportionately affect poor Latinx populations along the U.S-Mexico border. Professor Jennifer K. Seman's recent publication offers a brief insight into these inequities by approaching borderlands modes of care from a historical perspective to reveal how two vital practitioners of curanderismo – “An earth-based healing practice that blends elements of Indigenous medicine with folk Catholicism” (1) – served their communities to heal physical and societal ills at the turn of the twentieth century. Borderlands Curanderos: The Worlds of Santa Teresa Urrea and Don Pedrito Jaramillo (University of Texas Press, 2021) follows the biographies of these two Mexican folk healers as they traverse borders during a moment of increased nation-building, as they are implicated in the world of the spiritualist movement, and stand firm in their faith as they are wedged against professional modern medicine. Seman grounds the history of curanderismo in the cross-cultural exchange between European, Native American, and African heritages and practices that depend largely on the belief that there is a connectedness between the mind, body, and spirit. By utilizing institutional and non-institutional archives, newspaper accounts, and built environments in which Santa Teresa and Don Pedrito traversed and are memorialized, Borderlands Curanderos offers a detailed look at their lives. One major thread linking the curanderos is how they negotiated the state and state power during the early 20th century in Mexico and the United States. “It was their extraordinary responses to the failure of institutions that made Santa Teresa and Don Pedro threats – and, in some cases, assets — to the states and institutional authority,” (4) writes Seman. In other words, their medicine did not come from the state, the church, or professional medicine, as argued in her book, but rather from a distinct cultural practice that revitalized the sick. These two healers took on the insurmountable task of tending to people and geographies who were experiencing the aftermath unleashed by settler colonialism and enslavement; or, as Seman would argue, the generational susto brought on by conquerors and settlers (9). Jonathan Cortez is currently the 2021-2023 César Chávez Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Latin American, Latino, and Caribbean Studies at Dartmouth College. You can follow Jonathan on Twitter @joncortz Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Recent global events have unmasked inequitable healthcare systems that disproportionately affect poor Latinx populations along the U.S-Mexico border. Professor Jennifer K. Seman's recent publication offers a brief insight into these inequities by approaching borderlands modes of care from a historical perspective to reveal how two vital practitioners of curanderismo – “An earth-based healing practice that blends elements of Indigenous medicine with folk Catholicism” (1) – served their communities to heal physical and societal ills at the turn of the twentieth century. Borderlands Curanderos: The Worlds of Santa Teresa Urrea and Don Pedrito Jaramillo (University of Texas Press, 2021) follows the biographies of these two Mexican folk healers as they traverse borders during a moment of increased nation-building, as they are implicated in the world of the spiritualist movement, and stand firm in their faith as they are wedged against professional modern medicine. Seman grounds the history of curanderismo in the cross-cultural exchange between European, Native American, and African heritages and practices that depend largely on the belief that there is a connectedness between the mind, body, and spirit. By utilizing institutional and non-institutional archives, newspaper accounts, and built environments in which Santa Teresa and Don Pedrito traversed and are memorialized, Borderlands Curanderos offers a detailed look at their lives. One major thread linking the curanderos is how they negotiated the state and state power during the early 20th century in Mexico and the United States. “It was their extraordinary responses to the failure of institutions that made Santa Teresa and Don Pedro threats – and, in some cases, assets — to the states and institutional authority,” (4) writes Seman. In other words, their medicine did not come from the state, the church, or professional medicine, as argued in her book, but rather from a distinct cultural practice that revitalized the sick. These two healers took on the insurmountable task of tending to people and geographies who were experiencing the aftermath unleashed by settler colonialism and enslavement; or, as Seman would argue, the generational susto brought on by conquerors and settlers (9). Jonathan Cortez is currently the 2021-2023 César Chávez Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of Latin American, Latino, and Caribbean Studies at Dartmouth College. You can follow Jonathan on Twitter @joncortz Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/christian-studies
Hay un dicho muy popular que dice que todo en esta vida se tiene que pagar. Así que si tienes tus pecados y mentiras, en algún momento la vida te lo va a cobrar.Como la historia de este pobre tipo, que se rompía el lomo trabajando para mantener a sus dos familias y un día -gracias a la trampa del Bueno, la Mala y el Feo- se fue todo a la basura. ¿Qué le pasó? Aprovechando la Semana Santa donde muchas familias se reunieron, Yael de las Estrellas nos dice cómo hacer de dichas fiestas algo pacífico y no terminar peleando con nuestros familiares.Y no vas a creer la razón por la que una mujer que acaba de salir de la cárcel con prisión domiciliaria, quiere regresar al lugar donde estuvo recluida. Las autoridades no lo pueden creer y la mujer amenaza con cometer otro delito si no le cumplen sus deseos.
Alvar Núñez, Dorantes, Castillo y el negro Estebanico recorren tierras desconocidas seguidos por una multitud de indios que los tienen por curanderos que incluso resucitan muertos...
Jennifer Koshatka Seman is a lecturer in history at Metropolitan State University in Denver. Her work has appeared in Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses and the Journal of the West. Visit "Borderlands Curanderos" at University of Texas Press: https://utpress.utexas.edu/books/seman-borderlands-curanderos Follow Dr. Jennifer Koshatka Seman on Twitter: https://twitter.com/jenniferseman Follow Dr. Arlene Sánchez-Walsh on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AmichelSW
In this episode, with the help of Ms. Taylor Seaver, we explore folk medicine, Brujeria, curanderos, and folk saints like Nino Fidencio and Don Pedro Jaramillo. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/juan-carmona5/support
Hey everybody! Episode 64 of the show is out. In this episode, I spoke with my friend Ben. Ben and I have had a similar path in life. We've both had a similar quest and interest in spirituality, shamanism, martial arts, and religion. We both have spent time with different cultures learning about various paths of healing and medicine. And we both share a common teacher who works with Amazonian medicine. So I knew we would have a lot to talk about and to share. This was a long podcast and we went into a lot of topics around shamanism, plant medicines, ayahuasca, tobacco, and also touched on some of the current world situation. I really enjoyed catching up with Ben and having him share in his wisdom, life path, and thoughts. We had a pretty deep conversation, and Ben has a lot of wisdom to share through his many years of self-exploration and medicine paths. I hope and think you all will get a lot out of this episode. As always, to support this podcast, get early access to shows, bonus material, and Q&As, check out my Patreon page below. Enjoy!“Over the last 20 years, Benjamin has spent extensive time living and learning from traditional healers in Asia, Africa, North America, South America and Australasia. Benjamin has spent long periods in the Amazon and has worked with many Curanderos (healers) there. While in the Amazon, he completed an apprenticeship as a Tabaquero with one of the most renowned and skilled Tabaquero's in Peru. As well as learning from traditional healers, he is also an Acupuncturist and Qigong Practitioner. Benjamin likes to bring this knowledge to all of his teaching and healing work.”For more info about Benjamin and his work, visit: https://www.facebook.com/BenjaminWatiWaraThis episode of the show is sponsored by the Temple of the Way of Light. To learn more or sign up for a retreat, visit:https://templeofthewayoflight.org/If you enjoy the show, it would be a big help if you could share it with your own audiences via social media or word of mouth. And please Subscribe or Follow and if you can go on Apple Podcasts and leave a starred-rating and a short review. That would be super helpful with the algorithms and getting this show out to more people. Thank you in advance!My colleague Merav Artzi (who I interviewed in episode 28) and I will be running dietas in the Sacred Valley of Peru on September 1-29 and in the Sinai desert of Egypt on October 10-27. If you would like more information about joining us and the work I do, visit my site at: https://www.NicotianaRustica.orgIf you are able to and would like to donate to the show to help out with new content that would be deeply appreciated. For just a few dollars a month you can subscribe through Patreon and it gives you some really nice added benefits like early access to shows, bonus episodes, and a chance to ask personalized questions.To support this podcast on Patreon, visit: https://www.patreon.com/UniverseWithinTo donate directly with PayPal: https://www.paypal.me/jasongrechanikMusic courtesy of: Nuno Moreno (end song). Visit: https://m.soundcloud.com/groove_a_zen_sound and https://nahira-ziwa.bandcamp.com/ And Stefan Kasapovski's Santero Project (intro song). Visit: https://spoti.fi/3y5Rd4Hhttps://www.UniverseWithinPodcast.comhttps://www.facebook.com/UniverseWithinPodcasthttps://www.instagram.com/UniverseWithinPodcast
Welcome to the Psychedelic Conversations Podcast! Episode 20: In this episode we talk about Carlos' background story, how he became interested in medicinal plants through reading Carlos Castaneda books, overcoming his drug addiction after his wakeup call, his first transformative experience drinking Ayahuasca in Peru, synchronicities that take place after a psychedelic experience, the trust one builds with the universe along their path, the retreats that Carlos and his team offer that are lead by Curanderos from the Shipibo tribe, targeting and resolving inaccurate personal truths that were formed from our traumas, what is Ayahuasca and what are its properties, and perceiving beyond our biological limitations (sight, hearing, smell) through drinking Ayahuasca. Later on, we discuss Carlos' powerful understanding of how traumas are formed and how we can overwrite them through the use of psychedelics, the long-term effect of psychedelic treatment vs pharmaceutical treatment, the fish tank analogy and how important changing the environment of an unhealthy individual is rather than trying to fix the individual themself, forgiving but not forgetting, Carlos' thoughts on the future of plant medicines, the complex training involved in becoming an Ayahuasca practitioner and so much more. Connect with Carlos: Twitter: https://twitter.com/AyahuascaFound Website: https://www.ayahuascafoundation.org/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ayahuascaretreats Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ayahuascafoundation/ Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/ayahuasca-foundation/ About Carlos: Carlos was born and raised in the United States and has degrees in both art and philosophy. He moved to Iquitos, Peru, in 2004 and lived with his first teacher for four years before creating the Ayahuasca Foundation in 2008. In 2017, he opened the Riosbo Retreat and Research center and began hosting medical research in 2018. The stage 1 study was completed at the end of 2019 and has now been published in the journal Frontiers of Psychiatry. Carlos appeared in the Netflix series Down to Earth with Zac Efron in 2020 and continues to offer unique educational courses and healing retreats as well as host important research into the traditional use of ayahuasca and plant medicine. The published study on "Ceremonial Ayahuasca in Amazonian Retreats": https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyt.2021.687615/full?utm_source=F-NTF&utm_medium=EMLX&utm_campaign=PRD_FEOPS_20170000_ARTICLE Thank you so much for joining us! Psychedelic Conversations Podcast is designed to educate, inform, and expand awareness. For more information, please head over to https://www.psychedelicconversations.com This show is for information purposes only and is not intended to provide mental health or medical advice. About Susan Guner: Susan is a trained somatic, trauma-informed holistic psychotherapist with a mindfulness-based approach grounded in Transpersonal Psychology that focuses on holistic perspective through introspection, insight, and empathetic self-exploration to increase self-awareness, allowing the integration of the mind, body and spirit aspects of human experience in personal growth and development. Connect with Susan: Website: https://www.psychedelicconversations.com/ Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/susan.guner LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/susan-guner/ Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/susanguner Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/susanguner Blog: https://susanguner.medium.com/ Podcast: https://anchor.fm/susan-guner #PsychedelicConversations #SusanGuner #PsychedelicPodcast #Microdosing #PsychedelicScience #PlantMedicines #PsychedelicResearch #Entheogens
Make a One-time Donation via Paypal to support THIS SILVER DRAKAINA: https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/queenofthestars Take a Journey with QUEEN & my guest in this episode, EUCALIP GEA. Today we are traveling to PERÚ, to the Sacred Valley; A powerful location whose 5 elements: Fire, Earth, Wind, Water & Heart, support and inspire us every day. A place where there exists a true Alchemy and Balance of the Masculine Energy of Sun, Taiti Inti, and Feminine Energy of Mother Earth, Pachamama. It is precisely here in the Andes where we fly High with the Spirit of Condor and receive the wisdom, love and protection of the Apus, the Sacred Mountains. And if we are open to Healing, deep Healing, these lands may gift us connections to Master Plants/Master Teachers, Shamans & Curanderos, Medicine Women, and to the Mother of all, Pachamama herself. I invite you to listen to this conversation I was blessed to have with a true Soul Sister and Mujer Medicina, who reminds us that the Medicine is Everywhere. From Avalon to Peru, and every single Gridpoint on this glorious planet we call EARTH/TIERRA. When we connect to the Earth Wisdom, we can begin to remember & then embody our “Mujer Medicina”. ***Opening Medicine song “NATURALEZA” by Danit (You can find this artist on Youtube and Spotify) ***In this episode Eucalip Gea and I connect hearts from Avalon & the Sacred Valley of Perú to share about: Who the Medicine Woman (Mujer Medicina) is, what she looks and feels like, and what it means to Embody this Frequency. We share about our Lineages & Ancestors that have informed our life paths and Eucalip shares about the First Medicine Woman in our life (Mother or Grandmother figure usually). We discuss Earth Medicine, connecting to the 5 Elements and to the Big Mother of All Pachamama/Mother Earth, as well as connecting to the Intuition and Wisdom each of us carries inside (encoded in our DNA and Blueprint). And of course, I invite Eucalip Gea to share about her Drum Magic, her journey to become a drum doula, and how she weaved and spiraled her way from her native island of Kiskeya (Dominican Republic) to the Sacred Valley of Perú, which is where we met last year (**I birthed my incredible Medicine Drum with her in Sacred Ritual). To connect with me and explore all of my current Offerings: Booking Dragon Gridwork Sessions, Joining our Powerful Cacao Gatherings monthly, or to go on the 8Week Deep Dive within the Inner Sanctum: be sure to visit my WEBSITE PATREON | LIVE FROM THE HEART | YOUTUBE | PRIVATE SESSIONS For more Serpent/Dragon Medicine & my Current Gridwork Shares, Check out IG: @dragonslovecacao and @silverriverofgrace “The Medicine Woman (Mujer Medicina) is … the woman that is connected to the Earth. The Medicine is Everywhere… and [yet] society taught us that the Medicine Woman [is the] Witch, or the Curandera or the Curandero (Healer). If we observe very closely we see that they are just normal human beings who have a strong connection to nature, they listen, they hear, they're present.” -Eucalip Gea To connect with Eucalip Gea for more of her magical shares or to participate in a Shamanic Drum Birthing Ritual with her in Peru, here is her Facebook & Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/geaeucalip/
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Una vez mas hablamos de esos temitas que nos preocupan, las vacunas, los curanderos bendecidos por la virgen y la gente que se alimenta con el sol. Feliz Septiembre para todos. Become a Patron! Descargar