Read by Peter Lamborn Wilson on WBAI 99.5FM NYC sometime
in 1994 during one of his Ayahuasca shows (same as the icaro
tape). In this audio transcription unknown words are
spelled phonetically and marked with (sp) when they first appear.
If you, dear reader, are an expert and know the correct words
which are phoneticized here, don't hesitate to email me the
corrections.
Come to Disembodied Eyes GluckSpilz
HTTP://www.cnw.com/~neuro/gaz/
Ayahuasca Drinkers among the cha-ma (sp) Indians by
Heinz ku-sel (sp) see what i mean?
Originally appeared in the Psychedelic Review, 1965
Read from reprint in the Psychozoic Press I lived for seven years
traveling and trading in the upper Amazon region and often heard
stories about the effect of ayahuasca. Once on a long canoe trip
down the river my indian companion had chanted the song of the
Goddess of Ayahuasca. Ayahuasca, a Quechua word meaning
'vine of death' is the collective name for various climbing tropical
lianas and also designates the tea prepared from the leaves of the
vine, either by itself or in combination with other leaves. Indians
and the Mestizos alike visit the ayahuasquero or witch-doctor
when they are ailing or think they need a general check-up, or
want to make an important decision, or simply because they feel
like it. Among the scattered half-casts and natives of the swamps
and rainforests of the Ucayali region the ayahuasca cult plays a
significant role in their religious medical practices and provides
them with a good deal of entertainment. Repeatedly I heard how in
a vision induced by drinking the tea prepared from the liana the
patient had perceived the specific plant needed for his cure -
had later searched and found it in the jungle and had subsequently
recovered. To the enigmatic mind of the Indian ayahuasca opens
the gate to the healing properties of the forces of nature at
whose mercy he lives. A recurrent theme whenever the natives
refer to the results of the drug is the vision of the 'Procession of
Plants,' with garlic, 'the king of the good plants' leading the way.
Garlic, tobacco, quinine and oh-hey (sp), a tree latex, are at the
head of a long line of friendly elf-like plants which, in ayahuasca
visions, bow to mankind, offering their services. The Campa
Indians, sturdy fellows, who today specialize in drawing
mahogany and cedar logs for the sawmills in Iquitos
undergo a purge of ayahuasca before they enter the flooded areas
of the forest to float out the logs and assemble them into
tremendous rafts. For a cure of that nature they prepare themselves
by a prolonged diet, avoiding meat, salt, alcohol and sugar.
Aside from the main use of the drug for curing or keeping the
consumer in good general condition, ayahuasca will, according to
its users, induce clairvoyance and may for example solve
a theft or prophesy the success or failure of a given enterprise. A
man might be planning a trip to a certain river where he knows of
a good place to tap rubber, but to be sure of good results he
will consult ayahuasca first. After that, more than likely, he will
abandon the enterprise altogether and set off in another direction
to pan gold, hunt peck-oh-re (sp) or do something else. In these
unhurried hours and days I arrived at an insight into the native's
fantastic beliefs and images, the richness of which is equaled only
by the growth of the surrounding vegetation. Their superstitions,
ideas and images freely cross and recross the borderline of reality
in strangely patterned ways. Their stories have one thing in
common - man, plant and animal are one, forever woven into an
inextricable pattern of cause and effect. Later I found that
ayahuasca visions are fabrics that illustrate endless combinations
of this pattern. Man, plant and animal also passively undergo the
irradiations of each other. Irradiations of powers that to us are
mostly non-existent. Somehow sometimes they even acquire each
other's characteristics. Once, while drifting in a canoe the Campa
indian with me disturbed the silence by imitating the voice of the
kuto-mono (sp), a copper colored monkey. A kuto-mono from the
shore answered him, a third joined in. After a while the whole
whole shoreline seems to come alive with kuto-monos. The
natives use this abliity to imitate voices to such a degree that
hunting takes on the character of treacherous assasination. Though
hardly in the way of an equivalent, the animal world puts out a
bird that I heard one night on the pa-cha-tey-ah (sp) River. It filled
the darkness with an ascending scale of glass clear notes. Quite
likely it is a beautiful scale but nevertheless it
resembles the hysterical laughter of an insane women. It shocked
me. I felt upset, mocked, laughed at.
Everything calls in the jungle. Once a Campa indian in my boat
when we were drifting far from the shore was called by ayahuasca!
He followed the call and later emerged from the forest with
the a sampling of the fairly rare liana that today is cultivated by
the ayahuasquero in secret spots. I myself certainly did not hear
the call. If this jungle life and its irrational mutual dependency
forms a picture of general confusion, ayahuasca is the magic
mirror that reflects this confusion as something beautiful and
attractive. For whomever I listened to, all manifested the
enjoyment of a wonderous spectacle that was pleasing to the
senses. If fearsome visions occurred they said that
the ayahuasquero could easily dispell them by shaking a dry twig
near the ear of the affected drinker; or by blowing the smoke of a
cigarette on the crown of his head. The aesthetic climax
of the spectacle was, they claimed, the 'vision of the goddess with
concealed eyes,' who dwelt inside the twining tropical vine. Many
times I listened to these tales but it never crossed my mind
to try the liana myself. It belonged definitely to the local indian
lore, to something sordid, outside of the law, something publically
frowned upon like the binding up of the heads that the cha-ma
(sp) practice on their babies; or like burying one twin alive as they
also do; or so many other equally fantastic or ghastly things.
In 1949 I had my headquarters in a white washed brick house in
pu-cul-pa overlooking a wide curve of the Ucayali. Pu-cul-pa at
that time was a village of about 200 homes, a Catholic church, an
American Protestant mission, a Masonic temple and two primitive
hotels. The place had gained some importance by being at the end
of the only road precariously connecting Lima and the Pacific with
a navigable river of the Amazon system. It also had an airport
which could be used when the ground was dry. After the war and
the falling of prices for rubber, the importance of the read
decreased and Pu-cul-pa fell back into the stagnation of a Peruvian
jungle settlement. At that time I realized that my days in the jungle
were coming to an end and in spite of being somewhat skeptical
about the possible effects of the drug, I decided to try it.
I drank the bitter salty extract of the vine three times. It seemed too
much trouble to look for a venerated great ayahuasquero like Juan
in-uma (sp) who lived up the river near masi-eh-sia
(sp). There were a number of less widely esteemed fellows in pu-
cul-pa such as no-lore-bey (sp) who was recommended to me as
the most reliable of the witch doctors in the village. Hs hut was the
last upstream in the long row of buildings above the steep shore of
pu-cul-pa. It was there that I found myself sitting on an empty
gasoline crate while other people squatted on the floor. I drank the
required dose, about a quart, and nothing happened. The only
noticible effect was an increased auditory sensitivity which is the
reason why the drug is usually consumed in secluded places at
night. A neighborhood rooster crowed recklessly which upset me
considerably for it seemed to happen right inside my head. The
people in the hut were disturbed also - they sighed and shifted
their positions uneasily. No-lore-bey blamed the ineffectiveness of
the drug on the fact that it had not been freshly prepared.
Another evening the guide who carried my blanket led me to a hut
far outside the limits of the village. The hut, a typical structure of a
floor on stilts without walls covered by a thached roof, belonged to
sal-dani-ah (sp), a mestizo I did not particularly like who had
many patients in the village. I lay down on the raised floor of
beaten palm bark, overlooking the clearing, and sal-dani-ah
handed me a bottle of ayahuasca. I started to drink and heard him
singing behind a partition where he was tending his patients. I
listened carefully to the startling song that is always sung in ken-
cha (sp), the language of the highland indians which only old
people in the Ucayali region speak. The song starts with a shrill
musical question and continues with a series of answers
intermixed with hissing sounds and syncopated with gutteral
noises produced with the tongue against the palate. I drank the
whole dose sal-dani-ah had prepared for me and felt slightly dizzy
and nauseated. After a while I climbed down from the raised floor
using the ladder, made as usual by hacking footholds into an
upright log. The clearing and surrounding jungle looked as though
covered with white ashes in the strong moonlight. From the hut
behind me I heard sound of voices speaking monotonously. I heard
sal-dani-ah intermittently singing the song or administering his
cures. One of the procedures used to relieve a pain is actually to
suck the pain out of the hurting member. When this has been often
enough the pain is supposed to be located in the doctor's mouth
and removed from there by spitting. Again my stimulated hearing
reported those awful noises so intensely that at times they were
hard to endure. The next day sal-dani-ah attributed this failure to
the fact that I has a slight cold. I was more skeptical than
ever. After all, if unlike those people, I was not able to hear the call
of the plant, or to walk noiselessly through the jungle maybe I
lacked also the required acuteness of senses to meet the irridescent
goddess.I am glad that I went a third time. I made another
appointment with no-lore-bey for a saturday night. I walked out to
his place at the edge of the forest at about 10pm. I realized that his
one room house that stood in darkness and silence was crowded
and waited outside till he emerged. I told him that I would rather
not join the crowd and he obligingly showed me a good-sized
canoe pulled up for repairs and resting about twenty feet from the
cane wall of his shack towards the edge of the jungle. I wrapped
myself in a blanket and lay down comfortably; my shoulders
against the cedar walls of the dugout - my head resting on the
slanting stern. I felt relaxed and full of expectation. No-lore-bey
had appeared eager and confident. A small barefooted indian with
something queer and slightly funny about his face he showed a
nervousness that did not go with his sturdy build. He seemed to be
never quite present as if continuously distracted by frequent
encounters with his vegetable gods and devils. His eyes were not
steady but pulled in different directions. While something fearful,
there was something very happy about this man, as if a hidden
gaity were buried under his worried features. He believed himself
smart and powerful. He lived a glorious life, even if sometimes he
seemed to go to pieces in his effort to walk back and forth
professionally between two equally puzzling worlds. I remembered
seeing him once in the como-sari-ah (sp) in conflict with one of
them (one of those equally puzzling worlds), accused again of
leading a disorderly life and practicing quackery. He was standing
in his formerly green trousers before a wooden table and the
Peruvian flag answering the rude guardia-seville (sp) with a
humble smile - his eyes going apologetically in all directions.
He soon appeared with a gourd full of liquid he had carefully
prepared by stewing for hours the leaves of the vine with those of
another plant who's name possibly was his secret. He squatted
at the canoe and whispered, his eyes going sideways, 'Gringo,
today you will experience the real thing. I will serve you well. We
will have the true intoxication. You will be satisfied, wait and
see..' and he left me alone. After a while a girl approached me from
the hut and asked for a cigarette. She lighted it, inhaled, and for a
moment I saw her wide face surrounded by hard black hair, then
she walked noiselessly back into the hut. A two-eye-oh (sp) bird
began to call repeatedly high above my face. The whistling and
melodious sound at the end of his call seemed to touch me like a
whiplash. A truck loaded with cedar boards left the village and on
the distant highyway accelerated madly and shifted gears. By that
time I knew the drug was working in me. I felt fine and heard no-
lore-bey whispering near my ear again, 'Do you want more? Shall I
give you more? Do you want to see the Goddess well?' And again I
drank the full gourd of cool bitter liquid.
I cannot say how often no-lore-bey was present whispering and
drinking with me, singing the song near my ear and far away,
treating his patients and making those awful primitive noises that
I despised. There was another sound that upset me more than
anything, like something round falling into a deep well, a
mysterious, slippery and indecent sound. Much later I found out
that it was produced by normally innocuous action of no-lore-bey
ladeling water out of an old oil barrel by means of a snall gourd.
I yawned through what seemed to be an interminable night till the
muscles of my face were strained. Sometimes I yawned so hard
that it seemed to me as loud as the roaring of the sea on
a rocky coast. Things got so gay, absorbing and beautiful that I
had to laugh foolishly. The laughter came out of my insides of its
own accord and shook me absurdly. At the same time I
cried, and the tears that were running down my face were
annoying, but they kept running madly and no matter how often I
wiped my cheeks I could not dry them.The first visual experience
was like fireworks. Then a continuously creating power produced
a wealth of simple and elaborate flat patterns and color. There
were patterns that consisted of twining repeats and others
geometrically organized with rectangles or squares that were like
Maya designs or those decorations which the cha-ma paint of their
thin ringing pottery. The visions were in constant flux. First
intermittently, then successively the flat patterns gave way to
deep brown, purple or beige depths like dimly lighted caves in
which the walls were too far away to be perceived. At times snake-
like stems of plants were growing profusely in the depths,
at others these were covered with arrangements of myriads of
lights that, like dewdrops of gems, adorned them. Now and then
brilliant light illuminated the scene as though by photographic
flash showing wide landscapes with trees placed at regular
intervals or just empty plains. A big ship with many flags appeared
in one of these flashes. A merry-go-round with people dressed in
brightly colored garments in another. The song of no-lore-bey in
the backround seemed to physically touch a brain-center, and each
of his hissing, gutteral syncopations hurt and started new centers
of hallucinations which kept on moving and changing to the
rhythm of his chant. At a certain point I felt helplessly that no-lore-
bey and his song could do ANYTHING with me. There was one
note in his song that came back again and again which made me
slide deeper whenever it appeared, deeper and deeper into a place
where I might lose consciousness. If, to reassure myself, I opened
my eyes, I saw the dark wall of the jungle covered with jewels - as
if a net of lights had been thrown over it. Upon closing my eyes
again I could renew the procession of slick, well-lighted images.
There were two very definite attractions. I enjoyed the unreality of
a created world. The images casual, accidental or imperfect but
fully organized to the last detail of highly complex, consistent, yet
forever changing, designs. They were harmonized in color and had
a slick sensuous polished finish. The other attraction of which I
was very conscious at the time was inexplicable sensation of
intimacy with the visions. They were mine and concerned only me.
I remembered an indian telling me that whenevr he drank
ayahuasca he had such beautiful visions that used to put his hands
over his eyes for fear someone might steal them. I felt the same
way. The color scheme became a harmony of browns and greens.
Naked dancers appeared turning slowly in spiral movements.
Spots of brassy lights played on their bodies which gave them the
texture of polished stone. Their faces were inclined and hidden in
deep shadows. Their coming into existence in the center of the
vision coincided with the rhythm of no-lore-bey's song and they
advanced forward and to the sides, turning slowly. I longed to see
their faces. At last the whole field of vision was taken up by a
single dancer with inclined face covered by a raised arm. As my
desire to see the face became unendurable it appeared suddenly in
full close-up, with closed eyes. I knew that when the extraordinary
face opened those eyes I experienced a satisfaction of a kind I had
never known. It was the visual solution of a personal riddle.
I got up and walked away without disturbing no-lore-bey. When I
arrived home I was still subject to uncontrollable fits of yawning
and laughter. I sat down before my house. I remembered that a
drop of dew fell from the tin roof and that its impact was so noisy
that it made me shudder. I looked at my watch and realized it was
not yet midnight. The next day, and for quite some time I felt
unusually well. Three years later in a letter from pu-cul-pa I heard
that no-lore-bey had been accused of bewitching a man into
insanity and had been jailed in Iquitos.