The narrative effects of shamanic mythology

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verbalized gestalt (autobiographical, fictional or poetic) bringing to mind the capacity of the ... the door for deeper inwardness and relationship(s). .... symbolizing the cycles of seasons (winter, spring, summer, autumn) and of life (birth, life, ..... You were the wolf who has knowledge and who was seen taking care of her family.
The narrative effects of shamanic mythology

The narrative effects of shamanic mythology in palliative care Citation Santarpia, A., Ricci, T., Meuche, G., Gamberini, N., & Destandau, M. (2018). The narrative effects of shamanic mythology in palliative care. Journal of Humanistic Psychology, 1-31. DOI: 10.1177/0022167818777055 Alfonso SANTARPIA1, Aix Marseille Université, LPCPP EA 3278, 13621, Aix en Provence, France. E-mail: [email protected] Tania RICCI Aix Marseille Université, LPCPP EA 3278, 13621, Aix en Provence, France. E-mail : [email protected] Glenn MEUCHE CancerCare, 275 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY 10001, USA. E-mail : [email protected] Nadia GAMBERINI Hospital Salon de Provence, France. E-mail: [email protected] Mireille DESTANDAU La Maison, Centre de soins palliatifs, Quartier Pesquier Sud, Route Blanche 13120 Gardanne, France. E-mail : [email protected]

Abstract We make meaning of disease, suffering, and death through narrative, by telling a story. In a therapeutic narrative approach this paper explores the influence of shamanic intervention in psycho-oncology. This qualitative study seeks to present the narrative effects of detailed shamanic sessions (the use of the drum, and telling and interpreting visions according to the shamanic mythology) in the context of psycho-oncological treatment. In particular, the narrative positions of a patient (Mrs AA) are described (using a software linguistic analysis, TLAB) as they occurred before and after shamanistic sessions. The authors suggested that the Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Alfonso Santarpia, Ph.D. (first author), Office 1.43 – Lab. de Psychologie Clinique, de Psychopathologie Clinique et de Psychanalyse (LPCPP) - Maison de la Recherche, 29, avenue Robert-Schuman, 13621 Aix-en-Provence cedex 1, France. E-mail: [email protected] Tél: +33(0)4 13 55 37 62 - Mobile : +33(0)6 89 89 66 35. 1

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The narrative effects of shamanic mythology shamanism sessions enabled Mrs AA to produce a larger and more singular narrative about her end-of-life experience: from the initial narrative position of feeling “the acute consciousness of finiteness” to an emergent narrative position based on “consciousness of an interdependence/interconnection in all human and spiritual relationships”.

Keywords Mythology, spiritual needs, narrative medicine, palliative care, shamanism, T-LAB linguistic software

Narratives aren’t just the stories we tell our children at night; they are the stories we tell ourselves, the stories that help us make sense out of and find meaning in our experiences (Klein, 2010). Constructing stories is a natural human process that allows one to organize and remember events in a coherent fashion while integrating thoughts and feelings (Pennebaker & Seagal, 1999). In the humanistic approach (Santarpia, 2016), narration is a written or verbalized gestalt (autobiographical, fictional or poetic) bringing to mind the capacity of the reflexive consciousness to mobilize the meaning-making process based on: a) human and motivational sytems (attachment, sensuality, sexuality, exploration, transcendence, caregiving, social affirmation, aversive reponses (Lichtenberg, Lachmann, & Fosshage, 2011; Maslow, 1943); b) the multiple positions of the self (Hermans, 1993) that address the other (real or imaginal) in time (Ricoeur, 1984), in space and in the world (Bruner, 1986). William James (James, 1890) thought that beings are organized and directed by needs or motives ; particular events receive emotional value when certain human basic motives are fulfilled or frustrated (Hermans, 1999; Lichtenberg, Lachmann, & Fosshage, 2011; Maslow, 1943). This idea was the starting point for a narrative theory of the self based on the

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The narrative effects of shamanic mythology metaphor of the person as a “motivated storyteller” (Hermans, 1999). Brain imaging (Hasson, Yang, Vallines, Heeger, & Rubin, 2008; Honey et al., 2012; Lerner, Honey, Silbert, & Hasson, 2011; Regev, Honey, Simony, & Hasson, 2013; Silbert, Honey, Simony, Poeppel, & Hasson, 2014; Simony et al., 2016) supports the idea that when we tell stories to others, there is synchronization between the brain of the person telling a story and the one listening to it. An unconscious reciprocity therefore exists between the story-teller and the person who hears it. The narrative serves perhaps as a bridge thus opening the door for deeper inwardness and relationship(s). A shared neural mechanism supporting both production and comprehension facilitates communication and underlines the importance of studying these elements within unified frameworks (Silbert et al., 2014). Kidd and Castano (2013) show that reading literary fiction temporarily enhances the capacity to identify and understand another’s subjective states. The capacity to remain open to the individual’s story not only enables the therapist to experience the world as the other person may perceive it but also offers an opportunity to “know and become familiar with” oneself as well. The patient in this sense becomes a “reflection” or “mirror” of the other. Referring to the therapeutic use of constructing stories, the idea that the verbalization of feelings can help reduce distress is not new in psychology (Titchener, 1908). Several empirical studies have now demonstrated that verbal disclosure of a traumatic experience can improve physical and psychological wellbeing in the long-term (Hemenover, 2003; Pennebaker, 1997). Pennebaker and collegues (Pennebaker, 1989, 1997; Pennebaker, 2000; Pennebaker & Seagal, 1999) have demonstrated that when individuals write about emotional experiences, significant physical and mental health improvements follow: faster healing after surgery, low blood pressure, stronger immune function, reduced physical symptoms, better sleep in cancer patients, and less fatigue during rheumatoid arthritis. Emotional, physical, and spiritual health and wellbeing is contingent upon the “telling of the story”.

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The narrative effects of shamanic mythology

Narrative and palliative care Protracted illness in particular has the ability to disrupt the life story (Frank, 2013) and can radically frustrate basic human motives. Frank’s term “deep illness” (Frank, 1998) concerning protracted illness is experienced in the certainty that it will be permanent, and with fear of this permanence. Dame Cecily Saunders (Saunders, 1978) can be credited as the caregiver who first advocated the value of listening to the patient’s story; taping and transcribing the illness experiences of hundreds of her dying patients, she transformed medicine (Wittenberg, Ragan, Ferrell, & Virani, 2017). She noted that the care of the whole person included the treatement of “total pain”: physical, emotional, social and spiritual (Sasser & Puchalski, 2010). Indeed, facing the end of life, death, evoked by serious diseases (such as cancer ) is not only a question of techno-scientific medicine, of medical treatment, but is a therapeutic work on our narrative identity (Ricoeur, 1984) and on the appropriate use of a discourse on the 2

disease that can alleviate the anxieties (Kleinman 1988; Pennebaker 2000). The literature that connects narrative and palliative care is rich and varied (for a detailed review see, Charon, 2006; DasGupta & Hurst, 2007; Kleinman, 1988; Stanley & Hurst, 2011): a study of 105 published narratives of health care (Wittenberg-Lyles, Greene, & Sanchez-Reilly, 2007) concluded that using patient and caregiver narratives in health care can assist practitioners. A

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Ricoeur (1984) distinguishes between two different concepts of identity: identity as sameness (‘mêmeté’) and identity as selfhood (‘ipséité’). “Sameness” identity is the identity of something that is always the same which never changes, while “selfhood” identity is sameness across and through change. Narrative identity involves both dimensions.

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The narrative effects of shamanic mythology ‘‘good death’’, includes a relationship between the patient and practitioner ‘‘strong enough to overcome the patient’s feelings of isolation and abandonment’’(Wittenberg-Lyles et al., 2007, p. 200). Narrative becomes intrinsic to ensuring patients’ quality of life throughout the continuation of an illness.

Narratives in shamanic mythology In palliative care, little is known about the therapeutic effects of narrative interventions. Archetypal and post-Jungian approaches (Hillman, 1985, 1997; Samuel, 1995) proposed the idea of therapy “as a search for mythological narrative”. Myths are the stories, the narrative systems people tell to explain nature, history and customs. From this perspective, a myth is a story of ample perspective in which the patient can recognize and distance themself from their individualism. The myth has the power to restore the individual’s connection to the unconscious. The mythological narrative may not only help the individual connect with unconscious material that belongs exclusively to him/her (personal unconscious3), but may also allow for the reorganization or integration of the ego4 (Jung, 1960/1969) into both the larger Self5 and the archetypal world (collective unconscious6). This is especially important for cancer patients who may attempt to find meaning in their end-of-life experience(s). In tribal cultures, myths renew the person’s relationship with the divine. A balance between the human realm and the “land of the gods and goddesses” or, psychologically speaking, between the ego and unconscious is therefore, experienced. The biographical dimension (our life story) is thus inscribed in the collective dimension, and its existential sufferings become more bearable, because it’s possible to see the underlying metaphysical A psychic region containing a person's repressed, forgotten or ignored experiences (Jung, 1960/1969). To Jung, the ego was the ‘‘center of the field of consciousness”, the part of the psyche where our conscious awareness resides, our sense of identity and existence. The ego is just one small portion of the Self (Jung, 1960/1969). 5 The Self embraces both conscious and unconscious; it is the centre of this totality, just as the ego is the centre of consciousness (Jung, 1960/1969). 6 Structures of the unconscious mind which are shared among beings of the same species. To Jung, the human collective unconscious is populated by instincts and by archetypes: universal symbols such as ‘‘The Tree of Life”, ‘‘The Shadow”, ‘‘The Great Mother”, ‘‘The Wise Old Man”, and so on (Jung, 1960/1969). 3 4

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The narrative effects of shamanic mythology cause (Venturini, 1998a, 1998b). Our words give rise to the revelation of other, more distant voices (Santarpia, 2016; Venturini, 1998a, 1998b), and myths are characterizied by rhetorical figures (allegories, metaphors, etc.). In this paper we ask whether a mythological narrative exists that has the power to perform a spiritual transformation on a chronically ill body, even in the face of death. One of the earliest known genres of mythological narrative in which disease becomes a vehicle for spiritual transformation is that of the shaman (Klein, 2010). Shamans develop symbol systems drawn from the archetypal images that are vital to their psychic healing technique (Grim, 1983). Shamanic tradition has marked universal human cultures, it has a history that dates back between 30,000 and 40,000 years, and has been evidenced by the repeated discovery of various ancient cave paintings evoking shamanic activities such as dancing, playing the drum, and dressing with animal skin (Eliade, 1964; Harner, 1980; Moreno, 1988; Pickren, 2014). Michael Harner (1980) defines shamanism as an ancient tradition that uses a modified state of consciousness to acquire knowledge and power to help others. The use of the drum is usual in the shamanic rituals. Drumming facilitates modified states of consciousness and is a seen as a means of healing (Harner, 1980; Simon, 1998), symbolizing the cycles of seasons (winter, spring, summer, autumn) and of life (birth, life, death). The drum allows access to a specific state of consciousness, called the “shamanic state of consciousness”. It is characterized by the organized and multimodal (visual, auditory, tactile, kinesthetic) presence of mental imagery, compatible with shamanic mythology (Houran, Lange, & Crist-Houran, 1997; Noll, 1983, 1985; Walsh, 1995). Shaman mythology consists of a superior, middle and inferior world. The middle world is kind of a non-ordinary counterpart to our “ordinary” reality. Natural spirits, for instance, are common in the shamanic middle-world (Serr, 2017). The higher and the lower world exist outside of time and space. In their journeys to the lower world shamans explore and come into 6

The narrative effects of shamanic mythology contact with power animals, visions of a specific animal that transmit direct messages or symbolic actions relating to the meaning of the disease for the patients. The higher world is inhabited by spiritual guides who assist the shaman in healing work (Achterberg, 1985; Eliade, 1964; Harner, 1980; Money, 2001; Money, 1997; Simon, 1998).

The shamanic tradition insists on the idea that disease is a message for the patient's soul, it marks the need for a change and a new existential meaning (Money, 1997). Death is also a possibility to evolve, as it pushes the human to a full and meaningful existence (Buckley, 1993). Disease is the result of a loss of power, energy or soul. Loss of soul occurs when we lose part of our vital force due to emotional or physical trauma, it exposes itself to a fragmentation of the self: a part of the soul flies into the world of spirits when the situation is too painful to bear. Souls can be stolen by those who (spirits or men) are not energized or who are full of envy (Eliade, 1964; Harner, 1980; Hultkrantz, 1996; Schmais, 1988; Simon, 1998). Illness thus becomes “dis-ease”. The connection to the unconscious or “soul” is truncated and the person experiences isolation and aloneness. The subsequent suffering that is encountered not only results in detachment and the individual’s experience of a “loss of soul”, but also manifests in dissociation from other human beings and the universe as well. Within this framework, the patient’s experience of healing does not necessarily connote a “cure”, but denotes instead the renewal of the person’s ability to reconnect with his or her self. This relationship however, extends beyond the parameters of the individual’s ego and also embraces a connection with the entire universe or “spiritual world”. In tribal cultures the shaman was responsible for facilitating the health not only of the individual, but of the tribe as well. Through the use of various incantations and rituals, shamans were able to “join with” these spirits and forces that transcended the boundaries of the ego. The lessons and insight that were attained through their communication with the “inner realm” were in turn,

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The narrative effects of shamanic mythology transcribed to the tribal community. Shamans as “healers” were guardians of the individual and tribal “soul” and hence were pivotal in maintaining balance and harmony (Canda, 1983). Shamanic ritual and technique can serve as a mentor therefore, to therapy and the therapeutic alliance which focuses on caring for the person’s “soul” and fostering the proper rapport between the ego and unconscious. Shamans often do not view illness as inherently “negative” but instead, as an event that holds the potential for spiritual transformation and growth. Moreover, many studies have confirmed the erroneous association between people with schizophrenia and shamans (Boyer, Klopfer, Brawer, & Kawai, 1964; Noll, 1983; Van Ommeren et al., 2002). In fact, the shaman, as a healer, helps ameliorate the human’s connection with the divine or spirit world. The shaman is capable of “traveling through the supernatural worlds and seeing superhuman beings: gods, demons, spirits of the dead, etc…” (Eliade, 1964, p. 509). Eliade states (1964, p.264) that:

The shaman must first know if the soul of the sick man has been led astray from the village or if it has been stolen by demons and imprisoned in the other world. In the first case, healing is not too difficult: the shaman captures the soul and reintegrates it into the body of the sick person. In the latter case, it must descend to the lower world, and this is a complicated and dangerous undertaking.

Narrative therapy, through the “sharing of the story”, not only affords the person an opportunity to “process” the experience, but also assists them in “meaning-making”. Along with the individual’s ability to ascribe meaning to an event, the narrative can empower and lend itself to an experience healing and “wholeness”. The experience of ‘‘separateness’’ therefore remains nonexistent in shamanic consciousness. Shamanic consciousness recognizes the non-dual nature of the universe and sees the interconnectedness and interrelatedness of all things. This view lies in sharp contrast to Western culture which often underscores the

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The narrative effects of shamanic mythology autonomy and independence of the individual. The shaman’s capacity to transcend the parameters between the self and nonself affords him/her the ability to perceive the world through the prism of the others’ experience rather than solely through the lens of his/her own personal experience and belief system (Meuche, 2015).

Hypothesis Hermans (Hermans, 1999) with his colleagues (Hermans, Rijks, & Kempen, 1993), analysing the verbalizations of the participants, suggested that dialogue is made possible by the temporary hierarchical arrangement of “I-positions” that periodically and spontaneously realign themselves, with dominant “I-positions” retreating into the background and previously non-dominant self-positions coming to the forefront. In this article, we describe the narrative positions of the self or “I-positions” (Hermans, 1993) in Mrs AA’s narrative of her illness taken before, during and after a western shamanic treament. In our research, after the statistical computation (see the methodology), we looked for the associations recalling moments of the patient’s narrative (M1, M2, M3…) of a general narrative position concerning an global existential experience. Recurrent themes revolved around finding meaning in life, her connection to humanity, balance and harmony with the universe, and a sense of transcendence (Breitbart, 2002; Bryson, 2004; Byrne, 2002; Carroll, 2001; Dyson, Cobb, & Forman, 1997; Frankl, 1959; Taylor & Ferszt, 1990; Yalom, 1980). Following the phenomenological tradition (Giorgi, 1997; Giorgi, 2009; Husserl, 1977) these narrative moments are integral parts of the whole and belong to the entire narrative position of the self (Hermans, 1999; Hermans et al., 1993). From this, based upon our findings and perspective, we conclude therefore that these narrative moments cannot be separated from the general meaning structure (narrative position).

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The narrative effects of shamanic mythology We propose that the shamanic mythology can become a vehicle for spiritual transformation. The authors also wish to suggest that shamanism can be used as a creative intervention in enabling patients to produce larger and more singular narratives that we would designate as a “transpersonal narrative position” surrounding end-of-life experiences. We believe it is crucial for the reader to understand that an individual’s continued experience of “wholeness” while living with cancer encompasses not only a sense of physical well-being and security, but also a feeling of emotional and spiritual integrity as well. Although a person’s physical, emotional, and spiritual well-being can stand alone, these components nevertheless are undeniably connected and related to each other. Shamanism has much to contribute therefore as medicine begins to expand its understanding of an individual’s care from a holistic viewpoint.Through the employment of various shamanic techniques such as chanting, drumming and singing, patients’ are afforded an opportunity to find strength in their self. They can begin to address the challenges inherent in ascribing meaning to their illness and experiences.

Methods This piece of research is based on the methodology of idiographic science (Salvatore et al., 2009; Toomela, 2009; Valsinier, 2007): cases should be understood as singular individuals constrained by the given time and the given environment. Molenaar and Valsiner (Moleenar & Valsinier, 2005) proposed that ‘case-specific uniqueness’ can act ‘as a representation of generic, universal processes (p.1). Moreover, several authors have argued about the relevance of case studies in psychotherapeutic process research, especially the possibility of answering the questions of how and why change occured (Gedo, 1999; Hilliard, 1993; Kazdin, 1981; Kiesler, 1981; Moleenar & Valsinier, 2005; Morgan & Morgan, 2001; Stiles, 2003, 2007; Yin, 2005). One such case study was conducted in a French oncology unit by a psychology 10

The narrative effects of shamanic mythology intern with academic supervision. Mrs AA is a 63-year-old married woman whose 30-year-old son recently returned to live in the parental home. After spending nearly forty years as a leading model in the clothing industry, she stopped her career on the discovery of advanced breast cancer. She signed a ‘consent to participate’ form which specified that she could leave the study at any time and that all personal information about her would be kept strictly confidential (research ethics committee declared this study exempt of a specific approval because it is a qualitative study without the use of the biological markers and the invasive techniques). Prior to her participation in this research study Mrs AA was screened by the attending psychiatrist to determine whether or not any substance abuse history and/or that current drug use existed. The results of the psychiatric evaluation indicated no history of drug abuse, nor had Mrs. AA experienced any significant psychiatric events in her life such as psychosis or schizophrenia. Her scores on the anxiety effect, measured by The State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (Spielberger, 1983), also demonstrated “weak” to “very weak” anxiety. After careful deliberation and further consultation with the psychiatrist, it was decided that Mrs AA was suited to partake in this study. It should be noted that throughout the protocol Mrs AA continued to undergo psychiatric evaluation in which her psychological/emotional stability and integrity was closely monitored. Given these indicators, the visions and narrative that Mrs. AA shared with the team do not appear to be influenced by any chronic mental illness or modified state of consciousness initiated by drug use.

Presentation of shamanic therapist This study was achieved thanks to the participation of a 57 year-old French female Mrs BF, a professional music-therapist who undertook substantial training in shamanism with a female

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The narrative effects of shamanic mythology Amazonian Indian shaman7. Mrs BF completed 7 years of training with 2 or 3 trips to the Amazon Rainforest. She also learnt and integrated Amazonian and Ojibway shamanic traditions. She performs rituals for releasing, cleansing and harmonizing (using plants). These ceremonies are essential to purifying the body, spirit and heart, and can be used for healing. Generally, she dances and plays the drum in her interventions, however, in these specific sessions she played traditional musical instruments: the singing bowls, the chimes, the rain stick, the drum, and the sanza. Mrs BF sang lullabies: “buenas noches” from Chilean tradition, “pehe pehe” from Tahitian tradition, "yemaya" from African culture. The therapeutic style of the shamanic therapist was inspired by Rogerian psychotherapeutic principles: empathy, congruence, non-directivity, and unconditional regard that empowers and motivates the client in the therapeutic process (Rogers, 1951, 1961, 1975). During the sessions, this approach and style allowed the unconscious material to flow naturally and according to its own rhythm and beat. She trusted this “process”, or metaphorically speaking, honored the widom and knowledge of the spirit world. She did not lead the process, but rather, guided the person on the journey and acted as an interpreter of dreams.

Her interventions belong to the Core Shamanism approach, identified by the research of Michael Harner (1972, 1973, 1980), whose publications reintroduced shamanism to the West. Core Shamanism incorporates the techniques of different shamanic traditions in order to make them usable and accessible to people in western cultures. In this paper, we will use the definition of “shamanic therapist” or “therapist” when we talk about Mrs BF.

In Canada, the shaman learnt and internalized the shamanic traditions of the Ojibway Indians. Since 2007, twice a year, she has moved to the France region (Ardeche) in order to transmit her teachings, based on the Amazonian and Ojibwey traditions. 7

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The narrative effects of shamanic mythology

Design and procedure During the sessions, the lighting was reduced to approximately 10 cd/m2, the temperature was 21°C, and the sonor level 40 dB (weak noise generated by the electricity supply). A massage table was provided (see figure 1), on which the patient was invited to lie down and on which there are blankets and sheets. There are two sofas. The first sofa allows the therapist to place/order her musical instruments, and on the second, the psychologist positions herself behind the participant so that she does not see her. The shamanic therapist sat on a black chair at the participant’s bedside.

Figure 1. Setting for the shamanic sessions.

Data collection and analysis Preliminary Interview We established a research protocol focused on 3 stages (a preliminary interview, shamanic interventions, a final interview), organized over 5 weeks. A preliminary interview of about 45 minutes was conducted in which the patients’ phenomenological experiences of the illness were discussed (Kaufmann & Singly, 2011). This interview model was inspired by rogerian nondirectivity approach (Rogers, 1951). It was used to make a connection with the patient’s phenomenological world. Shamanism stresses the significance of “preparation” through the use of ritual and various techniques before the individual descends into the realm of the gods

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The narrative effects of shamanic mythology and goddesses. If the person is inadequately suited for the journey he/she runs the risk of being spiritually and psychologically devoured. The shaman thus spends a great deal of time with the individual in order to develop rapport and trust. Similarly, psychotherapy denotes the importance of establishing a therapeutic relationship with the patient before any descent into the inner world of the unconscious can be undertaken.

Shamanic Intervention One week after the preliminary interview the therapeutic work for the patient started. It consisted of three shamanic sessions of about one hour (50-55 minutes approximately), each one being offered once a week, following shamanic principles and mythology.

Session 1. The first session was caracterized by a suggestive narrative of the therapist focused on the power of the drum and the power of the animal world:

You will listen to me. I followed the teachings of an Indian shaman from the Amazon and learned to understand the power of the drum. For the Indians the drum was a healing instrument. This drum generates a particular sound and beat and in five minutes one can experience a modified state of consciousness. This state of consciousness is very similar to the experience of dreaming. It is a world of endless possibilities and vision.

After this presentation the therapist played an audio recording of a drum shamanic session83 (15 min). Then the therapist asked the participant to lie down on the table and relax by trying to loosen the body by being comfortably positioned. After the sound recording of the drum, time (15 minutes) is dedicated to the storytelling of visions and their interpretation9.

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recording is based on their own performance. this paper, we define the vision as mental imagery, the simulation or re-creation of perceptual experience (Kosslyn, Ganis, & Thompson, 2001; Pearson, 2007) across sensory modalities. 9In

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The narrative effects of shamanic mythology

Therapist Vision concerning Mrs AA. In my journey, I saw a wolf. She lived in a community that was home to her cubs. I saw you there with all the little cubs surrounding you. You told them stories. You were respected by the tribe. You were the wolf who has knowledge and who was seen taking care of her family. It was you who told magic stories to the children.

Therapist Intepretation concerning Mrs AA. Mrs AA, you could welcome the children and tell them stories (Patient smiles). Even if you don’t have the opportunity to play and to run with them, the children will come to see you. Thanks to the wisdom you hold, they will listen to you and your stories.

The experience continued for the patient. She listened to the songs and traditional music (15 minutes). Mrs BF sang lullabies. The session finished with reassuring speech by the therapist. This helped the patient to return in the ordinary state of consciousness.

Session II. The second session had the same temporal organization with an important variation, the therapist played the drum. Mrs AA could “travel” and “tell her visions”.

Mrs AA Vision. I saw birds and clouds. And, I saw gray swirls. These swirls were blue and I just stayed there, present in the moment, and simply watched their movement.

Therapist Interpretation. There is a movement of gray towards the blue. You are moving towards the opening and the positivity. This positive space of beauty, sun, and sky awaits you.

Session III. In the third session (as in the first session), the therapist activated the recording and set out on a “journey” through the “high world” in order to heal the patient's crystal body.

Therapist Vision. I did not see crystals. I was in a cabin. I went up and saw a large shell that welcomes you. I did not see crystals. I saw shapes. I saw the energy at the level of the head. There was a black stone at the level of the third eye. It was necessary though for this stone to depart? The stone dissolved. I saw many white shapes that circulated in the body. I asked my guides what I should do and for guidance. …Cleaning deep. At

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The narrative effects of shamanic mythology your feet, there was a hot water bottle. And this bottle; it sucked to provide great cleaning. I saw the body open wide; there was a lot of whiteness and it was very bright. I saw a beautiful energy circulating and I asked my masters to continue. I asked them to continue what needed to be done.

Therapist Interpretation. I have not seen black things. One can often see broken and burnt crystals with spears. This is not the case here. I saw energy, beams, circular membrane, and the third eye. A chest, and foot purification. There was purification and a beautiful space. It is good; you are in the hands of the guides.

In summary, each shamanic session consisted of 5 minutes of interview, 15 minutes of drumming, 15 minutes of either the therapist’s narrative or the patient’s narrative, 15 minutes of traditional music and songs, and 5 minutes of reassuring speech to conclude the experience, in total 50-55 minutes approximately.

Final Interview Lastly (stage 3), a final interview on the experience was conducted by the psychologist, using non-directivity approach (Rogers, 1951).

Analysis of the narrative The interviews and sessions were recorded on a dictaphone and then transcribed accurately, as a support for analysis of the data. It was analyzed with the aid of the software T-LAB version 9.1.3, a linguistic and statistical tool for text analysis, developed by Franco Lancia (Lancia, 2004, 2007). In choosing T-LAB software over others, two advantages were key: the multitude of instruments offered for text analysis and the possibility to use them in an integrated way (i.e. for examples, word association, thematic analysis, co-occurrence analysis, comparative analysis), and the possibility of analyzing a very large text. T-LAB works on a corpus that can be comprised of one or more texts and can be divided into different sub-sets, according to the variables employed for describing the texts. In this research, we used a “word association analysis”. This T-LAB tool allowed us to pick out a co-occurrence relationship within any corpus. This strategy determined the local 16

The narrative effects of shamanic mythology meaning of selected keyword, on the basis of a specific keyword-in-context list (Weber, 1984), following the principles of a directed content analysis (Hsieh, 2005). Word cooccurrences are computed within elementary contexts (sentences or paragraphs). Each time the selection of associated words is carried out by the computation of an “Association Index” (Cosine, Dice, Jaccard) and their computation is quite fast. Moreover the user had to take into account that the greater the number of words included in their list, the more reliable the similarity values become. In our analysis, firstly we added temporal variables in the preparation of “the Corpus”. “Before” for the narrative in the preliminary interview, and “After” in the final interview. Secondly, we organized a target conceptual category of DISEASE evoking our topic research (see target term in the radial diagrams, figures 2 and 3), composed of five lemmatized keywords referring (Cancer, disease, To_be_sick, Chemotherapy, Hospital). We organized another conceptual category crucial for our research, SHAMANIC-WORLD (see figures 4) composed of five lemmatized keywords (spiritual_guides, shaman, shamanism, spirit, to_make_a_trip). We chose a level of wordassociation significativity (p ≤ 0.05) and Cosine as the association index. Finally, this content analysis strategy generated a radial diagram, where the selected conceptual target is placed in the center and the other words are distributed around it each at distance proportional to its degree of association. The significant relationships are therefore one-to-one, to the central lemma and to each of the others. After the statistical computation, we looked for the associations (see repeated characters that have a “bold” font style in our narrative exemples) recalling moments of the patient’s narrative (see M1, M2, M3…in the results) of a general narrative position evoking an global existential experience (for example, “the acute consciousness of the finiteness”).

Results The examined corpus for Mrs AA was made up of 1,561 trascripted words, 10,029 17

The narrative effects of shamanic mythology occurrences (single words), 1,406 lemmatized words, the number of hapax10 was 797. We chose a general list of lemmatized words ≥7 in order to generate a vocabulary before and after the shamanic intervention (see Annexe 1).

Mrs AA’s narrative (before): the acute consciousness of the finiteness Concerning the conceptual category DISEASE (keywords : cancer, disease, chemotherapyto_be_sick, hospital) in preliminary interview (temporal variable, before, see figure 2) is associated with « Reunion Islands» (Chi2, 6.00 ; p=.014), with « month » (Chi2, 4.87 ; p=.037), « scared » (Chi2, 3.96 ; p=.047), « She » (Chi2, 3.62 ; p=.05), « we » (Chi2, 4.33 ; p=.03). These associations (see repeated characters that have a bold font style in our narrative exemples) in the preliminary interview concerning the disease, evoked a rich narrative concerning “the acute consciousness of the finiteness”. This general meaning of narrative structure started with the moments surrounding the “announcement of the severity of cancer with the dramatic conflict to accept it or not (M1)”: M1. The blood test revealed that I had a very advanced breast cancer. I had metastases all over the spine, and pelvic and cerebral parts and I had six months to live. M1. We were very scared, I was a flirtatious woman, my family was very very scared for my hair. I went to the hairdresser, every week. M1. I never accepted the disease. I can’t accept not working. My elder sister had cancer in the rectum and stomach, the gut. When she found out I had breast cancer, she did not accept it. M1. I had a very very very strong chemotherapy every week, for six months, seven months of chemotherapy. M1. I said yes to continued treatment, of course, because there had been some improvement. I was exhausted exhausted. When I did not have the chemotherapy, I had aplasia. I had two sessions of chemotherapy every week for two months. Finally, I was in a state where nothing could be done.

Words that occur only once in a text.

10

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A successive crucial moment of her “acute consciousness of the finiteness” it was discovering the reoccurence of the cancer “with an increased and strong need to approach the family and her homeland (M2)”:

M2. When my cancer started again, my son was at home. He felt I needed him, so he was with me and my husband. I had a new course of chemotherapy, I saw my oncologist again in July.

M2. We will go to the Reunion Islands. My husband was born in the Reunion Islands. And my brother-inlaw, also suffering from cancer, was a nurse in the Reunion Islands, and now he lives in Paris. But I have the oncologists, I have everything I need in the Reunion Islands.

Figure 2. In the radial diagrams the conceptual category DISEASE is placed in the center, before the intervention, in the preliminary enterview. The others lemmatized words are distributed around it, each at distance proportional to its degree of association. In the bold characters we identified the lemmatized keywords associated with DISEASE and with a specific level of word-association significativity (p ≤ 0.05), Cosine as an association index.

Mrs AA’s narrative (After): consciousness of the interconnection/ interdependence in all relations Concerning the conceptual category DISEASE (keywords: cancer, disease, chemotherapy to_be_sick, hospital) in the final interview (temporal variable, after, see figure 3) is associated 19

The narrative effects of shamanic mythology with « Energy» (Chi2, 14.31 ; p=.000), with « week » (Chi2, 5.05 ; p=.0025), « To give» (Chi2, 4.45 ; p=.035), « Shamanic-world» (Chi2, 3.60 ; p=.05). These associations in the final interview concerning the disease (cancer), evoked a rich narrative on “the consciousness of the interconnection/interdependence in all relations (visible and invisible)”. This general meaning of narrative structure started with the moment of “feeling yourself as a channel of interchergeable energy for herself and for others (M1)”:

M1. Because it is true that since I_was_sick, I have improved my feelings a lot of things have happened. I was in the depths of the abyss. I told my sister-in-law to take my energy, because I was going to see a lady (the therapist) who gave me a lot of energy. M1. The therapist treated me very well. She sees the spirits, and she is really sick of seeing all these spirits, calling her. And she gave me a lot of energy. And when I feel sick, now I know what to do, my future will be to help others. M1. My sister-in-law called me and told me “You were sick and you gave me your energy. Theorically I had to give you my energy.

Following this, a crucial moment of her “consciousness of the interdependence and interconnection of all things“ was seen, based on “the feeling of being in a new group, a new society (M2)”: M2. Now I have plans. In this hospital, I feel again a life of society, three months ago I left my work group. But I feel, for a week, I feel better.

The narrative positions cited above intersected and combined with “the new and positive perception (M3) of the pain”: M3. Yesterday I had chemotherapy. I will have this for two weeks, then a week of rest. This new treatment of morphine changed my health condition. Before I had nausea, this chemotherapy did not really give me nausea. M3. One thing that is also important is the role of songs. She (therapist) sang at the end of the sessions. The songs soothed us. She gave the songs on the notebook. I reread them at home. I think that the therapist and the spiritual_guides are there. I am glad to have had this experience.

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The narrative effects of shamanic mythology

Figure 3. In the radial diagrams the conceptual category DISEASE is placed in the center, after the intervention, in the final interview. The other lemmatized words are distributed around it, each at a distance proportional to their degree of association. In the bold characters we identified the lemmatized keywords associated with DISEASE and with a specific level of word-association significativity (p ≤ 0.05), Cosine as the association index.

Concerning the specifc relationship with the conceptual category SHAMANIC-WORLD (keywords: spirit, shamanist, shamanism, to make_a_trip, spiritual_guides) the final interview (temporal variable, before, see figure 4) is associated with « Body» (Chi2, 9.18; p=.014) and with « I » (Chi2, 5.06; p=.024). In the general narration, we identified “the consciousness of the interconnection/interdependence in all relations (visible and invisible)”. Mrs AA mobilized a new narrative position, characterized by “the spiritual world composed of benevolent spirits that heal human bodies and her body (M4)”: M4. In any situations the spirits are the spiritual_guides. At the last session she called the spiritual_guides to try to heal certain parts of the body. Today I feel better. I feel better. For a few days now I have felt better. But I would like to continue my sessions with my therapist. M4. Creation, where there are forces. We constitute the spirits. They constitute us, the spirits are true, live. I believe it. M4. So now I'm better! Finally, I'm better, my body wakes up better in the morning. I had an improvement.

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The narrative effects of shamanic mythology The synthesis of these last five days. I feel closer to the spiritual_guides. M4. We call them (spiritual_guides) with our means, we pray to them. I believe in the forces of the universe, yes I believe in them. My mother-in-law has communicated with the spirits. M4. I'm a person who is relatively curious. I went on the Internet and I looked up the shaman and shamanism. And I believe in all that. Perhaps I am very receptive. I believe in it. In shamanism. M4. I was pregnant. My mother-in-law had asked the spirits when I was going to give birth. My mother-inlaw constantly disturbed them. And I told her "to leave them alone a bit”. M4. My step-mother communicates with the spirits. That's why I know a little bit and I read a lot of books, so I'm very sensitive. I began to note books on this topic, but my son always made fun of me. M4. The therapist is a woman of extraordinary beauty. She is kind. She is the kind of person I love. I love her physical appearance, her natural beauty, her charm, her kindness, she is adorable. And we can entrust our body to her, because she heals our body, our soul, our spirit, our soul. M4. I had a lot of trouble making « the first trip » of the session. I saw these waves. I felt the reassuring presence of the therapist. I saw the blue sun, it was the sun, and finally I was more open. M4. In the last session, I saw a black whirlwind, which frightened me. I wanted to make my trip, but I did not get there. I was stuck in this black whirlwind. And after I saw the light under the steeple I was reassured, but I could not make my trip.

M4. I'd like to continue working with the therapist. I am aware of the spirits, to angels, we must not forget the angels.

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The narrative effects of shamanic mythology

Figure 4. In the radial diagrams the conceptual category SHAMANIC-WORLD is placed in the center, with two associative lemmatized keywords, « body » and « me » (word-association significativity, p ≤ 0.05).

Discussion Narratives are the stories we tell ourselves, the stories that help us make sense out of and find meaning in our experiences (Klein, 2010). Constructing stories is a human process which allows one to organize and remember events in a coherent fashion while integrating thoughts and feelings (J. W. Pennebaker & Seagal, 1999). Shamanic narrative and mythology is not simply a “story”. It serves a transcendent function and possesses the power to draw the individual inward and beyond the ego. Understood within this context, visions, metaphorical interpretations and mythology have the ability therefore, to orient the person’s vision towards realities existing beyond the parameters and boundaries of ordinary (ego) consciousness. In this paper, we described the positions of the self or “I-positions” (H. J. M. Hermans, 1993) in Mrs AA’s narrative of her illness carried out before, during and after an western shamanic treatment. We argued that shamanic mythology could become a vehicle for spiritual transformation. We suggested that shamanic intervention enabled the patient to produce a larger and more singular narrative that we could call a “transpersonnal narrative position” about end-of-life experiences. In keeping with our objective research, we observed

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The narrative effects of shamanic mythology in the preliminary interview a dominant narrative position focused on “the acute consciousness of the finiteness for the patient and her family in relation to the disease”. This general existential narration was invoked in a rich amount of ltterature (Furer & Walker, 2008; Meuche, 2015, 2016, 2017; Yalom, 2009). In his paper Thoughts for the Times on War and Death, Freud (Freud, 19151952) noted that “our unconscious does not believe in its own death; it behaves as if immortal” (p. 765). Modern theories are based on Becker’s existential view of death (Becker, 1973). He suggested that death anxiety is a real and basic fear that underlies many forms of anxiety and phobia (Furer & Walker, 2008). Becker’s work led to the development of terror management theory (TMT) in which, according to TMT, when people are reminded of their mortality, their need for meaning increases. As witnessed in Mrs AA’s encounter, her renewed connection to the “spiritual guides” afforded meaning to the cancer experience and offered a “sense of purpose” for her life. If illness is construed within the framework of “dis-ease ” and connotes a brokenness and separation in a person’s relationship with the unconscious or divine, it might then be suggested perhaps, that the capacity « to join and become one with » the unconscious material or spirit world is integral to healing and the individual’s experience of « wholeness ». In our results we observed a singular narrative in our patient. Mrs AA talked about “the consciousness of the interconnection/interdependence in all relations (visible and invisible)”:

I told her to take my energy, because I was going to see a lady (the therapist) who gave me a lot of energy…she gave me a lot of energy. And when I feel sick, now I know what to do, my future will be to help others”. This experience of Mrs AA echoes the heart and essence of indigenous cultures and the tribal psyche.

In Lakota cosmology and spirituality for instance, this is designated in an understanding of “wa’ce waki’ya” or “I am embracing relatives all around us”:

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The narrative effects of shamanic mythology

For Lakota people, all aspects of life are intimately connected to good health and well-being. The interconnections among family, tribe, and clan with moral, political, and ceremonial life all contribute to a sense of harmony and balance called “wicozani” (good total health) by the Lakota and “hozhon” (harmony, beauty, happiness, and health) by the Navajo. For Lakota people, life is like a circle – continuous, harmonious, and cyclical, with no distinctions. Medicine and healing are a coming-together of all the elements in this circular pattern of life. The circle of healing is formed by the interconnections among the sick person, his or her extended family or relatives, the spirits, the singers who helped with ceremonial songs, and the medicine practitioner (Voss, Douville, Little Soldier et al., 1999, p.233).

Although it can be argued that the altered state of consciousness experienced by individuals who have been prescribed morphine or other opiates is similar to the experiences of those who have engaged in shamanic ritual, it is important perhaps to underscore the long-term emotional well-being and often life-changing influence of the “visions” and insight patients have gained from shamanic interventions (Vuckovic, Guillion, Williams, Ramirez, & Schneider, 2007). The significance of Mrs AA’s experience of “non-duality” as referenced by her description of “the interconnectedness and interrelatedness of all things” appears to have a very positive and transformative influence upon the manner and fashion in which she not only interpretated her illness but construed the world and her place within it. Mrs. AA discovered comfort in her experiences and noted a profound difference in what she prioritized in her life after the experience with her therapist. In the “new narrative position” Mrs AA internalized the therapist figure with her lullabies, her music, and her beauty. This internalization process activated an emergent and benevolent part of the self: One thing that is also important is the role of the songs. She (therapist) sang at the end of the sessions. The songs soothed us. The therapist is a woman of extraordinary beauty. She is kind. She is the kind of person I love. I love her physical appearance, her natural beauty, her charm, her kindness, she is adorable. And we can entrust our body to her, because she heals our body, our soul, our spirit, our soul.

Finally, Mrs AA expressed a strong belief in a spiritual world: 25

The narrative effects of shamanic mythology Creation, where there are forces. We constitute the spirits. They constitute us, the spirits are true, live. I believe in them.” and “We call them (spiritual_guides) with our means, we pray to them. I believe in the forces of the universe, yes I believe in them… I am sensitive to spirits, to angels, we must not forget the angels.

On this kind of transpersonal narrative Voss and collegues wrote (Voss, White, & Lunderman, 2004) : Each person is a living testament as well as a legacy of his or her ancestral spirits and the spirits of creation. These ancestral spirits and spirits of creation can and do influence the individual in important and significant ways. What is personal and what is ancestral are related; the boundaries of self-and-other are permeable.

In line with our hypothesis, Mrs AA produced a larger and more singular narrative. Mrs. AA seems to have internalized the therapist’s narrative. Guided by the use of shamanic mythology and her therapist, Mrs AA was able to reframe and transform her cancer experience and view it as a gift or path in which to seek and attain enlightenment and healing. Shamans are important today because they express symbolically and poetically the forces that animate the natural and spiritual world. This particular ability to resonate with the natural world is seen as an important need in our time (Grim, 1983). Shamanic mythology can provide clinical psychologists and psychotherapists, especially those working in palliative care, an alternative resource in their meaning-making with patients.

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Annex 1. Vocabulary before and after the shamanic intervention.

Declaration of Conflicting Interests The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. Funding The author(s) received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. 27

The narrative effects of shamanic mythology

Authors’ Note We dedicate this article to Isaia Casale and to the memory of Giuseppe Santarpia, who passed away on November 22, 2015. Acknowledgments The authors would like to express their thanks to Tonino Anzante for commenting on, and proofreading this work.

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