Native American Sprituality / Full: Email me privately for inquiries
Details
Come and Pray with Us. RSVP required. We have a full house≥ WOW!!! Good of US!
What you need: A potluck dish for sharing (corn, ground beef, rotisserie chicken, stew, caldo, dried cranberries, fruit salad, vegetable salad, juice , soda, bottles water, etc.), a monetary donation for the shaman ($70min donation in exact cash- we will not be making change, also taking credit cards prepaid via paypal), a blanket and pillow to sit on.
Dress: Ladies, wear a ceremonial dress. A dress that covers the knees. You can find a loose fitting dress for cheap ($10-30) at Walmart, Ross, Marshall's or maybe you have an old one in your closet. You want to wear a dress that you don't might getting messed up. This ceremony involves ingesting Peyote and the result of that could be releasing the negative stored energy or thoughts via puke. Everyone throws up at some point in your Peyote journey. So it would not be a bad idea to bring a change of clothes to put on after the ceremony. Ladies... No Pants please.
Time: The ceremony starts at approx. 7pm. Please arrive on time. The shaman will need all the energies there to assess the intention for the prayers of the night. We fast over night and eat in the morning when the sun rises. Plan to be flexible: We could start later and end later. Plan to meet a new friend, be in silent reflection, volunteer to help set-up, or bring a book to read while you wait.
Bring: A personal water bottle, a good attitude and clear intentions about what you would like to pray about for the night or strong intention to pray for others or the world in general.
The Shaman:
The shaman is Yola Cohaila. Yola does not have an internet presence which is very common for roadmen. Medicine ceremonies typically are not advertised. I'm posting this ceremony but it is atypical. It has been a cultural struggle for Native Americans to practice these ceremonies without prosecution. So the meetings are usually secret and only shared via word of mouth.
Here is her husband's bio: ( They work together often)
A native Aymara from Tacna, Peru, Chief Don Valerio Cohaila (Freddy) is a teacher and ceremonial leader. He is an YATIRI (priest), born in the Khallawaya community, 13,000 feet high in the Andes, the frontier for Peru and Bolivia. In 2011 Freddy received the Chief's Bundle from Lakota spiritual leader and chief, Leonard Crow Dog.
Please take note of my private email
(amelody496@aol.com) and cell phone number 832-338-9971.
Can't wait to meet you all!