|
by Gary 'Z' McGee
not because it has been sober, responsible and cautious, but because it has been playful, rebellious, and immature." Tom Robbins
maybe the laughing face is better for them; and when they feel too good and are too sure of being safe, maybe the weeping face is better for them. And so I think that is what the heyoka is for." Black Elk
There I stood on a rocky peninsula with waves crashing all around me, rain pouring down, and thunder and lightning deconstructing the skies.
This was an existential crossroads of sorts, where I defied the gods (both civilized and spiritual); where I built a yin-yang hiker's totem out of black and white stones.
I built the totem only so high, and I was left with two stones, one white and one black, but they were too large to balance atop the totem.
So without thinking, I made an offering.
I tossed the black stone into the crashing waves, saying,
Then I tossed the white stone into the surf, saying,
After this I meditated at the center of the storm...
Despite the rain, despite the thunder and lightning, I had a vision that reached across the globe and compressed the past present and future into one single emotion:
Thunder vibrated in my bones. Electricity funneled through me like I was a conduit. And I was. I was channeling higher energies that I could not explain.
Only later did I understand that the thunder gods were communicating with me. They were initiating me into the heyoka inner-circle.
It felt like an out of body experience where I literally became the thunder itself. Except I was a thunder that subsumed the world and "felt" it from all points, pressing in like a vibrating mother.
The weather was still ferocious in its intensity. Walking up the beach back to my encampment, I found three coconuts stuck in a tangle of beach wood. I stopped and sat on a large rock to open them. I cracked open the first two but they were rotten.
But the third coconut was gloriously fresh. And as soon as I began to drink the sweet milk the clouds miraculously cleared and the sun came out, seeming almost joyous that I'd found sustenance despite the severity of the storm.
As I ate, my heart was a ball of tricked happiness in my chest, beating animal-happy against a glorious day, a day seized - dies capta...!
It was in the desert that Crow and Coyote revealed to me the truth of my initiation, that Wakinyan had spoken to me through metaphor and myth, through the almighty mytheme of the human leitmotif.
And his message was clear:
Heyoka is the Lakota equivalent of a sacred clown...
They were thunder shamans, representing the mysterious dual-aspect of nature and the cosmos. Their tactics were seemingly foolhardy and ridiculous, but they were revered by their people as powerful and wise.
Only a heyoka was allowed to mock the sacred and poke fun at cherished ideologies. They were both feared and held in reverence by the people.
Heyoka reminds the people that Wakan Tanka is beyond good and evil; that it's primordial nature doesn't correspond to human platitudes of right and wrong.
He acts as a mirror, reflecting the mysterious dualities of the world back onto the people.
gives you honor, but also shame. It brings you great power, but you have to pay for it."
Lame Deer
Heyoka is more of a chaos theory personified and is actually a re-enforcer of societal roles.
The charm of life exists precisely in its inconstancy.
Between essence and appearance there is the unconscious, there is Heyoka, existing in a delicate pirouette of transcendence, a coup de théâtre of higher awareness, that brings about such a fantastic jouissance as to make angels weep and cause kings to cast their crowns to the ground in abeyance.
Because only heyokas can see through the hero's plight, whispering,
Only heyokas can see the hero's feet of clay.
Heroes are powerful but they have no womb. The heyoka teaches the hero about the contingency and arbitrariness of the human condition, and he plants the flexible Dionysian seed into the hero's rigid Apollonian armor, thereby transforming the hero's heart into a womb.
Heyoka is,
"When a vision comes from the thunder beings of the West, it comes with terror like a thunderstorm; but when the storm of vision has passed, the world is greener and happier; for wherever the truth of vision comes upon the world, it is like a rain. The world, you see, is happier after the terror of the storm." Black Elk
In the end, through my coup de wit (a sudden or unexpected stroke of trickster genius), my heart has become a trickster god.
What it tricks is me, the small-picture-me, so that the big-picture-me can call the shots. In an immoral world one must appose it amorally in order to compel it to moralize itself. I amorally rebel; therefore morality exists.
But what exactly is a Disaster Shaman...?
He is I, and I am him, the fifth horseman of the apocalypse.
So it begins...
|