Down the Amazon in Search of Ayahuasca

http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1889631,00.html

By John Otis
Apr. 08, 2009

Although his parents urged him to study medicine, Jimmy Weiskopf 
dropped out of college and in the 1970s moved to Colombia, where he 
eventually began to focus on a different kind of elixir. The New York 
City native became an early advocate for the hallucinogenic plant 
mixture ayahuasca. For centuries, Amazonian Indians have been 
drinking ayahuasca, also known as yaje ­ a combination of the 
ayahuasca vine, tree bark and other plants ­ to achieve a trancelike 
state that they believe cleanses body and mind and enables 
communication with spirits. Weiskopf, who has published a 688-page 
tome about ayahuasca, was once among a tiny coterie of foreigners 
using the potion, but these days he has lots of company. (Read 
"Colombia's Drug Extraditions: Are They Worth It?")

Word of ayahuasca's healing properties has brought a growing number 
of New Age tourists from the U.S. and Europe, some of whom pay 
thousands of dollars to stay at jungle lodges where Indian medicine 
men guide them through all-night ayahuasca rituals. Sting and Tori 
Amos have admitted sampling it in Latin America, where it is legal, 
as has Paul Simon, who chronicled the experience in his song "Spirit 
Voices." "It heals the body and the spirit," says Eustacio Payaguaje, 
51, a Cofán Indian shaman who regularly treks to Bogotá to lead 
weekend ayahuasca ceremonies in the city. "It is medicine for the 
soul." (Read "The Year in Medicine 2008: From A to Z.")

But as the subtitle of Weiskopf's 2004 book, Yaje: The New Purgatory, 
suggests, ayahuasca is not for the faint of heart ­ or stomach. 
Drinking a few ounces of the sludgy brown liquid usually leads to a 
violent purge from both ends of the body. Beat Generation novelist 
William Burroughs, seeking to get high on Colombian ayahuasca in the 
early 1960s, described hurling himself against a tree and barfing six 
times. At a recent ceremony on the outskirts of Bogotá, most of the 
40 participants packed sleeping bags, water bottles ­ and rolls of 
toilet paper. Sting, in a Rolling Stone interview, made clear that 
ayahuasca is no party drug. "There's a certain amount of dread 
attached to taking it," the singer said. "You have a hallucinogenic 
trip that deals with death and your mortality. So it's quite an 
ordeal. It's not something you're going to score and have a great time on."

Although the hallucinations induced by the substance can be pleasant, 
some people experience nightmarish visions that last for hours. The 
agony, Weiskopf says, is part of the allure. "You get these near 
death experiences," he says. "And once you see life from the 
perspective of death, you become a bit more philosophical and have a 
better sense of what's important and what's not."

Because it contains the hallucinogenic alkaloid dimethyltryptamine, 
or DMT, drinking ayahuasca in the U.S. is illegal. But traditional 
use of the plant potion is permitted in much of South America. Its 
mecca is the Peruvian city of Iquitos, which hosts the annual 
International Amazonian Shamanism Conference and is home to about a 
dozen lodges that cater to curious foreigners. At first, local 
residents feared that a flood of stoned beatniks would turn Iquitos 
into an unruly rain-forest Woodstock. "I thought they'd be from the 
hippie graveyard, with tattoos and sunken faces," says Gerald 
Mayeaux, a Houston native who runs The Yellow Rose of Texas 
restaurant in Iquitos. "But these are doctors and lawyers. These are 
professional people."

One of the most popular lodges, Blue Morpho, is run by Hamilton 
Souther, a California native who moved to Peru in 2001 to learn about 
medicinal plants from local Indians. After receiving the title of 
master shaman, Souther set up Blue Morpho, a collection of charming 
thatch-roofed huts and nature trails with a ceremonial roundhouse 
where Souther offers ayahuasca sessions for a mostly U.S. crowd. As 
the only full-fledged gringo shaman in the Peruvian Amazon, Souther 
is a natural interpreter for tourists navigating the mysteries of 
traditional Indian culture and its sacred plants. "These are people 
who are interested in their own spiritual growth and development," 
Souther says. "For me, it's an expression of their courage to come 
all the way down to the Amazon on the hope that [ayahuasca] may be 
able to help them."

Many of Souther's guests shun alcohol and recreational drugs. Some 
experiment with ayahuasca to address emotional, physical or 
psychological problems that Western medicine has failed to alleviate. 
Others hope to time-travel in order to confront childhood traumas. 
Some even view ayahuasca as a way to kick their addiction to 
prescription drugs.

Although traditional-medicine practices had been waning in some 
Indian communities in Latin America, ayahuasca tourism has helped 
spark a revival, as guiding foreigners through the ceremonies can 
provide a decent income for shamans. The business has become so 
popular that at the airports in Iquitos and the Colombian Amazon city 
of Leticia, locals trying to drum up clients for freelance medicine 
men stand outside the terminals shouting "Ayahuasca! Ayahuasca!"

Outsiders, however, are advised to proceed with caution. Even among 
devotees, there's a consensus that people with heart ailments, high 
blood pressure or mental disorders should steer clear of ayahuasca. 
And, Souther says, mixed with certain foods or recreational drugs 
like cocaine, ayahuasca can be toxic, even fatal.

Despite these provisos, Weiskopf, who says he has taken the tonic 
hundreds of times "with everyone from guerrillas to government 
ministers," remains a passionate advocate for ayahuasca. A growing 
flock of travelers are heading to Latin America to explore the 
experience for themselves.

.


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