
Shamanic Art in the Twentieth Century.
Appendices
now for me that's very close to what you feel
when you're doing creative work.
Maisie - Yes.
Shinju - You're in a very relaxed space, I'm just curious as to whether
you felt...similar?...different?
Maisie - Yeah, there's definitely a likeness. I think that's going
back to the conduit idea. In that sense it could easily be said that there's
no such thing as creativity because...
Shinju - You're just a pipe.
Maisie - Yeah, often we may have a creative idea that we feel hasn't
immediately be spurred by something around us, but you know, everything
that we've lived and experienced up until that point, that's a huge range
of experience and a huge amount of that is going to be drawn on to produce
this kind of spontaneous idea. In a way its very reflective both of the
three dimensional world that it communicates with and a kind of pan dimensional...I
have this image of the magnetic picture of the sun where there are particles
in millions of intricate eddies all fundamentally feeding back on themselves
but there are also these great flumes that fly off on tangents off into
outer space and its a bit like that, where as the flying off into space
is the unknown space were the ideas spring from, and they're tempered and
affected by a huge amount of the immediate surroundings. It's as though
the things around you are your building blocks to create the message that
you've experienced on a non three dimensional channel and so obviously that's
going to reflect a lot on where the artist is and what their life experience
is. Given that we have to see the things to hand all of those things, those
building blocks are going to be pieces of the creator's or the message builder's
creation or their art. The inspiration comes from outside our dimensional
understanding and is then expressed in very localised language.
Shinju - How do other people fit into the life of a shaman, and vice
versa? Is it still true that the shaman is on the edge of the tribe, out
at the edge of the woods, out on the edge of reality? Or has that whole
archetype changed completely these days?
Maisie - I think in the small pockets of the cultures of the world
where they were first discovered, you know, as an acknowledged role, that's
why we use words like shaman is because they're from societies which had
an acknowledged role and space for this, and would, you know, readily support
anybody who grew into that space, which very largely, unless you're going
to throw in, essentially, with an organised religion, then you're not going
to, its very hard in our society to be in
any way funded to be supported to live in that
role .
Shinju - Do you not think there's an emotional support role there?
Maisie - Yeah, I think that does exist and people do it for each
other every day with the knowledge that hey would it be great if we actually
got paid to be good to each other.
Shinju - Yes it would.
Maisie - Wouldn't it be fantastic.
Shinju - Totally, small piece of wages set aside for being nice to
people.
Maisie - Yeah. But I think some people don't find space. You see
to me shaman is a bit of a redundant phase because the concept, to me, what
my experience is, where it maybe differs, is that having felt my own connection,
its not even a connection, it's, I believe there's a physics thing where
something can exist as a particle in two different forms at once.
Shinju - As a particle and a wave.
Maisie - Yes, they are states existing at the same time .
Shinju - So everyone's connected and disconnected at the same time?
Maisie - Everyone's connected but a lot of people don't feel that
Shinju - Yes I can see and talk to people and I can see their connection
and yet they say they're not connected.
Maisie - Yeah. I mean the sum total of life never goes away basically.
That is essentially it. Often its just a case of just remembering that you
are a part of all of that and that every last stray squiggle of energy wherever
it goes, whatever it produces in our reality, its all sacred. I think from
somebody, yeah going back to having experienced that, and just that for
me it was a very loving experience I gather it isn't for everybody. A lot
of people experience it as a baptism of fire. It's maybe a part of not accepting
how individually tiny we are .
Shinju - For some people there's a lot of fear to get over.
Maisie - Yes, how simple it is to realise that actually you know
my worries are there, I worry for myself, but its OK its not like the universe
wont blink an eye and carry on I guess having felt as though I've received
obviously infinite quantities of love and support from that thing that may
just be the hum on the universe and it may just be what I've projected.
So coming to that experience, it just immediately seemed obvious to me that
everything and everybody and every animal and every plant and every table
and dining chairs is just as valuable and just as much a part of all of
this strange matrix of energy as I am. So for me the kind of advisory and
healing roles often associated with shamanism don't really apply rationally.