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Teaching Lodge
Finding and Working with a Shamanic Teacher
In spiritual work our focus usually begins with our teachers, who they are and what we are going to learn from them. A good teacher can open our minds and hearts and introduce us to new ways of working, seeing the world and seeing ourselves. These are important relationships for our growth and development but are also complex and don't always go as well as we would like. Over my years of work, I have realized that we don't have a model for spiritual teachers in the West. The closest most of us come is with what we experienced in our formal schooling, and unfortunately what we experience there doesn't prepare us well for working with spiritual teachers. Without good and realistic models, we bring high expectations to our teachers: they will give me all the answers, help me grow up, be my best friend, never hurt me, and more. We can spend years searching for the perfect teacher, only to not find him or her. What do we want from a teacher, or what do we think we want? Are you ready for a spiritual teacher? How do you know that he or she is the right teacher for you? Through this article we will look at these topics and examine our attitudes and expectations of teachers.
You might say, "I am ready for a teacher right now," but are you? As with any relationship you want to enter, it is good to know where you stand today and what fears or concerns you have. I have my students work through these exercises:
Make a list of four disappointments or disillusionments you have experienced with teachers in the past. What did you learn from these experiences? How have they shaped the way you think about teachers today? Are you ready to risk making new experiences?
What do you expect from a teacher?
-I need a teacher because _____________.
-I want my teacher to __________________.
-I don't want my teacher to ______________.
-My biggest fear of working with a teacher is _________________.
-My ideal teacher is someone who ___________.
Many times when we would like to begin our spiritual work, the first thing we do is look around for the right teacher and make a commitment to him or her. From my experience this never works well and sometimes can stall our growth. I work with four levels of making a commitment and feel that the commitment to a teacher should be the last.
-The first level is making a commitment to yourself and to your work. This is the best place to start. Look at what you are doing and why. What is your motivation and how committed are you to working with yourself?
-The second level is to extend that commitment to Great Spirit or however you perceive that higher power. In doing so, you ask for help and acknowledge that you are part of something bigger, even if you don't understand what that is yet.
-The third level is to find a path or form that is close to your heart. Today more than at any other point in history you can choose forms from all over the world. Once you have found a form that you can imagine doing every day, then and only then is it time to find a teacher.
-The forth level is to make a clear commitment to working with a teacher who can assist you in the next step of your growth. This might range from something as simple as taking an evening class to something as serious as an apprenticeship training.
Are you ready?
-What do you fear most about change?
-What do you enjoy most about change?
-What does being a student or apprentice mean to you?
-What commitments have you already made to yourself and your work?
-Are you ready for your teacher to not look as you imagine?
-Are you willing to work on your next personal growth steps with a teacher who will likely challenge the unworkable parts of your life?
-Are you ready to make changes that will affect your entire life—not just one isolated part?
The perfect-teacher trap is something you want to avoid. It is normal to want to find the perfect teacher, but this is more difficult than it sounds and for a reason you might not expect. We bring two motivations to our work and to our teachers. The first motivation is what our ego or habits want. Their work is simple: to keep everything comfortable and safe. When a teacher confronts this safety, our response can be to no longer see that person as a good teacher and to move on. We can find ourselves moving from one teacher to another until we face ourselves and see our patterns.
The second motivation is a little harder to talk about. It is what our spirit or soul wants for our growth. My teachers always said that this is the part of us that moves and guides us into just the right situations for learning. These situations are rarely comfortable and never safe for our habits. These experiences, though difficult, usually leave us with a sense of freedom and lightness when we finish them. So when you go looking for the perfect teacher, you have to ask, "Which part of me is looking?"
I would like to offer the guidelines that I share with my students when they are considering work with a teacher:
Can this person help me with the next step of my work? This is a great question to ask early. Has the teacher had similar experiences and come through them well? Has he or she helped others go through these experiences and helped them come out the other side?
Don't just listen to what the teacher says. Spiritual work has little, if anything, to do with our minds. What do you feel or see in the teacher's heart and spirit?
I always say, "The best teachers teach us how to think, not what to think," and that is true for how to work and learn as well. Learning how will take you through your life. Learning only what will eventually have to be discarded.
Don't look only at the teacher; look also at the students at different levels. Talk to people who have been working with the teacher for one year, two, five and beyond. Ask what they like and don't like. What have they learned? How are they doing in their lives, not only their spiritual work? This will tell you more than anything else where you can expect to be in the years to come if you work with this teacher.
Do you need a teacher?
Today there is a flood of information available – more than ever before. This is a very special time in history because of the speed and ease that we can access books, articles and other people’s experiences. What we sometimes lack though is a way to apply that information and a guide who can help us move through it toward our growth. This is where the real learning begins as well as the challenges.
Spiritual teachers can:
| create a safe learning environment in order for you to make new experiences. You do not earn those experiences by only reading about them - a good teacher will not only introduce you to new possibilities but can help you put that information into practice. My teachers called this earning your medicine. | |
| guide you through the ocean of information available and help you discern which direction to go. | |
| help and guide you on your way – what works for one person may not work for the next and in the worst case even cause more problems. | |
| provide a mirror. This is probably one of the most important aspects of teaching. Seeing our habits is the first step toward growing up and becoming free of them. Medicine circles are an even stronger example of working with mirrors. Medicine circles are not social groups. They are even more mirrors in which to see yourself – both what you like and don’t like so that you can work with it. | |
| help you create a spiritual foundation through experience and practice – a foundation is not only what it is but what it can hold in the future. | |
| help you bring what you have learned from your spirit guides to the earth. Our human teachers help us look at and work through human issues. Without this part all of our good ideas and dreams can stay in our heads and never manifest in our daily life. |
Building a working relationship
The student-teacher relationship, like all relationships takes time to develop. What you put in you will get out of it. Here are a few things that can help that relationship grow.
Trust: this takes time to build on both sides. If you are going to a teacher just to get something you might walk away with a lot of notes - but not much more than what you could have read in a book. No teacher wants to see his or her life work consumed. We can be so hungry for information and attention that we can forget to give something back. This will ultimately cause and imbalance and harm if not end the relationship.
Patience: Here is where our mind can get us into trouble on our spiritual way. Our mind moves more quickly than our body and heart. Our mind can think we are ready for more when we have not even worked with what we have. There must be an open place in us and a true need for the teachings. Many people get inpatient and will quit because their answer did not come immediately – or worse – they will try to find someone who will give them the information even when they are not ready for it.
Open, honest and direct communication: Although we all would like to look good in the eyes of others – this will not function in this kind of relationship. Being as honest with your teacher as you are with yourself can help you more than most anything else.
Responsibility: don’t try to give your responsibility away because you won’t go far. Teachings are living and it takes a lot of responsibility to carry them. Once you know something then you are responsible for it.
Traps that can hurt our growth
Addiction to fights, drama and negative attention: with this we never get to the work. A good therapist can help us work through this before we begin on our spiritual way.
Fears and projections: when we meet someone who can really help us, our deepest fears and habits will come to the surface. This is necessary so that we can see and work with them. Because of the mirror a teacher can give us, we must be aware of our projections. Here is a little exercise for when your fears come to the surface and we start to think we "clearly see everyone else’s problems." Make a list of all the things you think you see the other person or teacher doing, then when you are ready – read it back, but this time to yourself. You can ask yourself what can you learn and what is your part of this situation.
I’ll be a student forever: well, yes and no. While we are always learning, remaining a fulltime student your whole life can be a way of not taking responsibility and moving forward. It also leaves us in a state of dependency.
Not living what you learn: Integration shows us where we really are on our way. How we live, treat each person we meet and our environment will reflect to us how much we "think we know" and how much we are actually living.
I just want a teacher who will tell me things: It is good to know that spiritual teachers do not tell you how to be spiritual. This is a trap of the mind. Teachers challenge us and create opportunities for us to grow through experience.
Honor and celebrate the end
All cycles must end at some point. I have never seen an exception to this simple law of nature. Sometimes things must close so we can begin a new level of work – sometimes it is an ending all together. One of the saddest things I have seen in our consumer driven society is not taking time to honor and celebrate the end of our relationships. Most of the time we feel we must go apart in a dramatic and even explosive ending. This does not only dishonor your work and time together but also will not truly bring a closure to your relationship. A spiritual working relationship requires more work to find closure. I recommend a ritual closing done in person so that the work can be celebrated and both people can truly be released. In the end, let go and honor your work and celebrate the new place you are standing in your life.
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