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Apr 1, 2014 · Since its first printing in 1995, Plant Spirit Medicine has passed hand-to-hand among countless readers drawn to indigenous spirituality and all things alive and green. In this updated edition, Eliot Cowan invites us to discover the healing power of plants—not merely their physical medicinal properties, but the deeper wisdom and gifts that ...
Apr 1, 2014 · Eliot Cowan. Sounds True, Apr 1, 2014 - Body, Mind & Spirit - 232 pages. Whether you live in a mountain cabin or a city loft, plant spirits present themselves to us everywhere. Since its first printing in 1995, Plant Spirit Medicine has passed hand-to-hand among countless readers drawn to indigenous spirituality and all things alive and green.
- Eliot Cowan
- Sounds True, 2014
- 1622031636, 9781622031634
Since its first printing in 1995, Plant Spirit Medicine has passed hand-to-hand among countless readers drawn to indigenous spirituality and all things alive and green. In this updated edition, Eliot Cowan invites us to discover the healing power of plants―not merely their physical medicinal properties, but the deeper wisdom and gifts that ...
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Eliot Cowan (1946-2022) was a healer, author and teacher of Plant Spirit Medicine, and founder of Blue Deer Center, which is home of plant spirit medicine. He was also tsaurirrakame-mara’akame and elder in the Wixárika (Huichol) tradition.
Gradually Eliot introduced what he called ‘Plant Spirit Medicine’ into his healing practice. He expected the plants would provide healing comparable to what his acupuncture practice had provided, but the medicine of the plants exceeded his expectations. Eventually he set the needles aside and devoted his whole practice to the plant spirits.
Apr 1, 2014 · Eliot Cowan Eliot Cowan is the founder of the Blue Deer Center in Margaretville, New York, where he provides training in plant spirit medicine and other traditions. For many years, he apprenticed with the shaman Don Guadalupe Gonzalez Rios who, in 2000, ritually recognized Cowan as a guide to shamanic apprentices in the Huichol tradition.