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ABOUT THE SWEAT
LODGE and ITS USE
Adapted from the notes of Hopoyv Fekseko (D. Joseph Alderson)
and
others by Chetty Chapko for use by the Ceremonial
Discussion Committee of Pine Arbor Tribal Town, 1997.
"All
things employed in the sweat rite are holy to the Native American
and must be thoroughly comprehended ........... for the true
power of
a thing or an act is found in the understanding."
Paraphrased from Bobby
Woods, Lakota (Sioux) sweat leader
This is the best explanation of this Sacred Ceremony I
have ever read
and give thanks to the Elders for their sharing of it.
Blessings to you and your families.
Jason
Introduction
Several community sweat lodge participants
asked for more information and explanation about sweats. In
response to such requests, this article is a compilation of
notes gathered during years of listening to Elders; also included
are excerpts from a few good books and hard earned personal
lessons gained from our many experiences. It is easier to
prepare and share detailed information about sweats when one
is not engaged in actually preparing or conducting such a
ritual at the same time. Like everyone, the authors are evolving,
too. For them, writing creates a record of their own focus
and growth; it also provides a mechanism for both self-evaluation
and sharing.
Marcellus Bearheart Williams, an Oklahoma
Creek Medicine Keeper, is the adopted uncle of Alderson-Fekseko.
Bearheart taught Fekseko the basics of Indian sweats as he
understood and practiced them. At the same time, Marcellus
Bearheart helped Fekseko discover much about himself in the
process. To his worthy student Fekseko, Bearheart presented
a Sacred Pipe, an Eagle Feather and a promise that Fekseko
would help many people in Tallahassee and Florida. Bearheart's
words were true. The other authors have also had equally valid,
though different, sweat lodge experiences.
Since 1982, Fekseko has been closely
associated with Pine Arbor Tribal Town, a mixed-blood Muskogean
community. He is actively involved at their traditional ceremonials.
Thanks to many teachers and especially Hokte-Pvhe and Sakim,
Fekseko continues to learn the details of tradition and gracefully
integrates this knowledge, where appropriate, into his sweats.
Every sweat leader does things a little differently; no two
sweats are ever completely the same. Differences accrue to
the fact that many ceremonies and customs are geographically
specific to a particular area due to it's unique climate,
environmental conditions, plant life and so forth. The purposes
of the sweat bath, however, are fairly universal throughout
the world. Whether we participate in traditional sweats here
or on the other side of the planet, the benefits derived from
a sweat lodge would be the same.
Saunas and sweat lodges are an historical
fact in many parts of the world: most of North and Central
America, Ireland, Finland and much of Europe, Russia, Africa,
Japan, the Mediterranean and the Middle East. Benefits of
sweat baths have long been known. Spiritual renewal and the
purification of body, mind, soul and spirit are the major
purposes and benefits resulting from regular sweat lodge use.
Physical Benefits
Sweating rids the body of wastes. In
this modern sedentary age of pollution, artificial environments,
synthetic clothing and lack of regular exercise, a sweat bath
can open clogged skin pores and stimulate the healthy flow
of a body's own natural sweat.
Depending on how hot the sweat bath
is and the climate in which it occurs, a fifteen minute sauna
or sweat can perform the heavy metal excretion that normally
takes healthy kidneys 24 hours to accomplish. Body sweat flushes
toxic metals such as copper, lead, zinc, and mercury from
the body. A sauna is often recommended as a supplement to
kidney machines. Sweat can also remove excessive salts; this
is generally believed to be beneficial for cases of mild hypertension.
Sweat can also eliminate urea, a metabolic by-product. Excessive
urea can cause headaches, nausea and in extreme cases, vomiting,
coma--even death. Sweat may also draw out lactic acid responsible
for stiff muscles and a contributor to general fatigue.
Sweat lodge heat dilates capillaries;
this increases blood flow to the skin. The heart beats faster
and impurities in vital organs are flushed out by the flow
of fluids. Finnish and German doctors cite studies indicating
sweat baths help persons with high blood pressure and heart
problems; many American doctors, however, continue to recommend
against sweat baths for such persons.
Lungs benefit, too. Clogged respiratory
passages are opened by heat; this gives relief from colds
or minor respiratory problems. Sweat baths are not recommended
for persons with pneumonia and major respiratory problems.
The heat of a sweat bath and the often rapid cooling afterwards,
conditions the body. A well-tuned body is more resistant to
colds, disease and infection. In cold weather, a warm glowing
feeling often lingers for hours following a sweat bath. In
hot weather, the body seems cooler afterwards.
Recent Finnish tests validate the practice
of splashing water on superheated rocks as a means to produce
an abundance of negative ions. This seems especially true
if the rocks are heated by a wood fire and not electricity.
It is known now that where there are too few negative ions
and too many positive ions, have been linked to heart attacks,
aggravated asthma, migraines, insomnia, rheumatism, arthritis,
hay fever and allergies. By the way, major causes of unhealthy
ionic conditions are: weather disturbances, central air conditioning,
smog and driving too long in a closed automobile.
Spiritual Aspects
Examining important elements used in
the Native American sweat lodge sheds light on its spiritual
benefits. First, is the "symbolic" lodge itself.
The lodge is often built (or renewed) during the morning of
the chosen "Sweat Day." People fast while working
on the lodge to help their intent remain focused, pure. Prayer
is offered as willow or other saplings are cut, as holes are
dug for the placement of saplings and as the pit for the hot
rocks is excavated. Tobacco, a powerful herb now commonly
misused, is often used for offerings--a visible "amen"
to prayer. Such lodges can be, and often are, a portal for
communication with a Higher Power, the Creator; it is very
necessary to exercise care and good intent in all things connected
with a sweat lodge, its construction and its rites.
Willow, it seems, is universally preferred
for sweat lodge construction by most Native American groups.
Words from Bobby Woods, Sioux sweat leader, illustrates some
of the many symbolic attributes associated with willow. "Willow
branches used to construct the lodge also taught bathers a
lesson. In Fall, leaves of the willow died and returned to
earth... in Spring, they come to life again. So too, men died
but lived again in the real world of Creator where there is
nothing but the eternal spirits of deceased things. A foretaste
of this true life could be known here on Earth if they purified
their bodies and minds, thus coming closer to the Great Spirit
who is All-Purity....." Also, according to Bobby, the
willows used in the lodge were set up in such a way as to
symbolically mark off the four quadrants of the universe--everything
of the world and sky was represented within the framework.
The relationship of all things is visible here.
Muskogees use willow extensively for
sweat lodges, brush arbors and medicines. Willow bark contains
salicin, an analgesic and ingredient in several aspirin-like
compounds. There are many ailments for which willow and aspirin
are effective. Cutting or pruning willow encourages additional
branches to sprout. A willow's life cycle reflects the natural
cycle of life's many stages, too.
Reflective Symbology
The constructed lodge is usually a
round or oval shaped dome--symbolically not unlike the womb.
Often, lodges are called Mother Earth's womb. The door is
low to prevent heat from escaping but lessons of humility
are easily taught when one must bend low to enter the lodge.
Sweats begin in silent darkness inside the lodge. The arrival
of glowing rocks is a constant reminder of One-Above's penetrating
goodness and radiance. Sakim, Creek spiritual leader, constantly
reminds us that Silence is the voice of Creator, One Above.
Sometimes, a flute is played; this represents bird song, Creator's
first specific gift to the newly created. In the Pine Arbor
Creation Story, birds received songs for their part in drying
out land when it was covered with water-- bird songs are both
a form of spiritual silence and an aural blessing.
People are often unclothed in the sweat
lodge; like the womb--each is a dark but secure and nurturing
place. A womb does not produce a healthy fetus if contaminated
with infection or impurities, neither can a sweat lodge produce
a healthy spiritual birth or renewal if penetrated with unhealthiness
or impure intent such as drugs or alcohol. Participants in
a sweat rite are not unlike the fetus in a womb; both can
be vulnerable to improper influences. Spiritual life deserves
no less care than the physical life--sometimes, it should
have more. Good and proper intent are very important. Those
who sneer about the unclothed body are ill-equipped to understand
the sweat; they probably shower fully clothed!
In his book, Sweat, Mikkel Aaland writes:
"...The warm, dark, moist ambience inside a sweat bath
is easily likened to a womb, even the womb of Mother Earth,
Herself. A tired dirty bather climbs into the confines of
the sweat bath, crouches in a fetal position (especially in
smaller, more primitive baths), sweats out impurities and
emerges refreshed and cleansed--reborn.
Because of these re-birth qualities,
rites of passage were invariably connected with sweat bathing.
Cleanliness is next to godliness and close to God is a good
place to be when an individual passes from one stage of life
to another. The sweat bath prepared bathers for the rituals
that attended birth, adulthood, marriage and death rites of
passages--times when awe of the unknown was highest.
Finally, as with any religion or ritual,
sweat baths would not have been given such cultural importance
without serving humankind in practical ways. With its mystical
powers marshaled, the sweat bath became a healer..."
In Native Medicine, Medicine Grizzly-Bear
Lake writes about reasons people go unclothe in the sweat
bath: "We prefer to go into the sacred sweat lodge stripped
of all our clothes, symbols, badges of education, status and
wealth, camouflages or other coverings which feed the human
ego. We go naked as a newborn into the womb of our Mother
Earth; humble, pure, innocent and prepared for nurturing.
We try to strip ourselves of [defining] human qualities, desires
and characteristics in order to become m ore spirit-like;
we shed our human image and physical attributes in order to
discover our soul and its spiritual nature. And, in most cases
we come out reborn and re-created."
In the center of each sweat lodge a
small shallow pit is dug. It is here the heated rocks are
placed as they are brought into the lodge. This hole is deeply
symbolic, even holy; within Plains Indian tradition this hole
represents the center of the universe. Dirt from this center
is used to form a small altar mound in front of the lodge
entrance. On this altar, participants can place special things
that may help them in the sweat. The altar is always on an
east-west axis between the fire at the east end and the lodge
at the west end of the line. To some, this is an avenue of
power while others call it an energy exchange. The fire is
special in many respects. For Creeks, Fire is a piece of the
sun, perfect symbol of Creator; through Fire One Above, the
Creator, finds expression.
Early Finnish sauna bathers believed
fire was heaven sent. If the sweat fire was fueled by choice
firewood and tended with appropriate ritual, disease and evil
influences could be warded off. Treated disrespectfully, fire
could (and would eventually) engulf and destroy the bather.
As we make the sweat fire, after gathering
all the appropriate and needed materials, we are also preparing
propitiations between mind, body, spirit and soul--a conciliatory
reckoning to restore balance and harmony between these four
elements. To s how this intent while building the fire, fire
makers offer constant prayers of thanksgiving for all the
purposes at hand, especially prayers for participants that
they may be cleansed in all these four parts and experience
renewal. The purifying heat to come forth from the fire is
also acknowledged and thanked for its help: heat, light and
strength. The visible conclusion to all Native American prayers
is the gift of tobacco to Creator. A fire maker often places
tobacco into the structure of the fire as h e or she sets
the wood in place; tobacco is always carefully and tenderly
placed into the newly ignited fire after it has caught sufficiently.
Many fire tenders offer participants tobacco to place in the
fire with their own special prayers and thanksgivings. It
is not unusual for knowledgeable participants to bring tobacco
with them for that purpose and to share with their sweat leader
or fire maker.
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Meaningful Materials
Wood is important on many levels, as
is the choice of stones, rocks or bricks to receive the heat
and facilitate the sweating. Again, well-founded participants
share in the gathering or bringing of wood so that it doesn't
become an unnecessary expense or time burden on the sweat
leader or fire maker. Natural woods are best--those gathered
from Mother Earth's breast without felling live trees or breaking
off their branches. Wood in other forms is also acceptable,
often more abundant and sometimes necessary. We try not to
use lumber with nails in it, and never pressure treated wood.
Damp, wet or rotted wood is also to be avoided. Certain woods
are favored for particular occasions or uses. Cedar is always
regarded as a spiritually impregnated wood carrying special
properties which can enhance properly offered prayers. Cedar
shavings are sometimes placed in the bottom of the fire pit
to fragrance the lodge. Evergreen needles are sometimes used
for this. Fat-lighter pine, abundant in the South, makes a
good fire starter but is a poor choice for the principal wood--too
much acrid ash, smell, smoke and tar. Seasoned wood burns
rapidly and well. Green wood is preferred by many sweat leaders
who believe it imparts more force and power to both participant
and stone than commercial lumber gathered without ceremony
or acknowledgment. Wise experienced leaders will combine different
types of green and seasoned wood in a ceremonial sweat fire.
Each type of wood imparts a different energy and heat to the
occasion. By mixing different types of wood in the same fire,
a sweat leader can kindle a fire specific to the purpose of
a particular occasion and bring appropriate energies to bear
which will enhance all proper ceremonial actions.
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The Ever-Present Duality
Other important points remembered and
practiced by Creeks, Fekseko and the people of Pine Arbor
are: to thank the wood as it is gathered or collected and
to smudge it before beginning to build the fire. Bringing
raw water and flame together is to mix opposite spiritual
elements in an improper fashion; therefore, avoid using damp
or wet wood when laying the fire. Because of this principle,
it is neither correct nor proper to blow on the fire with
moist breath. Pine Arbor sweat leaders include appropriate
fans in their sweat lodge gear such as a bird wing, stretched
leather on a wooden frame or a woven fan such as that used
at the Busk Fire. An old hat will do in a pinch (--especially
if it isn't yours!) Finally, nothing except for more wood,
tobacco or a special morsel or other offering is to be placed
in the sweat fire or any ceremonial fire for that matter.
Nothing with saliva on it may go into the fire--period. To
throw any trash on the fire is a great desecration! Fekseko
and all sweat leaders are constantly learning about woods
and their different qualities from their own experience and
practice; wood is always teaching the careful observer. Wood
and Stone, Fire and Water, Light and Dark, Earth and Sky,
Lodge and the Outdoors along with the Sweat Leader and Participant
make up the necessary duality of the Muskogee Sweat Lodge
Ceremonial according to Pine Arbor Tribal Town's traditions.
The stones used in the sweat represent
Earth as both Grandmother and Mother--an eternal matrilineal
kinship. Stones are symbols of endurance in the same manner
in which Earth endures. Creeks regard sweat stones as bones
of Mother Earth. They are alive. Stones absorb the power of
fire. When water is splashed on them in the lodge, the steam
or vapor produced is also considered powerful and holy--the
visible symbol of Creator's Breath. Finns call this vapor
"loyly," spirit of life. Such rocks or stones are
sometimes called "rock people," signifying that
we are related to them as we are with all creation. Stone
is to Earth as bone is to flesh say the old time Creeks of
Pine Arbor.
As in creating the lodge or gathering
wood, prayers and offerings are given when obtaining stones
for the sweat. Usually stones are gathered from dry fields,
uplands, hillsides or mountainsides. Those taken from streams
or near wet places will exp lode when heated! Creeks often
used baked clay balls in ancient times and firebricks in modern
times when good sweat rocks weren't available. A prominent
feature of historic Creek towns was the "hot house"
or "Chukofa" where an actual fire burned in the
center to produce a "dry sweat" felt to be very
beneficial to the whole community during winter cold spells.
It was also an economizing way to ration scarce wood and provide
evening warmth for all the town's citizens.
Water used in sweats represents one
of the two essential life giving elements--water and air.
We always give thanks for water from whatever source it comes--be
it spring, sinkhole, spigot or bottled. Sometimes, a Creek
sweat leader who is properly trained, uses a hollow blowing
tube through which he "bubbles" or oxidizes the
water thus becoming a vessel for One Above's breath. Bubbling
water or any liquid mixture for sacred or ceremonial purposes
is a prominent feature of most southeastern India n medicinal
practices, too. To show respect in more than a symbolic manner
in the lodge, water is first given Mother Earth to drink before
we partake ourselves. Water is one of the basic elements for
survival. Many elders believe nothing can hurt the power and
spirit of moving water--not poisons, toxins, germs or diseases.
Moving water purifies, heals and protects; it is often used
by One Above to heal the earth. Given free flow, water purifies
itself; it is a basic environmental principle long understood
by all natural peoples. Many Creeks will often put willow
leaves in sweat water to promote healing. Water brings out
the power in all medicines because it is a matrix of One Above.
During the building of the fire and
throughout the ceremony, we often invoke the four directions;
in fact, most actions occur in sets of fours. There are four
rounds or stages of the sweat. There are four sacred medicine
colors: Pine Arbor and Florida Seminoles and Miccosukee acknowledge
red, yellow, black and white. The four stages of life--infancy,
youth, maturity and old age or eldership are also shared by
these three tribes and many others throughout north America.
Meanings associated with each direction differs somewhat from
tribe to tribe in specifics but usually agree in the broader
categories--Power is geographically specific say the people
of Pine Arbor. Animals are often associated with each direction
as are many other benevolent beings.
Directional Attributes
Attributes, usually four in number,
are associated with each cardinal direction. These attributes
are said to influence or even to govern certain emotions,
features, ideas or intellect, passions and even personality
traits in receptive individuals. The effectiveness or force
of each direction on an individual varies greatly and depends
on the interaction of the influencing factors from the other
three directions. Each attribute has an equal but opposing
partner in another direction.
The North
largely governs or influences physical aspects of an individual
person's life--courage, strength, patience, and endurance.
To endure with a purpose, leads to patience. Strength is nothing
more than patience exercised for a specific purpose. Courage
is built on strength--a strength that is nothing more than
courage exercised with a purpose to accomplish a specific
goal.
In short, the cold winds of winter
teach the whole person about her or his physical aspects and
abilities. The North brings about physical balance and harmony
for the individual in the same manner the South brings about
those same aspects for the community as a whole entity.
East
governs mind--learning. It is the direction from which
light awakens each morning: life, light, wisdom and knowledge.
One must have life to endure. Patience is endurance coupled
with knowledge. Wisdom, following this model, is knowledge
exercised for a good purpose, usually one of service and sharing
or problem solving. Each eastern attribute is a sibling to
a northern attribute.
The South,
from which warming breezes come, brings rains and warmth to
grow and nourish our crops. It governs our interconnected
sense of community, family, growing and working together as
one body--community as a body. Called environment and eco
logy today, it is characterized by harmony and balance, like
the three sisters in a garden--corn, beans and squash. Each
puts into soil what the other needs. Harmony, balance, relationship
and interdependence are all associated with the South. Both
South and West govern, influence and teach the idea of community
body and mind--family, in the same manner North and East teach
development of an individual's body and mind. Earth is a living
world with many nations such as bird, deer, grass and the
star nations; desert, forest, mountain, plains and other regions
are like clan camps--each with it own particular citizens.
Each with its own four-fold path : infancy, youth, maturity
and old age.
The West
is associated with humility, reverence, holiness, and the
origins of love. When the sun wakes up, it doesn't come roaring
like a beast. It gently nudges its brothers and sisters from
the sky--the moon and stars--telling them they may rest now.
This is devotion--humility originates love. The sun ends its
journey with quiet humility. It doesn't brag that it is bigger
or has more light than its brothers and sisters. We learn
the origins of love through this example of true humility.
It is the direction where life ends. The sun is powerful.
It does not have to rest, but each evening it leaves quietly
to make room for brothers and sisters that they may have their
season, too. This is the visible example of love--the Sun,
perfect symbol for perfect Creator. It is One Above made visible
in symbolic form.
In the sweat ceremony, a talking stick
is often passed so that everyone has an opportunity to speak
and to listen. If no talking stick is available, Creeks often
pass a twig of willow or cedar or they tie such a twig to
a rattle or other object t o serve as the governor of counsel.
Willow and cedar are sacred plants; the speaker speaks more
clearly when holding a twig or green bough from these plants
which remind them that their words should be as living words.
Songs are often shared in the lodge.
Some have passed to us from our elders and teachers for opening
certain rounds; most reflect the spiritual leanings of the
participants. Most are songs of worship praising Creator.
They often show appreciation for creation. Songs help clear
away obstructions to clarity and growth. They lift our spirits
and call upon helper beings, ancestors and Creator.
Through combination of silence, singing,
praying, and sharing from the heart, sweat lodges become the
other heart of a community. The sweat lodge experience is
very holistic with innumerable benefits to be experienced
on many levels of understanding. It is a microcosm of the
cosmos.
Everything
we do is an outward symbolic presentation of an inner action.
It is important that sweat rituals
serve you; do not simply serve the ritual.
A certain amount of discipline and
form enables participants to be more focused as both individuals
and as a community. One woman once said: "The sweat lodge
is like your child--you must care for it properly. One wouldn't
want negative influences to contaminate your child."
Why would you want a negative sweat lodge? The community is
the parent of the sweat lodge. Know and understand the importance
of the four purposes of the sweat lodge and all the beautiful
symbolism that connects the materials of the sweat lodge and
its practices to community life.
Words cannot describe all things that
occur during a sweat. Each individual receives something different
than other participants; yet all share in a general way, too.
Participants in a particular lodge may come and go. They may
benefit for a while and then need to seek a different spiritual
path. This is not the way for everyone and that is fine. All
that is asked of the participant is respect--respect what
we are doing and know that our intent is good.
It is important that
we recognize that all are connected
to the true Great Creator of the Universe, One Above. Mvto!
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