Shaman to Adventurer
A subtle wind brushes against us all, leaving us with a vague sense that something inside is missing. We search for masters, teachers, and guides to illuminate the way, but where are they? The teachers of old are nearly gone, and as the number of seekers grows, they become harder to reach. We are left with the recorded words of these ancient masters, praising the beauty of higher worlds and warning of modern pitfalls, yet few can show us the future or guide us through the challenges of the present age. These masters, shamans, and wise beings are giving way to the new 21st-century human. The warrior archetype, which dominated the past fifteen thousand years, is being replaced by the adventurer.
The adventurer seeks the most powerful teachers within—those who reside in the very real worlds of non-ordinary reality while extending into the illusionary world of ordinary reality. These teachers include your spiritual aspects: your High Self, Soul, Spirit, Full Self, mental-self, astral self, past lives, and future lives. They wait for you to become aware of them, urging you to transition from warrior to adventurer, to stop fighting and instead flow with life.
However, be mindful that your inner teachers can be easy to misinterpret. Self-honesty is the most challenging truth, as it requires taming your negative ego. Always approach your inner voices with skepticism, and pay attention to your body sensations when faced with important decisions—your body never lies. These sensations are the adventurer’s guide to truth, for they are connected to intuition, which is always accurate.
As an adventurer, you’ll become aware of other teachers—your angels and unseen friends—waiting for your recognition and request for their guidance and companionship. These are the easiest to communicate with honestly. There are also many physical service-to-other teachers who incarnated to gain wisdom and navigate the chaos of these times. They teach through their actions and experiences, embodying the adventurer spirit as they explore, learn, and share their wisdom with others.
Every teacher, guide, and unseen friend is available to you, whether you see yourself as a modern adventurer or not. They bring new approaches suited to this new age, where the old ways may no longer suffice. None of these approaches are lesser; each has value in the modern world where ancient methods are being adapted to fit the needs of the 21st century.
The transition from old to new does not mean the old is worthless. Both old age and old epochs refer to wisdom and experience. Yet, with old age comes the fear of death, and with the end of an epoch, the fear of oblivion. The newly aware adventurers are awakening their ancient memories and spiritual skills, tools once used by the shamans of old. As adventurers rediscover these abilities, they refine and modernize them, making them accessible to all seekers.
The new shamans must release physical, emotional, and mental traumas to balance their connection to the astral plane. Unlike the shamans of old, who were so connected to the Earth’s resonance that they could physically shapeshift, modern adventurers shape their reality through time and space, using their skills to shift their awareness rather than their physical form.
Modern myths about shapeshifting beings are likely temporal lobe or astral experiences rather than physical ones. The old shamans lived in a time when such feats were more common, and they could easily blend with nature. Today’s adventurers face different challenges, with tools like digital technology replacing drums and chanting, and meditation apps replacing the smell of campfire smoke. Shapeshifting in this era is about shifting perception, moving through time and space, and accessing deeper layers of consciousness.
The adventurers of today experience life from conception to future death, integrating past lives, future lives, and the spaces between them. Stalking, once a shamanic skill, is now the art of visualization and probable life exploration. The modern adventurer is the average person, adapting shamanistic skills to navigate the rapidly changing 21st century.
This requires a fundamental awareness of one’s place in multiple realities. The tools used by the new adventurer are not entirely new; they are modernized versions of ancient techniques. Adventurers must discover which tools work for them, master their use, and share that knowledge with others. This mastery is often self-taught or remembered from past lives.
The old shamans were the last of their kind, while the adventurers are the pioneers of a new age. The world they are entering has no blueprints, which gives them the freedom to create new paths with the old tools, transforming them for their own purposes. Like the shamans of old, adventurers see what others cannot, guiding others toward a vision of a new world. Their only requirement is to be service-to-other beings. There are no instructions for this new world because it has not yet been created. It is an exciting, unique time where humankind is poised to design its future reality, and the new shaman will be the architects of that world.
Old shamans relied on nature, grounding themselves in the earth and honoring all things as living. They listened to the wind, communicated with animals, and crossed the veils between worlds. As raw nature becomes more defined, their time is ending, but the new shamans are emerging. Their tools are evolving, and they will lead humanity into a new era where they will become the guardians of the Earth and each other.
The old shamans were the healers, priests, and leaders of their time, connected to the spiritual realms. Modern adventurers tap into higher spiritual worlds, communicating with angels and unseen friends, elevating their awareness. These higher realms are different, not better, than those of the old shamans—just as the Earth is different from the moon.
As an adventurer, you are tasked with rediscovering forgotten skills. This process can be difficult if you hold onto beliefs that limit your potential, but as humankind evolves, so must its understanding of reality. Shamans of old used their inner senses to navigate the multidimensional realms. In the 21st century, adventurers will need these skills to thrive in a complex, information-saturated world.
The new techniques that allow entry into non-ordinary reality introduce adventurers to new possibilities and worlds. Interaction with unseen friends and angels becomes invaluable, offering guidance and helping to refine intent and motives. If your intent is not in alignment with the greater good, the unseen friends will not act, signaling you to rethink and adjust your approach.
Everything is interconnected, and time is simultaneous. The adventurer understands that by contacting and altering past, future, or parallel lives, they can positively affect their present reality. The adventurer is anyone who consciously lives in a multidimensional world, who knows that reality is malleable within their soul’s purpose, and who is willing to learn new techniques to navigate time and space in order to create a better reality for themselves and those around them.
My Eternal Gratitude For Lazaris, Seth, and Steiner, and My Unseens