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Journey to Ixtlan, The Lessons of Don Juan

July 25, 2007 By: Shaun Category: Books, Humanities 115 No Comments →

Journey to Ixtlan, The Lessons of Don Juan

Shaun Hoggan

Diablo Valley College

Humanities 115

Instructor: James Wetzel

July 23, 2007

 

Journey to Ixtlan, The Lessons of Don Juan

Carlos Castaneda’s book Journey to Ixtlan The lessons of Don is about a professionally educated person, Carlos Castaneda, and his unpredictable interactions with Don Juan Matus, a self proclaimed Yaqui Indian Sorcerer whose viewpoint on life is seen through nontraditional means. Some would argue the un-seeming reality painted by Castaneda would indicate the character of Don Juan to be fictional, since his approach seems so foreign to the normalcy of most readers. When dissecting the book for meaning, Don Juan’s intent can be believable and even provides insights into the human psyche, which can be significant to the extent of changing the readers viewpoint on life and how to view and react to external forces around them, but does Castaneda embrace the beliefs of Don Juan? This paper will argue that despite copious amounts of time invested into Don Juan’s way of thinking, Castaneda does not fully subscribe to what is being taught to him by a genuinely sincere man, Don Juan.

Carlos Castaneda, in the first chapter, indicates his intent in seeking greater knowledge from Don Juan regarding the medicinal impacts of peyote and offers payment for Don Juan’s time. Upon rejection of Castaneda’s money, the reader begins to understand that something more exists to Don Juan than what meets the eye. Don Juan is portrayed as friendly, yet strange with cryptic, emotional cues when dialoging with Castaneda. Don Juan is also obstinate when it comes to choosing which choices are made and ensures they are consistent with his own belief system. The reader finds themselves trying to determine if something more exists to Don Juan than a simple Arizona desert living Indian.

Don Juan believes in forces which cannot be seen by natural human eyes, which include the human soul and the soul of all living things including plants, the wind, and the gurgling of a coffee pot. He is intelligent enough to understand that much of the human race is not aware of this and the knowledge, understanding, and ability to handle this information is power. A person can gain power by observing and practicing against these beliefs. The book surrounds the entire premise of Don Juan training Castaneda these beliefs and the new viewpoint on the world they will hold for Castaneda.

One of the crowning moments in gaining the power which Don Juan proselytes, is the moment when meeting one’s own personal ally. This is a time when the student or individual who has been prepared over an extended time is ready to meet a significant being who will be their individual aid, after a significant struggle with his or her ally. At the end of the book, Castaneda is faced with an opportunity of meeting his own ally after months of being trained in the ways of gaining power and having many experiences which could not be explained by any other means than the truthfulness of Don Juan’s words. It was certain that Castaneda had been challenged to his greatest extent and that he was able to identify and see firsthand what Don Juan had been teaching him was believable.

In the beginning, Castaneda had to be coerced into doing any action which was requested by Don Juan. As time passed, Castaneda became more trusting to Don Juan’s teachings, and more readily did as he was instructed without external verbal or internal complaint. The instructions provided to Castaneda, although noteworthy, seemed greatly sacred. Not to be confused with secret, these sacred principles and teachings provided to Castaneda are proven sacred in chapter 1 as Castaneda, when discussing the recording of their meetings, asks Don Juan if he can record their conversations, Castaneda writes regarding Don Juan’s reaction:

I … asked him if he would mind my bringing a camera with me to take pictures of him and his house.

“That’s out of the Question,” he said with a frown.

“How about a tape recorder? Would you mind that?”

“I’m afraid there’s no possibility of that either.”

I became annoyed and began to fret. I said I saw no logical reason for this refusal.

Don Juan shook his head negatively.

“Forget it,” he said forcefully. “And if you still want to see me don’t’ ever mention it again.” (Castaneda, 1972)

This event indicates that Don Juan considers these teachings important enough to not put them onto a recorded or acoustic imagery medium which can be left to interpretation and dispute from external sources. Don Juan intends to deliver his message through the spirit of meaning, intent and personal interpretation to a directed audience, not external sources other than those intended.

Castaneda has the reader hook line and sinker considering that he has fully adopted Don Juan’s teachings until the very last paragraph of the book. After being invited to see his ally for the first time, Castaneda chooses to get in his car and drive away from the opportunity from meeting his ally. He does this after Don Juan has left his presence. He excuses his reasoning with a brief explanation of not being ready.

Readers should consider that Castaneda, with his copious amount of notes taken during this surreal experience, had plans to turn this work into something for his own personal benefit. Castaneda writes eight books related to the subject matter of Don Juan. He used the experience to further his opportunity on the world and not to pay homage on the valuable lessons taught by Don Juan.

 

References:

Castaneda, Carlos (1972). Journey to Ixtlan The Lessons of Don Juan.

New York, NY: Pocket Books.

Cultural Taboo Skit, Third Draft

July 16, 2007 By: Shaun Category: Humanities 115 No Comments →

  • Skit practice on the 18th of July
  • Acting it out for class on the 23rd of July!!!

Scene 1, covers values VIII

Charlie Telling Madeline how to prep for meeting the family. They are driving in the car She should wear a black shirt.

Charlie is nervous; Madeline seems fine and feels confident that all will go well. How strange can the family be anyway?

Charlie and Madeline exit on one side of stage

Scene 2, covers values I, II, III, IV

The rest of the team enter on the other side of the stage as Charlie and Madeline exit.

Team starts chanting 3.14 equals PI….

Charlie and Madeline enter scene

Introductions are made and eye contact is avoided at all costs with Madeline. Madeline attempts to make eye contact….

Audible background conversations compare and contrast how different Charlie is and strange abnormalities with Madeline.

Scene 2.1 covers values II

In preparation for eating dinner group with sanitize their hands with hand sanitizer.

Scene 3 covers values I, II, IV, VI, VIII

Every one gathers around in circle or ground and start eating with dinner conversations regarding current news events. Belinda who is the one with the longest hair is considered the most wise. Comments are made by short haired people and group consensus is not achieved. Belinda says the same things and automatically everyone agrees with applause.

Scene 4 covers values V

Night hike with natural torches Madeline pulls out flash light which sends entire group into frenzy because of the artificial light

Scene 5 covers values III, IV, VII

Evening hike. Round sphere is encountered and entire groups starts to worship the sphere while Madeline discovers it is an ordinary ball and begins to play with it.

Entire group in disgust throws Melinda down a cliff to the dismay of Charlie who recalls the last time he brought a girl to meet his family that something similar happened.

Team member character development:


Cheryl is married to Shaun

Charlie son of Cheryl and Shaun is dating Madeline

Denise, Phoebe, Azeeta, are sisters to Charlie

Balinda possesses great wisdom

Joanne

Allie

Margaret

Sherrie

Kristtina

 

 

 

Assignments and Props:

Circle earrings, Pencils, black shirts and math tools: All

Torches and sign that Says CLIFF: Sherrie

Square basket: Joanne

Twinkies: Belinda

Beach ball, round plates: Denise

Flashlight, black shirt, and extra shirt: Madeline

Table cloth, and paper cups: Cheryl

Bagels: Allie

Grapes, apples, oranges: Shaun, Phoebe

 

 

Characteristics of characters:

Family:

  • Mumble and avoids eye contact
  • Obsessed with cleanness
  • Don’t talk about politics
  • Obsessed with natural light and color white
  • Carry math related objects

Outline:

1) The Drive up to the campsite for a family reunion

a) Basic introduction to the family

i) Explanation of idiosyncrasies

ii) Family practices multiplication tables

iii) Round of applause for Charlies’s arrival

iv) Parents meet mom rest leave to do chores

2) Eating and community discussion

a) Madeline eats package food while family eats natural food

b) Madeline spills food and family immediately goes into clean mode

3) Hike

a) More questions

b) Family reacts to flashlight

c) Charlie’s parents counsel with him about his choice of girlfriend.

c) “Alien” beach ball appears and Charlie breaks up with Madeline and pushes her off the cliff

 

 

 

Cultural Norms Skit, Second Draft

July 12, 2007 By: Shaun Category: Humanities 115 No Comments →

  • Skit practice on the 16th of July
  •  Acting it out for class on the 23rd of July!!!

Scene 1, covers values VIII

Charlie Telling Madeline how to prep for meeting the family.  She should wear a black shirt. 

Charlie is nervous; Madeline seems fine and feels confident that all will go well.  How strange can the family be anyway?

Charlie and Madeline exit on one side of stage

Scene 2, covers values I, II, III, IV

            The rest of the team enter on the other side of the stage as Charlie and Madeline exit. 

Team starts chanting 3.14 equals PI….

Charlie and Madeline enter scene

Introductions are made and eye contact is avoided at all costs with Madeline.  Madeline attempts to make eye contact….

Audible background conversations compare and contrast how different Charlie is and strange abnormalities with Madeline. 

Scene 2.1 covers values II

In preparation for eating dinner group with sanitize their hands with hand sanitizer. 

Scene 3 covers values I, II, IV, VI, VIII

Every one gathers around in circle or ground and start eating with dinner conversations regarding current news events.  Belinda who is the one with the longest hair is considered the most wise.  Comments are made by short haired people and group consensus is not achieved.  Belinda says the same things and automatically everyone agrees with applause. 

Scene 4 covers values V

Night hike with natural torches Madeline pulls out flash light which sends entire group into frenzy because of the artificial light

Scene 5 covers values III, IV, VII

 Evening hike.  Round sphere is encountered and entire groups starts to worship the sphere while Madeline discovers it is an ordinary ball and begins to play with it. 

Entire group in disgust throws Melinda down a cliff to the dismay of Charlie who recalls the last time he brought a girl to meet his family that something similar happened. 

Team member character development:

Kristtina

Cheryl is married to Shaun

  Charlie son of Cheryl and Shaun is dating Madeline

  Denise is sister to Charlie 

Balinda possesses great wisdom

Joanne

Allie

Margaret

Sherrie

Azeeta

 

Winter of the Holy Iron, Cultures in Conflict

July 10, 2007 By: Shaun Category: Books, Humanities 115 No Comments →

Winter of the Holy Iron by Joseph Marshall III is about two cultures identifying themselves within the new western world who find unresolved conflict when looking into the telescope of the future.  Marshall, a Lakota descendent, authors a fictional novel where he paints a vision of his ancestry through strong character development and relationship building with the books characters and the reader.  Despite Marshall’s well written story surrounding the injection of the “Holy Iron,” otherwise known as a modern day flintlock rifle, the common thread and conflict is not found within

Marshall’s written words, but rather the message he sends through the words he does not write.  The message of conflict between two cultures and their differing belief systems is where in lies the true conflict and message of the book.  This conflict of cultures which the author describes and his intentions of discussing them in his book is what this paper will discuss. 

Superficial readers of Winter of the Holy Iron would argue that the book is about a Lakota war leader named Whirlwind who is faced with many choices and forces conflict among his fellow tribesman in his Lakota village when he brings home the recently shot victim, a Frenchman named De la Verendrye.  Those readers would indicate that the real meaning behind the book was intended to paint a picture of a moment in time when simple lifestyles of the Lakota people were suddenly complicated by new technology from the eastern world.  The questions which need to be asked in contrast to this simplistic viewpoint is: Why did Marshall, a Lakota descendent, who was raised by his grandparents, and whose first language was Lakota write a book about the eastern French civilization intermixing with western native American Indian culture?  Evidence of why Marshall may have written this book could be pointed out when reading between the lines of the text when

Marshall writes regarding Bruneaux.  Henri Bruneaux was cast as a stupid large oaf who never thought past his own individual passions and desires.  Bruneaux was a man of impulse who only took what he wanted and left all else to waste in his wake of terrible destruction.   Why did

Marshall describe his own people, through the mouth of Bruneaux, as savages and nothing more than beasts which should be exterminated?  The reader should identify that

Marshall had animosity towards cultures, other than his own.  This animosity was likely taught to him, and perhaps even learned through life experiences which may have paralleled the thoughts, actions, and behaviors of Bruneaux.  Yet at the same time,

Marshall admits faults of his own culture through the described weaknesses of Bear Heart.
Bear Heart was a clear rival to Whirlwind. 

Marshall compares and contrasts them many times in the book and makes it clear that Whirlwind is superior to Bear Heart when he was chosen to receive the war lance and become the new war leader of the Lakota tribe.  Bear Heart is shown to have similar characteristics to Whirlwind except for his short temper and lack of thoughtful judgment which Whirlwind excels in.   Because Bear Heart was not chosen over Whirlwind, he continually stirs up the tribe against Whirlwind and his supporters and ultimately takes many of the tribe’s people with him as he ventures off to seek future security in the new gun technology, which he has recently been educated about by the actions of Verendrye.  

Marshall implies this separation is destroying the future culture of the Lakota and defines the main tribe as the one which Whirlwind remains within. 
De la Verendrye is the healing salve between the two cultures, but only after a long period of discovery by the Lakota people in observing him in a weakened state after being shot by Bruneaux.  De la Verendrye risked his life and sacrificed his time to learn the language of the Lakota people.  This sacrifice by De la Verendrye ocours prior to the timeline of the books story line with another tribe called the Dakota.  Because of the sacrifice which he made, it makes him unique among both the Lakota and the other cultures which will interact among Indian cultures.  Even after common languages were established between De la Verendrye and the Lakota people, there was still conflict among viewpoints and just simply how the two cultures viewed the world around them.  Joseph Marshall wrote the book with passion.  His knowledge and descriptions of the Lakota people in how they loved, fought, built, survived, and how they viewed the world around themselves.  When dissecting the level of detail of the Lakota people with which he writes, the reader can see that

Marshall loves his culture and its roots.  His deep respect for the trials his culture has gone through is felt within the feeling of his book. 

Marshall, being a modern day person and having the insight of a modern day world, would have clearly felt the pressure of another culture squeezing his own and the oppression which is coupled with such looming and surrounding omnipresence.  Would

Marshall stand from a pulpit and preach against the conflicts of the Native American culture?  Perhaps he would, but in doing so his message of conflict and the destruction of culture it caries would only be heard and understood by his own culture and those who the message was intended for would not see the value in the message.  Rather than standing from a pulpit and preaching regarding the conflict of two cultures, Marshall has made a story with passion, desire, and intent with a clear focus to send a message of why two cultures who have so much individually, find conflict in living together peacefully. 

Cultural Norms Skit, First Draft

June 28, 2007 By: Shaun Category: Humanities 115 No Comments →

Scene 1, covers values VIII

Charlie Telling Madeline how to prep for meeting the family.  She should wear a black shirt. 

 

Charlie is nervous; Madeline seems fine and feels confident that all will go well.  How strange can the family be anyway?

 

Charlie and Madeline exit on one side of stage

 

Scene 2, covers values I, II, III, IV

            The rest of the team enter on the other side of the stage as Charlie and Madeline exit. 

Team starts chanting 3.14 equals PI….

 

Charlie and Madeline enter scene

 

Introductions are made and eye contact is avoided at all costs with Madeline.  Madeline attempts to make eye contact….

 

Audible background conversations compare and contrast how different Charlie is and strange abnormalities with Madeline. 

 

 

Scene 2.1 covers values II

In preparation for eating dinner group with sanitize their hands with hand sanitizer. 

 

Scene 3 covers values I, II, IV, VI, VIII

Every one gathers around in circle or ground and start eating with dinner conversations regarding current news events.  Belinda who is the one with the longest hair is considered the most wise.  Comments are made by short haired people and group consensus is not achieved.  Belinda says the same things and automatically everyone agrees with applause. 

 

Scene 4 covers values V

Night hike with natural torches Madeline pulls out flash light which sends entire group into frenzy because of the artificial light

 

Scene 5 covers values III, IV, VII

 Evening hike.  Round sphere is encountered and entire groups starts to worship the sphere while Madeline discovers it is an ordinary ball and begins to play with it. 

 

Entire group in disgust throws Melinda down a cliff to the dismay of Charlie who recalls the last time he brought a girl to meet his family that something similar happened. 

 

High/Low Context Activity Group A –List of Values–

June 25, 2007 By: Shaun Category: Humanities 115 No Comments →

Assignment: Act out a 10 minute skit where the following social norms are communicated by action within the skit. 15% of total grade

Here are some of the cultural Values/norms that your fictional society holds sacred:

I. People with long hair are naturally more intelligent than others and their opinions should be considered in all things.

II. Neatness and cleanliness of attire is of paramount importance. People who have dirty or worn-out clothing are shunned by the rest of society.

III. It is expected in conversation that you will never look directly at the person to whom you are speaking, to do so is quite rude – you are examining them too closely.

IV. The most fascinating topic of conversation for your group is mathematics. Your culture is obsessed with it. Anyone who can discourse at length on the topic of higher mathematics is highly respected and is likely to hold a high position in the government of your society. Conversely, the topic of politics itself is highly taboo.

V. Natural light is the only true source of Light. Artificially created light is considered heathenistic and sacrilegious. The culture worships the sun goddess named Isosceles whose points of light are always true and equal.

VI. Naturally prepared food is preferred over artificially prepared foods with man made preservatives. Staying consistent with mathematical tradition food is always served in pairs

VII. Circles are considered holy. Squares are considered bad luck and taboo in society. Circles are considered to be one eternal round with no end and containing an infinite number of possibilities. Destroying the natural mathematical shape of one of god’s creations is considered blasphemy and is subject to punishment and possible sacrifice

VIII. Black shirts are preferred because black absorbs the light and does not reflect other strange colors.

Team members:

Kristtina

Cheryl

Shaun

Balinda

Joanne

Denise

Allie

Margaret

Sherrie

Azeeta

Charlie

Madeline