Teachings of the Sweat Lodge.
I wrote this piece about the sweat lodge ceremony almost 20 years ago at the request of my elder and teacher. With us hosting a lodge soon it felt relevant to share it here for folks to gain some perspective and understanding.
The Sacred Sweat Lodge
Several months ago my teacher and friend, Clyde Hall, asked me to write
an essay regarding Sweat Lodge. I thought this request unusual as the
Ladle for Pouring Lodge has recently come to me through my teacher
Carolyn Sanders. As I write this essay, I do so in humility and with the hope
to convey the message of one who is continuing to learn to work with
lodge in a sacred and honored way.
Carolyn Sanders, of the Utah Community, has held a Lodge in her yard for
over twenty-years. Bear Boy, who passed away in August of 2004, taught
Carolyn how to pour and work with medicine. Not only has Bear Boy
taught Carolyn how to Pour Lodge and to work with medicine in a Sacred
Way, but we have had the privilege of having many Elders come to our
Lodge and encourage, teach and mentor us on these things, teachers
such as Clyde Hall, Lanie Thom and those who have never been
introduced to the Naraya: A Dance For all People community.
Approximately nine years ago I made an offering to Carolyn Sanders and
presented her with tobacco, a blanket and other gifts and asked her to
consider teaching me to pour lodge. When she accepted this offering her
initial requirement was for me to attend every lodge for one year. After
that year, if I still felt called to pour Lodge I was to approach her and
reconfirm my commitment. For one year I participated in every Lodge
that Carolyn poured.
For the next eight years, Carolyn had me chop wood, carry water, care
for the land and build fire. She taught me how to build a lodge, honor the
willows, the earth, the water and each person who entered the lodge.
Throughout the years, I often won- dered when I was going to learn to
“pour” To sit in the “place” of Lodge Pourer and perform the Sacred Rite.
Little did I realize at the time that I was learning how to serve the people
and that often serving the people, in an honored way, does not always
require you to be seen or observed, but that you learn to carry sacred
things in a good way and do as you’re taught and told by your Elders.
What I will offer is my perspective about Sweat Lodge. I offer this with the
awareness that each and every Lodge is different and unique in
accordance to those who are attending and in accordance to those
who are pouring and taking care of the Sacred Things. In my instance, I
learned to pour Lodge through Carolyn Sanders, who learned from Bear
Boy.
The foundation of what we do in the Lodge comes from a Ute tradition,
history and background. What Bear Boy taught us is a reflection of how he
was taught by his Elders, family and teachers. The way I move around the
Lodge, the way I honor the Lodge is reflective of that tradition. What I
have learned is that every Lodge Pourer approaches lodge from their
own tradition, history and background. You may find someone pouring
from the East or someone pouring from the West. They may move around
the Medicine Wheel in a way that is unique to their teachings.
Whenever I am in a Lodge that is unfamiliar to me, I am quick to be
observant and to be as teachable as possible in order to learn and
understand the honored things and the way of the person who is carrying
those things at that time. I never enter someone else’s Lodge and
presume that because I have Sweat for so many years, that I know what I
am doing in that particular lodge.
When one comes to Sweat Lodge, they should come prayerfully and in
consideration of their own needs and the needs ofothers. This requires the
assistance of a Fire Keeper who comes several hours before Lodge to
prepare the fire, set the fire, supervise the Fire, and to make sure that
things are initiated in a good way with the Lodge. The Lodge Pourer
spends time, before the Lodge, in meditation, preparing Prayer Ties and
generally preparing to do the work for the people. Because of the effort
and time that these individuals put into a Lodge, it is a good thing to
remember them in your prayers. It is also good to come with Sacred
Offerings. Offerings can be anything from the Heart. Traditional offerings
of Tobacco and Red Cloth are a standard, but offerings can exceed
these things.
In this day and age it takes considerable resources and offerings can be
of a nature to support these resources and honor those who have worked
in behalf of those who are participating in the lodge.
If you are requesting a lodge it is important to honor that request with an
offering that is reflective of the request. They are presented to the Lodge
Pourer and to the Fire Keeper so the work and effort they have put
towards the Lodge is honored. I also consider it an aspect of the intentions
of the person making the request; the offering reflects the prayers of the
person requesting and participating in the lodge and often sits on the
altar during the lodge.
Sweat Lodge is an act of Purification. It is a place of wor- ship, healing,
prayers, songs and it is a place where we are real with ourselves and with
others. We seek a level of honesty that will encourage us to a higher sense
of self. Within Lodge, I have seen people healed of disease; Drug Addicts
put down addictions; Alcoholics put down the bottle. I have seen
Agnostics have faith and I have seen strong men humbled to tears. Lodge
is a very hot place and I often think that our struggles are not about where
we sit in Lodge, but where we stand in our life.
I think about Lodge as a place of purification, worship, and of honoring
the Spirits and Ancestors. Lodge helps me understand the Sacred Wheel
and the importance of balance in my life.
The demographics of Lodge are not very complicated. The Lodge is an
Igloo shaped hut. Willows are used for the framework. Gates are
established in each of the four directions and then the Lodge is sealed off
with blankets, sleeping bags and tradition- ally animal hides so that when
inside the Lodge it is completely dark inside. When we sit in the dark we
are all the same!
Outside of the Lodge there is a Heart Line. This is the line between the fire
that cooks the rocks (referred to as ancestors), to the door of the Lodge.
In our tradition it is prohibited to cross the Heart Line so as not to disturb
the flow of energy from the fire to the inside of the lodge.
When we walk around the lodge we move with the circle in a clockwise
manner. It is believed that the Hear Line is the conduit of the energy that
comes into the Lodge. In the way we have been taught it would be
inappropriate to cross the Heart Line unless you are the Fire Keeper
tending to the stones.
The Fire Keeper sets the Fire. This is done in a ceremonial way, making
offerings to the Four Directions to establish a place where the Stones will
rest and the fire will be built. The Fire Keeper approaches the fire with
great reverence, setting the tone with their intent and their focus for the
entire Lodge. Once the fire is set, the stones are cooked for several hours
so they are appropriately heated for the Lodge.
The Rocks are placed into the center of the Sweat Lodge once the
participants are seated. These Rocks are then honored with Tobacco and
Sweet Grass as prayers are said to welcome them into the Lodge. As
prayers are said we ask the Ancestors to help us in what we are doing.
Water is poured on the stones and the steam blesses the people.
In our Lodge, we conduct four rounds. The first round is the round of the
East. This is the round in which we honor the medicine of the Eagle and
the Spotted Deer as well as the other ancestors that sit in the East. It is the
place of New Beginnings, Birth and Infancy. It is the place where we seek
out purification and in which we pray for ourselves. We cleanse ourselves
and offer prayer, asking Creator and the Ancestors to help us to become
better people and to move our lives forward in a good and honorable
way.
Once the round to the East is complete, we move to the round of the
South, the place of “Bonatsi” or Beloved Mouse. It is, at times, the place of
Coyote. It is the place of childhood. This is where we pray for our loved
ones. We pray for our families, our friends, our colleagues, our fellow
dancers and our Elders. This is the place where we ask the Creator to help
those whom we love.
Once the round of the South is complete, we move to the round of the
West. This is the round of “TuWada” or the Bear. It is also the place of the
Wolf and the Thunder Beings. This is the place where our ancestors go
when they have crossed over so that their souls and spirits can be washed
by the family of Wolves that will tend to them. This is the place where we
pray for our Enemies (often we are our own worse enemy; therefore it
would be appropriate to pray for ourselves in this place).
The place of the West is also a place of Introspection where we go deep
within the cave of our Soul and look within to ask the Creator for healing
and change in our lives. This is the round in which we seek the upgrading
of our lives, upgrading the physical, the spiritual, the social and the
emotional.
The round of the North is the round of the Buffalo, the round of gratitude
and wisdom. It is the place where we go to bring a conclusion to these
things. The Buffalo is often the spirit associated with abundance and
spirituality, not only temporal abun- dance, but spiritual as well. This is the
place where we conclude the Lodge.
Before we exit the lodge the ancestors are thanked and dismissed with
gratitude as they go and take our prayers to a place where they can be
answered. The stones that have sat in the middle of the Lodge, that have
offered their lives to us, that have released their steam to nurture us and to
help us grow, are notified that we have completed the Lodge and we
depart as new creatures.
When we leave the Lodge, we have an option. Those things that we have
left behind can stay there, with the stones, or we can choose to pick them
up and take them with us. If I go to Lodge because I want to learn to let
go of my anger and accept growth and happiness, it is my choice. I can
either leave the anger with the Ancestors or I can pick it up again when I
leave lodge.
For me, Sweat Lodge is one of the most important rituals and acts of
ceremony that I participate in on a regular basis. In Lodge is where the
most important things in life become apparent. I believe in the power of
the Sweat Lodge because I have witnessed this power in the lives of those
who have participated and in my own life.
I cannot think of one participant who approached Lodge with a good
heart, who didn’t walk away with a powerful experience. I find Lodge an
opportunity to cleanse my Soul and start my walk with my fellow man in a
good and honored way.
As I stated earlier, everyone approaches Lodge in a different way. I hope
by sharing your next experience in lodge is enhanced.