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55 of 55 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars sharing transcendent experiences
All other considerations aside, Visionseeker--like Spiritwalker and Medicinemaker--is a good story. By the way, if you haven't read any yet--READ THEM IN ORDER! It's interesting to consider what a possible future might look like. I like to hear about Wesselman's shamanic/visionary encounters and lessons with Nainoa. Unlike some other reviewers, I didn't read this with...
Published on August 9, 2002 by Michele Eshleman

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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars More male appropriation of feminine soul
If there is one thing that is clear about the dire state of our planet at this time, it is that the last 5000 years of our history have been overwhelmingly male-centered, and the neglect, indeed the serious devaluation of the feminine soul, of women and the Goddess, has driven us to the brink of collapse. For that reason alone, I can't accept that a society that exists...
Published 7 months ago by D. Riverblue Cloudwalker


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55 of 55 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars sharing transcendent experiences, August 9, 2002
All other considerations aside, Visionseeker--like Spiritwalker and Medicinemaker--is a good story. By the way, if you haven't read any yet--READ THEM IN ORDER! It's interesting to consider what a possible future might look like. I like to hear about Wesselman's shamanic/visionary encounters and lessons with Nainoa. Unlike some other reviewers, I didn't read this with a particular agenda and specific questions I needed to have answered. If a pressing question came up, I think I'd just write to Dr. Wesselman and ask. I read on to book three because I enjoyed the other two and find the "characters" to be multi-dimensional, aware and very human. Their consciousness is expanding with each visit. Some of their epiphanies help to clarify my own thinking--things I've been turning over in my own mind. The author has a gift for articulating hard-to-define concepts, particularly regarding the nature of the soul. I have a stake now in knowing what happens to these characters, and how they continue to learn and make sense of their uncommon relationship.

Wesselman is not painting of picture of 21st century life, culture and morality when he visits Nainoa. It's a foreign point of view in most respects. Nor do I think the author is omniscient when it comes to life in that time and place. He is learning as he goes and gathering information and understanding. Readers have to be aware of these things. Personally, I read the books with a curiosity about the possibility of a spiritual connection across time. If you believe in the possibility of reincarnation, his narrative is intriguing. What if he and Nainoa share a portion of an enduring soul? I don't think he is asking us to believe what he is saying beyond a shadow of a doubt; we didn't experience what he did, so how can we? But I respect his experience/his beliefs about them--and I think they contain something of value for us.

One of the things I liked best about this particular text was that he goes into specifics about his shamanic practices. As he begins to develop some control over his visionary states, he is also able to share the knowledge he's gained more clearly. He discusses the energy/levels of soul and seems to be honing in on what connects him and his ancestor in these visionary states. I haven't had a conscious experience quite like his, but I've had enough powerful visions in dreaming and other moments to give me an open mind about it.

With regard to the sexuality that a few have taken issue with...if it's part of the overall experience and story, why should it be filtered out? Some might think it's overdone--I hear similar complaints about Auel's Clan of the Cave Bear series--but sexuality and intimate partnerships are part of life. I found them to be tastefully and lovingly captured, though a few could make you blush.... For some who follow a more mystical path, I have heard that you CAN launch some journeying via sexual buildup and release. I can't confirm or deny it myself, though I have spoken to people who claim it happens and I've read about it more than once. You might think it's new age mumbo jumbo--that's your prerogative, but as far as I'm concerned Mr. Wesselman is the author and he gets to choose what goes in and what he feels is important or worthwhile to share. Seems rather courageous to me to lay bare the details of one's life so openly. It's also inspiring to read about couples who love and respect each other with passion and tenderness, though it might not always be comfortable to read coming from our cultural framework.

At any rate, author/mythologist Joseph Campbell cautions that when the hero comes back after his transformational journey with gifts for his/her community, a lot of times those gifts turn to ashes in his hands, because the the community is often not ready/able to understand and receive those gifts--yet.

Keep the stories coming, Dr. Wesselman! We'll embrace whatever gifts we are ready for.

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32 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Third Time is the Charm, October 19, 2001
By 
ssipdx "ssipdx" (Eugene, Or United States) - See all my reviews
I began reading about Shamanism, when the Castenada books hit the bookstore, and I quit reading half way through his series, because he lost me in the twist and turns of his learning process. When I began reading Hank's SpiritWalker, it was with serious reservatons; however, I quickly moved on to MedicineMaker with enthusiasm. I liked Hank's intellectual grasp of the indigenous point of view, combined with his *field-note* anthropological mentality, which was a good mix with my own blend of white-urban core shamanistic practice. Soon, VisionSeeker was published. I bought a copy and started reading. I began to underline whole paragraphs to reread. For me, in VisionSeeker, Hank succeeded in pulling together the esoteric teachings, that rest on the shamanistic foundation he developed in his two preceding volumes. Granted, I am of mystical persuasion, so Hank's use of symbolism and metaphor was not lost on me. Hawaiian mysticism is easy to understand within Hank's storytelling context. I encourage you to buy a copy of this book for your library, since there are few volumes that will teach you more. Thanks Hank, for living your life so authentically. I have benefitted from your written experience. And, if you have a chance to spend some time with Hank personally, DO IT.
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30 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Visionseeker goes beyond Castaneda, August 31, 2001
By 
Castaneda fans, don't miss Dr. Wesselman's books. "Visionseeker" is absolutely mandatory reading for anyone seriously interested in shamanism.

While Carlos Castaneda went through years of training to become a shaman of the Toltec tradition, his description of the events, as spell-binding and out-of-this-world as they have been for me for three decades, have left many loose ends. This is attributable to linguistic limitations of describing the teachings of the left and the right sides, i.e. the explanations and exercises during the "normal" waking state, and the teachings during "heightened awareness", allowing direct access to "knowledge" in linguistically uncharted territory. Dr. Wesselman's trance journeys resemble heightened states of awareness, probably within the narrow band of intense consciousness experienced while falling asleep, just before going under, when images become vividly 3-dimensional and absolutely engaging. This is the shamanic state of "Dreaming Awake" which is traditionally held in suspension through monotonous drumming, chanting, dancing, or psychedelic drugs. Dr. Wesselmann's entry into this kahuna-shamanic state of awareness is accompanied by surges of energy, a doubling of brain wave activity (see footnotes of chapter 14) which is most likely the effect felt when linking up with an "entity" or spirit helper. Castaneda also was told repeatedly by his mentor Don Juan that "speed" was necessary when encountering or attracting the allies, or when coping with the Abstract. While Castaneda either had little innate ability, low personal energy, or due to his reluctance to accept his experiences which never left him, he always needed a push on his so-called "assemblage point" to mobilize it. Dr. Wesselmann has the natural ability to shift awareness, triggered in his case by the emotional outburst of sexual energy, to assemble new realities and to act within them, including complete recapitulation of the events. Although Castaneda's description and use of the "inorganic beings", those entities that are indispensable in shamanic work, is very similar to Dr. Wesselmann's dealings with the "leopard man", the dorajuadiok, and Pele, Castaneda's encounters always seemed dreadfully disturbing to his core. This may be due to Castaneda approaching the subject as a reluctant, fearful, and possibly inadequate apprentice, while Dr. Wesselmann seems naturally skilled and familiar with these entities right from the start.

Despite Castaneda's inadequacies or because of them, however, he introduced to millions of readers the mysterious side of us human beings and the world we live in, preparing us for what Dr. Wesselman has to offer. His description of a master program, hidden deep within our DNA and which needs activation by an outside agent, is most intriguing and novel in his conclusions. Apparently, a shamanic dismemberment and reassembly ritual is key to installing and activating this master program, a notion which can be found among indigenous shamans throughout the world. There is some discussion of how this happens and who is doing it, and Dr. Wesselmann authenticates himself as an initiated shaman by his description of such a ritual while he is preparing to journey to The Source, together with his future relative as a backup. In Castaneda's case, Don Juan probably loaded and activated this program during heightened awareness (replacing Castaneda's energy with his own), forcing Carlos to painstakingly recapitulating these events by moving his assemblage point minutely to those precise locations during the time of the teachings, a task that was taking him a lifetime. However, this kept the reluctant apprentice on his path of discovery and towards his task as a nagual.

Those evolved entities (also called allies, elementals, spiritual masters) seem to have a higher purpose beyond human comprehension and who are the caretakers and gatekeepers of large-scale domains, complex planetary and celestial systems. This reminds one of the ancient Greek pantheon, or the myths and legends from all over the ancient world, when these entities seem to have been much more involved in human affairs. Dr. Wesselman hints at the possibility that these interactions are responsible for human evolution. Now, these entities seem to pick one or the other human, activate the master program and channel through that individual. Once the master program has been switched on, journeying into the unknown tends to be easy, not requiring many specific steps beyond a steadfast desire to succeed. In this way, facets of the unknown, even the unknowable (The Source from which everything emanates), become accessible or can be observed. In Castaneda's terms, the shaman may acquire the ability to soar past The Eagle (The Source) to total freedom (beyond Karma?). Those who make it successfully past The Eagle may be new gods in the making (Nietzsche could have said that). In any event, shamans are scouts into the unknown, the seeing among the blind, and it is interesting that the once top-secret activities of shamans are reemerging during a time of worldwide climatic, economic and geopolitical changes.

Dr. Wesselmann's great contribution to making shamanism palpable to the interested reader is the ease with which he maneuvers between normal waking and shamanic awareness, combined with a good story, baffling discoveries and insights, using contemporary mythologic and archetypal concepts. I expect much more to come on the following topics: purpose of mankind on this planet and where we came from, the Ao Aumakua state, some useful exercises to activate the master program, or to get in touch with an entity, the causes and events leading to the severe shrinkage of the human population in the near future, on the nature of the different entities and their spheres of existence, on healing and the connectivity of living and inanimate things and how events, decisions, and actions affect each other, on why the average person is unaware of all this, on the Web, more journeys to the Source, on the nature of Light and Sound, on chaos and negative/negating aspects, past civilizations, etc.

Evolve, keep on dreaming!

MW

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16 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Brilliant Third Book in his Series, full of wisdom & love, August 4, 2001
By 
R. Mundt (California, USA) - See all my reviews
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Once again Dr. Hank Wesselman has shown he has the depth of understanding, compassion and courage to take on serious and difficult topics with clarity, while providing us with a spell binding and beautifully integrated stream of narrative which captures our attention and holds us through each detail. Clearly, he has learned not only the extremely valuable lessons of the Hawaiian spiritual understanding but the craft of their storytellers as well.

His brilliant use of the interchange of ideas between himself and his esteemed descendant, Nainoa, as they seek understanding of the nature of reality, the self, the spirit realm, and the nature of the universe provides a rich tapestry of concept and wisdom within the graceful flow of the narrative.

What I love about his writing in these three books, SpiritWalker, MedicineMaker and now VisionSeeker, is this interplay of ideas and concepts woven so perfectly into the experiential narrative of these adventures in consciousness. There were times when I was so excited by the ideas as I was reading that I literally had to put the book down and think for periods of time before continuing.

Wesselman never makes the mistake of assuming or consuming Nainoa's perspective with his own, and in fact, in the true evidence of a good scholar and seeker, uses the insights of Nainoa to enhance his own understanding and provide insight to his emerging new "world view". His openness and willingness to consider and explore new perspectives and concepts as they relate to his major questions and curiosity give his work a powerful and informed wholeness not found in very many other places.

His integration of his analytical or scientific self into the process, without the normally accompanying baggage of the limitations of a purely rational approach gives his work a strength and coherence that is exciting, refreshing and thrilling to participate in.

And, make no mistake about it, these books are definitely participatory. As he weaves the new cloth of his own integration and understanding, pulling in the diverse and multifaceted resources of his considerable research in areas ranging from psychology, modern myth, anthropology, physics and the physical sciences, his resulting tapestry is alive with a synthesis of ideas and constructs which are both sensible and breathtaking at the same time.

As a life long student of the nature of reality, consciousness and physical form, and, later, the deeper inner relationships of thought, form and creation, I find his work to be perhaps the most engaging and exciting reading I have had the pleasure to encounter in many years. This is in no small part due to the level of respect, reverence and compassion which he brings to his subject matter, evidenced by his courage and willingness to honor not only his own, but other's experiences. Thank you Dr. Wesselman for once again providing the journey of purpose and the gateway to infinite new potentials of exploration!

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12 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Vision, February 14, 2002
By 
jessica c claus (wise river, mt United States) - See all my reviews
Required reading for the hungry soul, consious mind, or curious being.Visionseeker is chalked full of mystic experiences, healing practices and advice of extraordinary importance. Hank's insight of our wordly concerns [political, economical, religious, and environmental]offers options and hope for the future of humanity.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars visionseeker, September 12, 2011
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This review is from: Visionseeker (Paperback)
This is a awesome book. I have read all 3 in the series & they really make you think about our life here on earth & why we're here! Everyone of his books leaves you wanting to read more & you hate to have to put it down. Excellent books!!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars what I've been looking for, November 28, 2011
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This review is from: Visionseeker (Paperback)
Having read the preceding two books of Wesselman's 'Spiritwalker' trilogy, I find the third,'Visionseeker', to be a perfect ending companion to the set, although 'ending' is not quite the right word. These books inspire one to start life afresh with the insight and knowledge they bequeath.They have been among the most compelling books I have ever read in my life. In the experiential narrative of the trilogy, matters of the mind, body & spirit, questions about life and the great beyond, our origins and our evolutionary potential, are all addressed. The ponderous subject matter and the thorough, succinct and descriptive writing style of Dr. Wesselman make for a powerful and persuasive read.In some instances, I felt like I was reading a Dan Brown novel, except that this was not fiction. This book, like the preceding two of the trilogy,is a joy to read & hard to put down once started.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Hank Wesselman is Awesome, March 3, 2009
This review is from: Visionseeker (Paperback)
Great adventure while providing enlightening information and options to our normal day-to-day living and spiritual practices. This book is written so that the reader can easily understand/follow the information yet if something isn't clear, there's a glossary in the back that provides commonly used words and their definition. I've read all but his last book and have thoroughly enjoyed all of them. I'm looking forward to attending at least one of his seminars. Thank you Hank, for sharing your stories with us!!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A good conclusion to the "Spiritwalker" trilogy., July 12, 2007
By 
Genji Lim (Berkeley, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Visionseeker (Paperback)
Visionseeker is the final of three books. The first two being "Spiritwalker," then "Medicinmaker."

In Visionseeker, Hank Wesselman continues to beautifully illustrate his extraordinary visionary experiences with using a writing style which is easy to follow and often peppered with humor. The concepts presented in the book -- such as out-of-body consciousness and shamanism's healing methods, etc. -- are thoroughly investigated and explained to the best of the author's ability, with the Western, scientifically-oriented perspective in mind. Hank's "inner scientist," stemming from his previous education in the Anthropological field, compels him to come up with rational and logical reasons as to how and why these extraordinary experiences are taking place. Using scientific reasoning and traditional Hawai'ian beliefs, he is able to explain (was able to explain to me, at least) what would normally be unexplainable.

The content of the entire trilogy generally includes: 1) his first encounters and reactions to his initial out-of-the-ordinary experiences, 2) his understanding and explanation of these experiences through a scientific and traditional Hawai'ian Kahuna's perspective, 3) an extraordinary account of his repeated "journeys" to a possible future Earth, seeing it through another man's eyes, and 4) several undeniably relevant and important proposals which connect his experiences to our present time and global situation.

I appreciated Hank's openmindedness and sincerity when he approached his difficult-to-explain/understand experiences. Both his experiences and perspective inspired me to look at my life and future in a new way. The Spiritwalker trilogy has made a significant difference in my life. I highly recommend all three books.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Classic Hawaiian shamanism, March 27, 2007
By 
Hank has been there, done that. He allows you to join his ecstacy as he receives vital information for humankind's growth and survival. Don't miss it.
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Visionseeker
Visionseeker by Henry Barnard Wesselman (Paperback - January 28, 2002)
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