Summary of "ARTE RITUAL 2ª parte / Victor Brossa, Nicolás Pauccar, Miguel Valls y Yolanda Soria"
Summary: ARTE RITUAL (2ª parte)
This document collects key tips, routines and ritual steps from the video session ARTE RITUAL (second part). It organizes the main themes, practical ritual instructions, lifestyle and health guidance, warnings, examples and the traditions and tools referenced.
Main themes
- Power, belief and humility
- An object or ritual can provide confidence (“a power”), but attachment, arrogance or trying to prove it undermines the effect.
- Accepting limitations (e.g., saying “of course I can’t” when appropriate) can reduce resistance and allow genuine change.
- Teaching as mutual learning
- True teachers remain students; sharing experiences (rather than lecturing) helps everyone integrate knowledge.
- Awareness and personal filtration
- Be selective about what you absorb — treat yourself as your own “antivirus” and choose which truths to take on.
- Subconscious rules
- The subconscious often does not reliably distinguish joke from reality or present from imagined scenarios.
- Be careful with what you say and visualize. Visualize the path/steps rather than only the finished outcome.
Lifestyle & health tips
- Relaxation/vagotonia for stress
- Entering a calm, vagotonic (parasympathetic) state is more effective than battling stress directly; it enables therapeutic shifts.
- Breath as a core practice
- Breathing is the primary “giving life” mechanism. For people with breathing issues, regaining breath can be a starting point for broader healing.
- Start subtle, move to dense
- To change external reality, first adopt the internal state (e.g., feel secure and then finances will align; feel healthy and the body will follow).
- Gratitude and valuing basics
- Travel or its absence can increase appreciation for everyday comforts (hot water, food, family). Practicing gratitude shifts perception of abundance.
- Beware of mental rehearsal pitfalls
- Repeatedly imagining a finished result can trick the nervous system into feeling the goal is already achieved, reducing motivation.
- Instead, visualize the path and the concrete actions required.
Ritual / “sacred space” — purpose and practical steps
Purpose: create a temporary, personal “fractal of your universe” — a small ritual space (altar / mita) to program intention, gain confidence, and practice change.
Setup (basic structure)
- Foundation
- Lay a cloth or blanket representing your universe, divided in two mirrored halves (symbolic complementary units).
- Structure
- Overlay a fourfold cross (chakana) dividing the space into quadrants that represent viewpoints (examples: spirit / matter, known / unknown, possible / impossible, positive / negative).
- Symbolic objects
- Place white items on one side and dark/red on the other.
- Add flowers, seeds, sweets, and small objects that represent the issue you are addressing.
- Optional geometries and markings
- Mark numbers, use a compass, or include metaphysical geometries (octahedron/decadhedron references) if relevant.
Animating the intention
- Breathe life into the setup — breath is the first “life” given to the altar.
- Add symbolic elements: seeds (growth), sweets (sweetness/harmony), wine or other offerings, and sound (singing).
- Be creative and imaginative — tailor symbols to the specific change desired (example: for diabetes, place a symbolic sugar/chocolate item and balance it with sweets/flowers representing stability).
Working with the altar
- Locate where you’re “stuck” among the quadrants and move that element toward the center.
- Use the altar as an oracle if you built it from a state of trust (for example, coca leaf placements).
- Perform the ritual for a limited time to gain confidence; the long-term goal is to internalize the state so external props are no longer necessary.
Closing and detachment
- After the ritual, wrap or tuck the items and then detach by burying or burning the construction.
- Give thanks and celebrate (dance, confetti, singing).
- Detachment prevents clinging to the symbol and completes the transition back to ordinary life.
Group / collective endorsement
- Rituals gain power from shared practice and collective attention.
- Collective practice still requires individual responsibility and awareness.
Practical warnings & subtleties
- Words and jokes matter
- Careless comments (for example, joking “I’m old”) may be taken by the subconscious as instructions.
- Don’t make sacred space 24/7
- Being perpetually sacred is exhausting; use the ritual space intentionally (e.g., an hour a month or as needed).
- Visualization nuance
- Visualize the steps and the path; imagination can simulate experience (useful therapeutically) but requires skill and presence.
- Play vs. seriousness
- Emphasize playfulness and creativity — treat ritual as a “magical game of life” rather than becoming paralyzed by fear of winning or losing.
Examples and anecdotes
- Stick vs. barking dog
- A stick used as a confidence symbol worked briefly, then failed when the person became attached and tried to “prove” it.
- Diabetes ritual example
- Locate the imbalance (quadrant), place a symbolic sugar item, then balance with sweet, stable symbols.
- Breath visualization
- A student who could only visualize breathing began practice from breath as the foundational survival visualization.
- Travel anecdote
- Speakers noted fear and tension while traveling, then a return home led to greater appreciation for domestic comforts.
Notable locations, traditions and tools
- Traditions and communities
- References to Quechua (Queero) cosmologies and practices and Peruvian indigenous ritual knowledge used across Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador, Argentina and parts of Chile.
- Tools and objects mentioned
- Altar (mita), blanket/cloth with mirrored halves and numbers, flowers (white/red), sweets, seeds, wine, coca leaves (for divination), compass, octahedron/decadhedron metaphors, stick (anecdote).
- Medical/physiological term
- Vagotonia (relaxation/parasympathetic state).
Speakers
- Víctor Brossa
- Nicolás Pauccar
- Miguel Valls
- Yolanda Soria
Note: rituals and symbolic practices are cultural and subjective; apply discernment, personal responsibility and appropriate medical advice when relevant.
Category
Lifestyle
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