What Happened to the "Witches" of Carlos Castaneda?

In 1998, several women associated with "Tensegrity," the belief system of 1970s New Age guru, cult leader and literary hoaxer Carlos Castaneda, vanished upon Castaneda's death. All but one of their cases remain unsolved. What happened to these women, and why did they follow Castaneda in the first place?
The written article on which this video is based: www.seanmunger.com/blog/disap...
My website: www.seanmunger.com/
New blog: www.gardenofmemory.net/
Chapters:
00:00-00:32: Introduction
00:32-01:09: The Witches Vanish
01:09-04:01: Who Was Carlos Castaneda?
04:01-06:39: Patricia Partin/Nury Alexander
06:39-08:33: Florinda Donner-Grau/Regine Thal
08:33-10:21: Taisha Abelar/Maryann Simko
10:21-10:57: Kylie Lundahl
10:57-13:32: Amalia Marquez/Amalia Marin
13:32-14:02: Carol Tiggs
14:02-16:51: What Happened? (Theories)
16:51-19:08: Amy Wallace's Story
19:08-22:59: Historical Question--Why?

Пікірлер: 513

  • @barrywilson4276
    @barrywilson42762 ай бұрын

    In the early 70s I was a university student interested in eastern philosophy and psychedelics. I had two experiences that were powerful but baffling to me. Two or three years later I encountered the Don Juan books and was startled to find my experiences described as losing the human form and hearing the voice of seeing. I was hooked on reading all the works. Not being a joiner I never became involved with the movement. After reading Castaneda I did have other experiences similar to those from the Books but the pre exposure experiences seem the most uncanny. The later books were mostly about Stalking which involves intentional creation of a false crisis to move the students assemblage point for magical experiences. At 73 I remain puzzled but unable to completely dismiss Castaneda.

  • @veronica_._._._

    @veronica_._._._

    2 ай бұрын

    Even after the podcast? His books are so dystopic and depressing. A biography of a psychopath is how l would describe them, a dog eat dog p.o.v.

  • @amberandrews6842

    @amberandrews6842

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@veronica_._._._just because he used it for selfish purposes, doesn't mean there isn't some truth inside it.

  • @nicolasdelaforge7420

    @nicolasdelaforge7420

    2 ай бұрын

    Well, everything is partly true and partly fiction. We mix dream and reality. Humans dreamed before they came into the state they call "waking".

  • @bertanelson8062

    @bertanelson8062

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes, I'm 74 & was quite taken with Castenada's stories. I didn't read all his books nor did I know about tensegrity until now. Clearly some of what he wrote was taken from cultural traditions somewhere. He did study anthropology after all. His writings were the only seemingly "real thing" discussing spirituality at that time. I've often reflected on the pull these stories had on me in my 20's. What he wrote about "dreaming" had a particular resonance with me. Yes, it was a time of experiments with consciousness, alternate realities & profound distrust of the old fashioned "straight" world that was drafting us into a war that was being lied about. At this point I guess I'm not surprised to find out that what he wrote is considered fraudulent, especially in the context of academia. I'm sorry to hear there had been a sort of cult around him. People give their power away too easily.

  • @joalexsg9741

    @joalexsg9741

    Ай бұрын

    It's just because he plagiarized true teachings of ancient eastern civilizations, like the alchemical Taoist and Tibetan sources! He made a dangerous pastiche which lured many into his spiritual abyss. Please, look for the truly legitimate fountains of knowledge by reliable masters instead.

  • @marymarlowe292
    @marymarlowe2929 ай бұрын

    Are you familiar with Merilyn Tunneshende? She wrote two books 📚 Medicine Dream-A Woman' Encounter with the Healing Realms of Don Juan and Don Juan and the Art of Sexual Energy. In the second book on pg 219 she describes Don Juan's death 💀. On pg 124 she describes diagnosing CC liver cancer. On pg 221 she talks about CC death 💀 in April 1998. No one mentioned her name in the comments so I 🤔 thought I would.😉

  • @SingleMalt77005

    @SingleMalt77005

    2 ай бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/f3l5utmBZZi3ops.html

  • @bertkilborne6464

    @bertkilborne6464

    Ай бұрын

    I've heard of her Never read them - I'm sort of over Casteneda, but there's a lot of valid material there.

  • @pentatonic145

    @pentatonic145

    27 күн бұрын

    Carlos had a very strong draw toward feminine energy - hence his experience with Datura. Not surprised to hear that he ended up surrounded by a harem of witches.

  • @jackwood8307
    @jackwood83072 ай бұрын

    My sister owned a hippie bookstore in the early 70’s and that’s where I read Castaneda. It was a mind trip for me at 14 years old. Wild times indeed.

  • @anonymoushuman8344

    @anonymoushuman8344

    Ай бұрын

    I was 14 when I first read him, too. At first I wanted to go to Mexico in search of Mr. Matus.

  • @user-jh8eq9mn3q

    @user-jh8eq9mn3q

    13 күн бұрын

    sad you wasted yout time on thsoe readinds .. he was a scumbag

  • @christophersmith7714
    @christophersmith77142 ай бұрын

    Ive read all of Castaneda's books and found them very interesting and thought provoking. And believable. My favourite is Tales Of Power.

  • @Sunviewer338

    @Sunviewer338

    Ай бұрын

    Hippie books, but enjoyable reading.

  • @DaleRogers
    @DaleRogers Жыл бұрын

    I was first introduced to the Castaneda books when I was 16 (76). They had a profound effect on me. They were my first introduction to metaphysical thought, other than Chrisianity that is. I am now 63. The exploration of consciousness has remained a primary interest.Having joined and left a cult myself, I can attest to the desire to find a teacher/guru that has walked the path before us. Jesus was a leader, that in the early days, was considered by many a cult leader and heratic. Read the history of early Christianity. Castaneda talked about how our description of the world influences our experience. Regardless of whether Don Juan was fiction, that notion remains true. What we believe, our description, does influence our perception and experience of the world. Whether you trust the findings of quantam physics, the Monroe Institute, Hinduism, Christianity, Magic, New Thought, Shamanism, the Placebo effect, the Institute for Noetic Sciences, or any number of other groups studying consciouncess, they all point to the same thing. Belief, i.e. thought + feelings, intersect with materialism. Matter is not solid. Consciousness is fundamental.

  • @SeanMunger

    @SeanMunger

    Жыл бұрын

    The positives of this metaphysical philosophy, and it's possible that there are some, do not change the fact that five women are dead who would otherwise probably be alive if not for Castaneda's toxic control over them.

  • @greenman4508

    @greenman4508

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SeanMungerfascinating on several levels. I was recently looking into the mk Ultra connections to the great full dead, and all the musicians/military intelligence / counter culture movement/the acid push by the cia on counter culture …and it was offhandedly remarked that Castaneda was part of this movement to co-opt and mislead any positive potential growth that mystical experiences could bring. Haven’t found any actual leads just insinuating comments. Any thoughts?

  • @andredewaal3511

    @andredewaal3511

    4 ай бұрын

    @@greenman4508 hi , yes i had same thought about , yesterday i read article about ;the travistock institute , seems the created greatfull death , beatles , rolling stones and even the doors , only jim morrisson would not let the interfere with his composition, or something like that , i post another message with link.

  • @cristianocastagno9680

    @cristianocastagno9680

    2 ай бұрын

    @@SeanMungerthank you for informing us, life is complex, the search for truth an endless quest with always possible twists of the plot.

  • @dawnemile7499

    @dawnemile7499

    2 ай бұрын

    I hope you free yourself of your unsubstanstiated beliefs.

  • @laslobas1234
    @laslobas123410 ай бұрын

    My teacher in Tecate, the medicine man of the Yaquis, knew Carlos and helped him write the books. He told Carlos “if you make any money from these books bring some back to the tribe”. He never did. My teacher always referred to him as Pinche Carlos. Carlos took the spiritual practices of the Yaquis and twisted it for his own power. It is sad to see so many still follow Carlos

  • @jeffjohnson7470

    @jeffjohnson7470

    2 ай бұрын

    How would anybody know. Pre internet all we had was the books. No one was out yelling on the corners that he was a fake. As a matter of fact i am just learning this now. What are you gonna do. Shit never changes.

  • @SaralinaLove

    @SaralinaLove

    2 ай бұрын

    Precisely. Amazing to have that verification of who helped him write. His lager works were co written by the 3 women and were plagiarized from many many books which others have verified them as plagiarized materials.

  • @veronica_._._._

    @veronica_._._._

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@jeffjohnson7470yes they were! But primacy and repetition wins right? Why were they inn every public library? - and the fact that they are verbal diarrhea is a clue.

  • @sythe77

    @sythe77

    Ай бұрын

    @@jeffjohnson7470 The Castanada Papers were published in the 80's. Complete expose. No excuse.

  • @radiojet1429

    @radiojet1429

    Ай бұрын

    In New Mexico, where I'm from, a "tecate" is a heroin addict. It is a common term here.

  • @maurogarces7337
    @maurogarces73372 ай бұрын

    As someone native from South America, descendant from (Quechua/aymara), when i read Castaneda's books i saw many things that i previously experienced, specially around the amazonas. Many of the things he speaks about, entities and the power of the night and open areas, i can say that he speaks factually. Many natives who never went out to civilazation and stood in their villages have knowledge that he speaks about very clearly, even body techniques. To me, his work is a door to the occult that not many can reach, and he shares it. People waste a lot of time arguing about whether everything was a farse or about females he had relationships with. It's more a reflection of who you are and why it pisses you off, or makes you invest so much time discrediting. (Not meaning your video, i mean in general). People need to go out and find for themselves. Btw south america experimented through thousands of years with Ayahuasca. Yet the component of that plant and Peyote, as well as other cultures (Africa specially) who are believed to have aquired consciousness through the usage of such plants, with help of "beings". Our reality today is basically cement.

  • @A_Chicago_Man

    @A_Chicago_Man

    Ай бұрын

    Uh huh! Sure I believe you.

  • @Sunviewer338

    @Sunviewer338

    Ай бұрын

    The only reason Carlos Castaneda' has any connection to tales of Mexican Brujos is because he had a relationship with a noteable psychiatrist who was a mover and shaker in new age groups around California and other places....esp Esalen in Big Sur. There was much written about Casteneda basing most of his writing from conversations with this man. It was either Oscar Ichaza or Claudio Naranjo. I can't remember which one for sure, but whichever man it was either had far more credibility than Casteneda. Imagine having highly charged psychedelic experiences and you are able to calmly write about in such detail and detachment! Do you think anyone would be able to recall such stories due to the overpowering torrent of hallucinations and flood of thoughts and emotions? He always framed himself sitting with a notebook and pen writing with complete focus while questioning Don Juan in an academic fashion. Major BS. I've been in those states and you don't write about them in the moment! He gave himself away by the retelling of those explosive experiences like he was sitting in a bulletproof cage. He would even write how difficult it could be at times. He was running around in inhospitable conditions with jaguars attacking from the darkness! A lot of people were really invested in the Don Juan zeitgeist of the 1970's and they wanted so badly for the bullshit** to be true!

  • @nwogamesalert

    @nwogamesalert

    Ай бұрын

    Your story sounds like a bunch of crap.

  • @joeorca5087

    @joeorca5087

    Ай бұрын

    Exellent

  • @gabrielnunes7407

    @gabrielnunes7407

    Ай бұрын

    lol.

  • @dougyoung221
    @dougyoung22110 ай бұрын

    I was drawn to the castaneda books in 71 after returning from viet nam. LSD, pot, left me with life altering experiences and also a good deal of confusion. Casataneda capitalized on that moment in time where conciousness expansion was only a toke or pill away. I recall that about the third book i began to see this was a scam, no doubt making castaneda wealthy, famous, and sexually satisfied. He was a gifted story teller but also an ass, preying on other peoples earnest desire to reach some deeper understanding of life. Turns out we're our own best teacher when we learn to listen to the spirit within. No mediator required though honest others are helpful.

  • @ConciousnessExplorer

    @ConciousnessExplorer

    10 ай бұрын

    I have read his book the art of dreaming and immediately knew it was fiction but I thoroughly enjoyed the setting and loved the book, but I don't get how people would think it's all real

  • @oldernu1250

    @oldernu1250

    Ай бұрын

    Right. Humans are so prone to self deception. Knew many kids who drugged out and were impaired everafter.

  • @Morgan313

    @Morgan313

    26 күн бұрын

    “We’re our own best teacher when we learn to listen to the spirit within.” Perfectly said!

  • @JohnEuliss
    @JohnEuliss10 ай бұрын

    I have always been enamored with Castanedas writings. The concepts seemed incongruous but they always had an element of truth. No self importance, no feelings of In superiority , or feelings of failure. Cutting off the internal dialogue is very important to developing the magic of Don Juan. This is all rather disconcerting and I would love to do further research on this whole subject.

  • @veronica_._._._

    @veronica_._._._

    2 ай бұрын

    He is Don Juan, you are the ignorant acolyte who must be tormented towards "truth" Confessions or a boast?

  • @nicolasrossi5978
    @nicolasrossi59789 ай бұрын

    Nice piece. It is probably difficult now at this later date to understand why these books were so important within the context of the time in which they were written. It was necessary THEN for me to hear what he had to say,(both Castenada and Don Juan ) and to incorporate, or square that into/with my understanding of the world. To have a more vital and comprehensible connection with the mystical and unseen forces I felt/sensed were otherwise all around us, but just beyond my knowing. I made some of my own investigations (as did my friends) into the metaphysical and altered states of consciousness spoken about. because I was a curious/seeking young man of that era. This videos information is interesting, but really does nothing to diminish the first books as they concerned or influenced myself or others I knew then (1970's). Certainly one of those, "you had to have been there" points in time in order to fully appreciate the cultural context. Likewise with Hesse's 'Siddartha' or McKenna's books, or even in some ways Richard Brautigan's poetry and verse. All still relevant, but also very era specific too. Thanks

  • @elasticharmony
    @elasticharmony9 ай бұрын

    Since they taught erasing personal history this seems to be the strongest clue.

  • @cheshirecat5571
    @cheshirecat5571 Жыл бұрын

    The eternal question: Can one separate the art from the artist? Carlos Castaneda was a captivating and gifted writer. Unfortunately, later on he became an abusive cult leader and egomaniac. On which basis do we judge him - by his art, or his personal life? I read his books as a teenager and young adult. I was hooked by his first three books which caught my imagination - so much so, that I once had a powerful acid trip that was inspired subconsciously by his writings. By the fourth book, however, I realized Castaneda was a huckster. Fraud or not, he was a fine storyteller. There was even a little wisdom in his books, sprinkled among the bullshit. Fertilizer does help the flowers grow, after all. It's a shame he didn't heed his own writings and grow wise as he aged. He did the opposite; he became a monster. At least he left three wonderful books for the world to read. Thanks for this wonderful video, and your two subsequent ones on this topic. I am currently reading "Sorcerer's Apprentice" by Amy Wallace. I highly recommend it.

  • @djshowtrial4565

    @djshowtrial4565

    2 ай бұрын

    I totally agree with your assessment. . .it took me a lot longer to realize the absence of literary merit in his later books because the series had such momentum with those great books like A Separate Reality and Teachings of Don Juan. . .very important that people who enjoy his books also get an opportunity to read books like Amy Wallace’s account

  • @EpicFantasyRPGOfficial2

    @EpicFantasyRPGOfficial2

    2 ай бұрын

    you want to believe his lies and you are making excuses. his unfalsifiable lies and deceit are murderously dangerous and only the weak willed and the mentally subnormal can be persuaded he has anything to offer.

  • @heartofodds

    @heartofodds

    2 ай бұрын

    I've come to believe that we're just insensitive, generally. You can't separate it vibe-wise. If we were more attuned, balanced, self-consistent we'd probably be able to detect it. Craftsmanship aside.

  • @openeverydoor
    @openeverydoor4 ай бұрын

    Cleargreen had to drop the term "Tensegrity" to "magical passes" because Buckminster Fuller's estate threatened a lawsuit.... Tensegrity is the foundation of geodesic domes as related by Buckminster Fuller. It combines the words tension and integrity. The very thing that makes structures impervious to outside influence. The book is "Critical Path". It is a cracking good read and then some... The point of Castaneda's teachings is internal silence It's all about challenging perception❤❤

  • @andrewblake2254
    @andrewblake225410 ай бұрын

    The historical moment you describe is not over at all. Meditation is more popular than ever but "gurus" or cult leaders are no longer very noticeable. The MSM however has lost interest decades ago. I read and loved his books in the '60's and I am still at it in terms of enquiring into consciousness. I have never become disillusioned even though some teachers were less than they claimed, because our consciousness itself is endlessly fascinating. From where does it arise?

  • @mrq6270

    @mrq6270

    10 ай бұрын

    Journey to Ixtlan was a text book in a college course I had back in the mid 80s. We also studied Gurdjieff (through the book "The Fourth Way" by his student P. D. Ouspenksy), and also Idries Shah. After college I continued to read all three authors. All three have their critics, and I don't argue with the criticisms, but I am eternally grateful that I was introduced to those gentlemen. I feel that they have enormously expanded my horizons. They set me free in a way. Interest in The 4th Way led me to find the 9 personality types theory, which also expanded the way I see the world. I don't take any of it as "the word of God" so to speak. But it all keeps me from becoming fixated on minutiae. As Rumi supposedly said, "Do not look at my outward form, but take what is in my hand." That's how I feel about all these supposed gurus. If they offer something I can use then I'll take it. But at the end of the day it's still up to me to make life work. If you have any reading to recommend I'd be grateful.

  • 2 ай бұрын

    Alex Shulgin is still a household name in some circles ("smart" drugs).

  • @OrlandoHofmann-qt7mx

    @OrlandoHofmann-qt7mx

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@mrq6270If one says about himself to be a teacher or guru you should run...a real teacher/benefiter never calls himself a superior being, instead shares his wisdom & gets called a teacher or wise man by those who learn from him

  • @Demosophist
    @Demosophist10 ай бұрын

    Around 1976 I visited Carlos Castaneda's house in the farming country north of Los Angeles, near Carpinteria. I went and knocked on his front door and the door was answered by an Hispanic woman whom I took to be his housekeeper. She said that he wasn't home and wouldn't be back for some days so I gave up and continued my motorcycle trip. I wonder if the woman I talked to was one of his "witches"?

  • @jonshive5482

    @jonshive5482

    2 ай бұрын

    Heh-heh. On leave from the Army I visited his office on the UC Irvine campus to make sure this guy was for real. He wasn't there but the plaque on his door convinced me he was.

  • @sleepydreamdealer
    @sleepydreamdealer3 жыл бұрын

    *Funny that for the one of them witches you couldn't find any photo is Kylie Lundahl. Because here, on youtube, there's long interview with her and two more, explaining the lineage of Castaneda's mystic path and so on. Also, wherever you see a pictures of a woman in black jump suit, showing the 'Tensegrity' movements - that's Kylie. Blond, shorthaired, looking exactly like Nuri, Florinda and who know who else more of their magic convent.

  • @jrae4348
    @jrae43482 ай бұрын

    I read Travels to Ixylan years ago and loved the way it challenged my concepts of reality. I never took it as a literal account of events but rather an imaginary and mythical dive into spirituality. I enjoyed it from that perspective. Erasing personal history goes back to early Christianity when one is born again. Nothing new here. Historically cults arise during times of conflict, change and or cataclysmic events. There is a good book that addresses this phenomena called “The First Messiah.”

  • @jameslyons3320
    @jameslyons332010 ай бұрын

    I am an old Hippie, coming along as Hippiedom was just coalescing. A product of the psychedelic experience was the ever broadening of what Reality encompassed. A friend had written a book, THE PSYCHEDELIC GUIDE TO THE PREPARATION OF THE EUCHARIST, which very clearly describes how to create many psychedelics. Soon we were roaming the South Texas desert searching for peyote from which we chemically extracted mescaline. In the desert area were local peyote pickers, licensed to provide the plant to Native Americans. Later, as I became aware of the Don Juan series I realized that the story was likely a work of imagination. It bore too much of the experiences that the “psychedelic experience” had already proven to be imaginary. The REAL MAGIC that took place was how real Love is and how close to the psychological surface it truly lays.

  • @bonnie_gail

    @bonnie_gail

    2 ай бұрын

    I enjoyed your last sentence.

  • @SW-jt3sl

    @SW-jt3sl

    2 ай бұрын

    Lies. Hens lay

  • @veronica_._._._

    @veronica_._._._

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@SW-jt3slCastenada was a golden goose for his publishers tho.

  • @user-tz3yx8dr1j

    @user-tz3yx8dr1j

    Ай бұрын

    "..... IN A FEW OF ITS MANY GUISES" (an inspiration to me as a kid in pursuit of an educational direction, later well realized). Still a devoted Hippie and can't imagine a higher path. Regards to Mr. Brown, should he still be around.

  • @AS-gz8oe

    @AS-gz8oe

    Ай бұрын

    I thought it was pretty obvious that psychadelics were a catalyst for the stories in his books

  • @MrStrocube
    @MrStrocube10 ай бұрын

    It doesn’t matter that Carlos made it all up. His work stands as an amazing work of fiction regardless. It’s too bad Carlos went nuts and formed a cult around himself. 🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @user-jh8eq9mn3q

    @user-jh8eq9mn3q

    13 күн бұрын

    should have been locked up and punished by law before he could cause all this damage.

  • @noahjuanjuneau9598
    @noahjuanjuneau959810 ай бұрын

    I was in a position to interact with Carlos Castaneda on two occasions at UCLA in the early seventies because I knew two young women, roommates, who had both dated him. He readily admitted his primary motivation in writing the books and getting his PhD. stemmed from deep feelings of personal insecurity based on his ethnicity and background. He said (something along the lines of) ‘I’m a short, brown Hispanic man from Peru who very much wanted to get dates with tall blonde girls, and obtaining my PhD was my goal so I could ‘score.’ The two girls I knew who introduced me to him basically supported that premise. Their friendship with him bore this out. He wrote his books in the library at UCLA and gleaned the hodgepodge of philosophical BS they contained from other philosophical and spiritual books he read. He mixed in colorful stories from his own trips in and around Latin America and the American southwest. And he exploited the interests of the era in altered states of consciousness. He created a fictional narrative that he exploited meet girls who otherwise would have never even noticed him. It was all a ‘schtick.’ Even he admitted it.

  • @SeanMunger

    @SeanMunger

    10 ай бұрын

    Fascinating! This is consistent with what I've read from those who knew him personally. His most passionate defenders never knew him, which is telling.

  • @Lyrielonwind

    @Lyrielonwind

    9 ай бұрын

    It makes sense. Just another low self esteem narcissist who needs to lie to get sex. There are far too many. I have noticed all women where beautiful and Caucasian type.

  • @MelissaThompson432

    @MelissaThompson432

    9 ай бұрын

    Now, this, I believe wholeheartedly.

  • @lunainezdelamancha3368

    @lunainezdelamancha3368

    2 ай бұрын

    Wow.... I'm not surprised... He was another con artist, (among many), followed by insecure women, aka losers.

  • @Leonard-Mazet

    @Leonard-Mazet

    2 ай бұрын

    Damn the pill is hard to swallow...

  • @narcabusevictimgermany9687
    @narcabusevictimgermany96873 жыл бұрын

    I love everything about the warriors and Castanedians!

  • @tristanstephens3322
    @tristanstephens33222 жыл бұрын

    If you want to find out the truth, follow the money. Who is in charge or benifiting from the eagles gift trust.

  • @katerwriter

    @katerwriter

    Ай бұрын

    Those who have been running Cleargreen ever since Castaneda's death appear to be the ones benefitting most from the trust. Where are current book royalties going? - perhaps to the same trust. . . I've read that the series may belong to a single person now but haven't seen any definitive proof yet. It appears that Castaneda might have been manipulated by his beneficiaries into making decisions about the trust while ill, although perhaps dealing with practicalities very late in life was part of the manipulative sway Castaneda held over those who lived with him. Apparently the trust and will weren't finalized and signed off on until three days before his death.

  • @sabaistiantrebor9417
    @sabaistiantrebor94173 жыл бұрын

    As a pre tee. I met Mr Castaneda, I spent time with some of the witches, I totally distrusted and hated him, he felt the same in spades.. .....

  • @drygordspellweaver8761

    @drygordspellweaver8761

    2 жыл бұрын

    You sensed a sociopathic conman

  • @robertoponce8077
    @robertoponce80779 ай бұрын

    I met Castaneda around 1994 up north México City, during a three day seminar about Transegrity, attended by hundreds of people, many of them younger than me, with lots of loyal women recieving and headed the "lessons" to visitors like me and "pupils" who payed a fee, the last day Castaneda himself held a talking and talked to a small group of press reporters --me among them. So, that is why I liked your video, Sean, since I somehow understand what you talk about in general, but those women dissapearing was something I didn't know, the theme here is treated very seriously here by you, congratulations 😮

  • @vally732

    @vally732

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes yes..very seriously..

  • @randystone4903
    @randystone490310 ай бұрын

    It's been interesting to reread the Castenada's first books recently and come across this critique. I feel (I don't know) his first book had some information that did come from Native Americans. Carlo's first experience with Mescalito is very different from the laid back high I observed in friends back in the 1970s when many thought doing drugs was cool. Now we have a resurgence of interest in Shamanism with the Ayahuasca drug who's point is to meet entities in another dimension. Rereading the first book it seems to me he is warning people of the dangers of hallucinogens and shamans by his awful experiences. Having seen people damaged by drugs back in the 1970s, especially jimsom weed and morning glories, it's amazes me why so many of my generation tried the drugs described in his books. Having met shaman, as designated by their tribe, they scare the hell out of me. Castaneda did plagiarize from a lot of sources that I find entertaining and some quotes valuable to me. After his third book I became convinced even in my teenage years he went into writing fantasy that I still found entertaining. I'm just hoping the first book isn't made into a movie, I'd hate to see young people pursue shamanism through drugs that can do permanent damage to their brains and nervous system. Please don't attempt to find knowledge from the drugs Carlos describes. As for the cult that Carlos surrounded himself with should be described as a horrible failure. Sorry for the women who thought they had found a path to spiritual powers, but ended up succumbing to one man's fantasy.

  • @georgehart994
    @georgehart99410 ай бұрын

    Interesting, there's no mention of his son, and that the women close to him controlled all of his finances, except the one found dead of course. Did the finances magically disappear with them as well? Perhaps that's another video...SRi

  • @Jim-Tuner

    @Jim-Tuner

    2 ай бұрын

    There was a will created three days before he died that put all his assets into a trust (the Eagle's trust). Everything to do with the estate was put together by an LA entertainment industry attorney named Deborah Drooz who was also made executor of the will.

  • @kaijusushi8165
    @kaijusushi816510 ай бұрын

    One important aspect of this story is that the ritualistic use of peyote, datura and other halucinogenic plants that was a part of Castaneda's 'cult' could lead to mental derangement and insanity. Especially when used over an extended period of time, these drugs can be very damaging to one's mental health. These poor women may well have been completely out of their minds by the time Castaneda died.

  • @tonyfeld5403

    @tonyfeld5403

    2 ай бұрын

    You don't mess with datura. A really really bad idea. I've known people that have taken it, not recommended if you want to keep your sanity.

  • @LIFEIowa
    @LIFEIowa5 жыл бұрын

    LIFEIowa 1 minute ago Kylie Lundahl is De Ann Jo Ahlvers from Iowa- she has 2 adult sons, who are looking for her. IF anyone knows where she is her Sons would like to Connect with her. Thank you.

  • @sp1t0nu
    @sp1t0nu3 жыл бұрын

    I ve been practising tensegrity before and it really worked. I never been into groups or leaders so i did it on my own. I started doing it again few days ago and it brings me energy and peace and the rest of drama I don’t care about.. not trying to jump from the cliff either ..but i always wondered what happened to Kylie L.

  • @raymondkerr5471
    @raymondkerr547110 ай бұрын

    Nicely done. I was hooked by Carlos Castaneda’s adventures back in ‘73 and continued to read him right up to the bitter end, more out of lurid fascination at the whole saga than credulous adherence to his fantastic claims, which, if taken as psychotropic Vaseline dreams, might have loosely passed as phenomenological reports. They never were convincing enough that I would follow him over a cliff. Delving into his sources, digging out the truth of the matter occupied me for years. I think the philosophic seeds strewn throughout his far flung yarns owe more to Gurdjieff, Karlfried Von Durkheim, Alan Watts and others than to a Yaqui Indian named Don Juan Matus. According to his ex-wife “Matus” was Castaneda’s favorite brand of port. Cheers! Tensegrity’s “magical passes” are clearly no more than rehashed Qi Gong-in fact his book “The Fire From Within” bears a dedication to his martial arts instructor. And having read, God help me, the “witches’” books as well, I believe those manuscripts were quite likely written by Castaneda himself in his tireless campaign to shore up the credibility of his mythos. The writing style reads exactly like his. Recently I went back and had a look at his writings from “Tales of Power” on (I have a whole file box stowed away in the garage) and found his schtick completely unreadable-just plain bad writing. Oh well, live and learn.

  • @veronica_._._._

    @veronica_._._._

    2 ай бұрын

    Idries Shah was pushing the same tish too, at the same time, in the UK and internationally. Club of Rome type level and a "fixer" Cultural Engineering "keeps the lights" on tho, or so they would have us believe. How many parasites can a host (civil society) sustain seems to be a perennial fascination for these types.

  • @InRiseMovement
    @InRiseMovement2 ай бұрын

    "Erasing personal history' is a basic method of all manipulators, even jealous husbands and wifes. It's easy to control someone with no familly and friend-ties. That is why cult-leaders using this method. No one need a 'saviour'. We are our own saviour and guru. Do not give away your power to anyone, by thinking, that they are better than you. As they say: "we are one", so why would anyone would search for a guru, or an authority figure to undermine his/her divinity? I enjoyed your story.

  • @OldHoTrollin

    @OldHoTrollin

    Ай бұрын

    Yes!!! Its too bad life has to beat us up before we get that!

  • @jmpsthrufyre
    @jmpsthrufyre3 жыл бұрын

    If you hear of any updates please keep us posted. The whole saga fascinates me. Esp after reading all of his books multiple times and almost going off the edge myself

  • @JustinTRollins

    @JustinTRollins

    3 жыл бұрын

    Read Armando torres books, the secret of the plumed serpent. His two books will give you more pieces of the puzzle

  • @wjbkjay23464
    @wjbkjay234642 ай бұрын

    My advice is don't actually ascribe to Castanedas practices. If you use mushroom, peyote, etc., just let your own ways be found. Many of the indigenous people used the Virgin Mary with mushroom use. The Yaqui's where a hard Indian tribe that used large doses of the hallucinagenic plants and where proably more indoctrinated than other people. Dosage is really the difference between good and evil sometimes when it comes to medicine.

  • @robbes7rh448
    @robbes7rh448Ай бұрын

    Carlos Casteneda clicked all the righrt boxes for that era of the 70s. He had lived the life that restless middle class adolescents could only dream of. Everyone who was into self transformation, Eastern religions, Native American shamanism, antediluvian lost history, etc. thought he was the ultimate seeker of truth and a bonafide mystic who went out into the desert wilderness to encounter his spiritual Guide. It didn't even occur to any of us that he had made it all up.

  • @lynnhubbard844

    @lynnhubbard844

    26 күн бұрын

    suckas! We have all done some embarrassing stuff when young...

  • @tiemiee
    @tiemiee6 жыл бұрын

    thanks for the awesome video! i still think about them...

  • @lowtone9
    @lowtone92 жыл бұрын

    I'm of the generation that first read Castaneda, and read his first in 1969 when I was 18. Sean is correct when he says we were fascinated with altered states of consciousness, but I and everyone I knew understood that Castaneda was fiction, but that he had some acquired some knowledge of shamanistic practices including the peyote rituals, and found it a very interesting understanding of the universe. I still do. It's a lot more fun than christianity, et al.

  • @MrsShanonBrown

    @MrsShanonBrown

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @tristanstephens3322

    @tristanstephens3322

    2 жыл бұрын

    Have you read the the road to Eleusis or the Immortality key? You might appreciate them.

  • @nachtschimmen
    @nachtschimmen10 ай бұрын

    ...I was given the Carlos Castaneda book I mentioned in reaction to another post mid-eighties for a birthday... That means that all this happened AFTER I'd read the book. Because I was a small child in the seventies and wasn't even alive during the sixties, I sort of assumed this was like ancient history. Wow! Thanks for that contextualization!

  • @pedronorman5396
    @pedronorman5396 Жыл бұрын

    I read Castaneada's books as a teenager in the mid 80's. They blew my mind and changed the direction of my life. I became an acupuncturist and functional medicine practitioner. I explored his tensegrity system in the late-90's, and came to the conclusion that it was a rip off of simplistic Chinese Qi Gong and Taoist energy cultivation practices. I also realized back in the mid 90's that Castaneada fabricated the entire story.

  • @andyokus5735

    @andyokus5735

    Жыл бұрын

    A very intense evil energy entered my being after reading the first chapter of I believe his first book. I follow the Holy Spirit.

  • @lynnhubbard844

    @lynnhubbard844

    26 күн бұрын

    and his books on lucid dreaming originated from Edgar Caycee, too! He was a fraud diguised in LatinAmerican juju

  • @jimnicosia5934
    @jimnicosia593410 ай бұрын

    In or about 1998 I wrote to Deepak Chopra and asked if he ever read the 'Power Of Silence' He wrote back and said that it was one of his favorite books.

  • @andrewcarney6502

    @andrewcarney6502

    2 ай бұрын

    Tara brack also....

  • @veronica_._._._

    @veronica_._._._

    2 ай бұрын

    So funny

  • @bastian6173
    @bastian6173 Жыл бұрын

    Alan Watts named it perfectly: Once you got the message, put down the phone. CC got the message but wanted more and as always attracted some lost individuals who couldn't accept that this life is "just that much".

  • @charlesforrest7678

    @charlesforrest7678

    2 ай бұрын

    Syd barret of pink Floyd didn't hang-up in time😢

  • @christopherskipp1525

    @christopherskipp1525

    2 ай бұрын

    Phony gurus and gnostics are always around. Watts and Castaneda are two pits in a pod.

  • @SaralinaLove

    @SaralinaLove

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@charlesforrest7678wow what happened to him? I'll have to look it up

  • @BestInGlass360

    @BestInGlass360

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you for mentioning Alan Watts regarding this. It shows your credibility as an experiencer

  • @lukescullin2948

    @lukescullin2948

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@charlesforrest7678 Baaaaahaaaaahaaaa... poor Syd. One of many . The album with Arnold lane on it was recorded same time and studio as the beatles ....can't remember which album...but you can hear some subtle pinching of ideas for sure....lol

  • @TheloniousCube
    @TheloniousCube8 ай бұрын

    One question that you don't seem to have addressed is: Who got the money from CC's estate? He was a best-selling author and I'm sure royalties are still flowing (or trickling by now) into the coffers of someone. Did these women have access to a couple of million dollars and just go set themselves up in a compound somewhere else? As to the frustration with the police investigations, in the absence of any indications of foul play, the police are (quite rightly) inclined to presume that someone who doesn't want to be found is really not their business.

  • @veronica_._._._

    @veronica_._._._

    2 ай бұрын

    Why were public Libraries buying and constantly restocking his tosh?

  • @Jim-Tuner

    @Jim-Tuner

    2 ай бұрын

    There was a will created three days before he died that put all his assets into a trust (the Eagle's trust). Everything to do with the estate was put together by an attorney named Deborah Drooz who was also made executor of the will.

  • @JamesRichardWiley
    @JamesRichardWiley2 жыл бұрын

    Carlos was a fiction writer who used the growing popularity of psychedelic drugs to create fantastic stories of alternative realities. The lesson I learned from his writing is that THE BRAIN is the creator of all experiences high or low. When you introduce certain substances it alters brain activity and produces unusual changes in perception. Once I realized that I stopped trying to alter my consciousness and accepted ordinary awareness.

  • @TheUrantia001

    @TheUrantia001

    Ай бұрын

    you were controlled, infantile pov

  • @dwinsemius
    @dwinsemiusАй бұрын

    The liver cancer that claimed Casteneda is most likely due to hepatitis C. Hepatobiliary carcinoma is a common outcome of hep C.

  • @SeanMunger

    @SeanMunger

    Ай бұрын

    I recall reading that he may have had that.

  • @Lou.B
    @Lou.B2 ай бұрын

    Fascinating! I read several of Castenada's books in the early 70's, and enjoyed his stories. Thanks for your film!

  • @am2023
    @am20234 жыл бұрын

    Great video thanks for it looking for videos on this subject

  • @Chiller11
    @Chiller112 ай бұрын

    I read Castaneda‘s books in college and found them compelling stories. I just saw them as part of that counter culture drug influenced indigenous kind of appropriation that was relatively common at the time. I remember the controversy when they were debunked but I wasn’t terribly surprised. It’s unfortunate that Castaneda felt compelled to fabricate his research because North American indigenous spirituality strikes me as a fascinating field of study.

  • @muffinman9462
    @muffinman94622 ай бұрын

    what happened to admiral byrds son ?

  • @djshowtrial4565
    @djshowtrial45652 ай бұрын

    Really great that you have researched this. . .as important as Castaneda is to the culture as a writer, he did wield power in very selfish and dangerous ways with his celebrity cult. Amy Wallace’s book Sorcerer’s Apprentice: My Life with Carlos Castandeda is a good look into that world

  • @websurfer5772

    @websurfer5772

    Ай бұрын

    I bought her book after reading your review here the other day. Wowza! It's a page-turner for sure. It's so much fun in the beginning because of her recounting stories with all the other famous people her family knew who were connected to the literary world in that time period. I'm still in the middle of it now on Ch. 21 - _Energy Vampires_ . This chapter is hitting on many of the things I happen to be learning about elsewhere from other sources these days so it's really intriguing to me.

  • @mossibility
    @mossibility8 ай бұрын

    Being able to interpret perception correctly results in finding out how we are habituated to look at the world the way that meets societal needs, not our own.

  • @loristoneking5711
    @loristoneking5711Ай бұрын

    Im.just stumbling across your channel. I have fond memories of reading the Carlos Castenada books.

  • @kultus
    @kultus5 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this excellent video. I'm finishing reading Amy Wallace's book.

  • @Alexander-tj2dn

    @Alexander-tj2dn

    5 жыл бұрын

    Me too, it´s really insightfull.

  • @Alexander-tj2dn

    @Alexander-tj2dn

    5 жыл бұрын

    That book is awsome, superb.

  • @humanelectromagneticpsych7960
    @humanelectromagneticpsych79605 жыл бұрын

    How many organizations founded on some important truths eventually become 'infiltrated' by opportunists without scruples..

  • @MarsHalekGuitar
    @MarsHalekGuitarАй бұрын

    I started reading Castenada's books in the '80s, beginning with a summer class in college entitled Philosophy and Fantasy. My professor, who claimed to have known Castaneda somewhat, essentially presented the reality of the story as an open question for us to ponder and debate. What I can say after reading all or most of the books is that lucid dreaming, which I had spontaneously experienced a couple of times before, can be enhanced or focused through some of Castaneda's techniques; I actually reproduced the experiences of looking at my hand and flying in dreams, among others. I would agree though that the women probably committed suicide and this is very unfortunate. "Don Juan's" death was depicted as an intentional and spiritual act, described without any physical details, more of a "becoming one with the Eagle" or something along those lines. Perhaps this is what the "witches" were aiming for. I think it's fine to experiment with altered states of consciousness that do not involve psychoactive drugs, which Don Juan/Castaneda more or less renounced in a later book. But I do fear that following such experiments into the realms of death is a symptom of cultism and a rather huge mistake, perhaps the largest mistake most people could ever make.

  • @slickwillie3376
    @slickwillie337610 ай бұрын

    There is some profound knowledge in that fiction, yet the crux of it is very depressing. I took copious notes on the books. LOL. Tried to piece together something practical. One problem is spending 5 years in a small crate to recapitulate. Another is erasing personal history. There are other branches of Toltecs, and they have their problems as well. However, I would say glean what one can from it all and move on. In recognition of Don Juan's advice, self-importance makes one vulnerable to many bad things, including, I would say, scams.

  • @dizzyspinner648
    @dizzyspinner64810 ай бұрын

    I never made it through "The Teachings of Don Juan," concluding it was fictional before ever learning it had already been debunked, to no great surprise on my part. I didn't think there was anything very interesting about him, so I stopped paying him any attention. I have to admit there's an interesting mystery here. Until this came up on my KZread feed, I hadn't thought about Castaneda since the early eighties. Being something of a one time psychonaut, I can tell you that he is the last person you would want to rely on for information about psychoactive substances. In particular, daturas are a really bad idea that in no way will ever help you actually fly.

  • @davidotness6199
    @davidotness61992 ай бұрын

    Thank you for filling in so many blanks; I was in my early 20s when his book came out, it was on so many bookshelves of my contemporaries, I just never fell into the supposed offerings. It was nonetheless a cultural icon of those times, and has importance as a milestone in my own life. A good and appreciated story you have produced here.

  • @MrHeuristics
    @MrHeuristics2 жыл бұрын

    Great work! Fantastic.

  • @wolfgangkranek376
    @wolfgangkranek37610 ай бұрын

    "I know it's fake, but it feels so right." Presumably Castaneda fan-girls

  • @FrancisE.Dec.Esquire
    @FrancisE.Dec.Esquire5 ай бұрын

    They hoped to spend the following day searching for their cousin’s remains in the expanse of desert nearby, joined by a New York writer named Robert Marshall and Jennifer Stalvey, a private investigator who specializes in infiltrating cults. The search never happened. Miscommunications with park service honchos and the Inyo County Sheriff’s Office turned what seemed to be a well-planned, months-long effort into an exercise in bureaucratic frustration on one level, sweet catharsis on another. The questions, though, remain. WHERE IS AMALIA? Is she dead? Did it end like Don Juan Matus, with an intense fire, the burning rising from the seat of her being, exploding into a ball of light, catapulting her into what Castaneda followers call the “second attention?” Or, was that ball of light the flash of a pistol? Was it the final, flickering, electrical gasps of her brain’s synapses as she plunged to the bottom of a Death Valley mine shaft? Or is she, in fact, still alive? She disappeared days after Castaneda died of complications of liver cancer on April 27, 1998. She took his ashes with her. “He was supposed to turn into a ball of light, burn from within and go up to heaven. He got liver cancer and instead of burning from within he died and was burned from without at the Culver City (California) mortuary,” says Marshall, who wrote a 2007 story about Castaneda’s dark legacy for Salon.com. Marshall is working on a biography of the man, loved by millions in the 1970s for a series of books about the teachings of a Yaqui Indian sorcerer, Don Juan Matus dAmalia’s family’s focus on the Big Four stems from a photo a hiker posted online. It appears to be a makeshift shrine - a circle of rocks that resembles a campfire ring with multicolored glass shards laid out in equal colored parts; five colors for five women - at the entrance to the mine. Could it be where Amalia and the other women consummated a suicide pact? One experienced park ranger, David Brenner, who happened to have found Partin’s car in 1998, doesn’t believe it. He sat down with Marin and his sister and explained how the mines in the area are abandoned, but almost continuously explored by spelunkers, government mine mappers and trespassers. He says the mines in that area have been searched hundreds of times. “To be honest, the Big Four Mine isn’t even that big,” he told the group. Marin says while he appreciates Brenner’s assistance, he’s discouraged by what he calls contradictory information from park service employees. “Here’s the challenge that we have. We have two members of the park service who say two completely opposite things. The one who helped me initially says, yeah, explore the mines, and shafts are a great place to disappear. David Brenner says the mines have already been explored hundreds of times and the shafts aren’t even vertical. We seek out the opinions of experts and they tell us two opposite things,” he said. Marston Motweiller, a retired Inyo County Sheriff’s investigator who worked Partin’s case, told Marin that the mines should be searched. When Marin initially reached out to Inyo County authorities a few months ago, they seemed to agree, assigning a detective named Dan Williams to the case. Williams was gung-ho about solving the mystery. By the time Marin and Gutierrez were prepared to travel to Death Valley, that enthusiasm had dissipated. Inyo County Sheriff Bill Lutze appears to have pulled the plug on any effort. In an email sent to members of their party shortly before they arrived, he disputed Marin’s version of events. “All contacts made included inquiries only - no definitive requests for assistance were made prior to March 28th. Mr. Marin was contacted by Undersheriff Keith Hardcastle on March 31st, 2014, and Marin explained his request. Mr. Marin was advised that the Sheriff’s Office did not have an open case or any missing person’s cases fitting the description he provided,” the sheriff wrote. Providing a brief glimmer of hope, the sheriff confirmed he would share information with the park service after a review of the pertinent case files. Asked via email why the sheriff’s office never searched the area for the other missing women after Partin’s remains were finally identified, Lutze didn’t respond. No one from Inyo County showed up last week to explain their position in person. A request for comment was left with Williams for this story but was also ignored. Aspokesperson for Death Valley’s Chief Park Ranger Karen McKinley Jones confirmed that Marin had spoken to a park service employee about searching the mines but that the employee’s version of the conversation did not match Marin’s. The spokesperson said no one in the park service would ever advise anyone to go into an abandoned mine for safety reasons. Jones and other park rangers met with Marin and his sister for several hours, explaining that without the proper permits they could not conduct any type of search. But the rangers did provide the group a roadmap for acquiring permits, a seemingly daunting task once laid out. Brenner suggested the group get a permit to use a drone to search the area for more of Partin’s remains - not all of her was found - though clearance from the Federal Aviation Administration would likely be required. Marin and Gutierrez were grateful for the advice, but a sense of hopelessness quickly set in. “The whole experience was emotionally blanching,” Marin said. Now the group is weighing its options, which include filing for the required permits, or taking a different tack altogether, including tracking down former and current Castaneda and Cleargreen members who may know what happened. “Robert (Marshall) thinks there are probably at least five people who know what happened. But getting them to tell you the truth is the problem,” Marin sai January is National Human Trafficking Awareness Month and Soroptimist International Pahrump Valley is taking the opportunity to shine a spotlight on this global problem with the club’s annual Human Trafficking Awareness Community Forum. Special to the Pahrump Valley Times Nature Health Farms will host a party at the farm this Satu ... PARTY AT THE FARM: Wedding chapel to be unveiled at 4th annual fundraiser By Robin Hebrock Pahrump Valley Times January 9, 2024 - 12:08 pm

  • @termsofusepolice
    @termsofusepolice10 ай бұрын

    I first read The Teaching Of Don Juan as a teenager. I was a deeply seeking person at that time. My older brother had a copy on his bookshelf. This was before Castaneda was exposed as a fraud (or at least long before I became aware of his exposure). I got about 1/4 of the way through the book and said to myself "This sounds like bullshit," and stopped reading. I guess my "detector" has always been in good working order.

  • @betacam235

    @betacam235

    10 ай бұрын

    Me too! I kept recognising things from all sorts of different philosophical/mystic systems and decided he'd simply rolled them together into a new narrative hung around the fictional figure of Don Juan. It seemed like a brilliantly judged money-spinner. I'd told all my friends in the mid 70s that I reckoned it was pure fiction, some agreed, others not, but last year I was amazed when my daughter actually spoke about the first book as though it was non fiction! I don't recall Castaneda's 'message' as being particularly positive or useful...

  • @jamesburke3803

    @jamesburke3803

    9 ай бұрын

    I got 2/3 of the way through the first book when i realized it was bullshit. Why? Because i live near Tucson and realized he had never been here. He gets high on psychedelics and walks naked through the desert at night. Honey, you do that around here and you'll need a pair of pliers and a few weeks to pull all the nasty thorns out of your hide! On another note, some of it was true, but not in a good way. He describes after death forgoing heaven, and finding the opening between heaven and earth, and entering a dry land where the wind never ceases..... um, he's describing the entrance to Hell. Think about it....

  • @christopherskipp1525

    @christopherskipp1525

    2 ай бұрын

    Indeed.

  • @windhammer1237

    @windhammer1237

    2 ай бұрын

    Same here.

  • @absentmindstate

    @absentmindstate

    Ай бұрын

    Read it as fiction and take what resonates. Why stop reading? I read many of his books and greatly enjoyed them, they have inspired me although it is a fictional story. There is still a lot of wisdom in them in my opinion. To each his own I guess

  • @stephennicol6308
    @stephennicol63083 жыл бұрын

    There are photos of Kylie Lundahl practicing Tensegrity in Castanadas "Magical Passes" book published 1998.

  • @jovanblom7742
    @jovanblom77422 жыл бұрын

    Castaneda's books had a profound influence upon me as a teenager. Your report cements the disillusionment I eventually experienced over it all - good work!

  • @HighWealder
    @HighWealder2 ай бұрын

    The most important thing in life is to have a built-in, shock proof, twentfour carrat crap detector. ( modified from Henry Miller)

  • @bartonknight2677
    @bartonknight26779 ай бұрын

    Theres a book called (I believe) Don Coyote. Was a book that fully DISPROVES the whole Do Juan series. Timelines dont add up. Basically fully proves that it all was a fabricated LIE. Iwas very much a big fan and it crushed me to find out it was all a big lie. Possibly these ",witches" dont exist as well. Some of the knowledge ... perpetated had a lot of real knowledge and I experienced some world changing events as my personal life experience. I cant explain it. I had a moth speak to me. I witnessed the "crack'" between the worlds. Saw what I believed was an "Ally" etc. So the books I believed did contain some real knowledge. Thanks for this video. Very well done. 🤠

  • @RhoArtMagic
    @RhoArtMagicАй бұрын

    Omg. I used to idolized this guy. I’m tired of getting duped. It’s tiring finding out everything is a cult. Heavy to find out so much all at once, but it’s relieving to take a huge dump and leave it all behind. 😂❤

  • @DustinMercer
    @DustinMercer10 ай бұрын

    No, the eternal question is, "Why are you wearing headphones?"

  • @wldndn22

    @wldndn22

    2 ай бұрын

    He was listening to some Judas Priest.

  • @ingedetroia7189

    @ingedetroia7189

    Ай бұрын

    😄

  • @chuckart2006
    @chuckart2006Ай бұрын

    thanks very much for your work on this subject.

  • @bold810
    @bold8108 ай бұрын

    Okay, Sean I will accept your premise as you have presented it.

  • @thomasmacginnes100
    @thomasmacginnes100Ай бұрын

    TY for your deep look into the ‘legend’ so many were/are familiar with and your sharing what seems at least to be “the rest of the story …….”

  • @michelmontvert2542
    @michelmontvert25429 ай бұрын

    Nobody has mentioned that there was contact at UCLA between Castañeda and an individual of Yaquí parentage who likely was the source for much of the indigenous informtion. I can't mention names. But I knew that individual, one of whose parents was Yaquí and the other of another indigenous people of the SW, and I joked to him once that, "You're don Juan!" he just laughed. Sadly the communal attempts of the 60s largely failed, the exceptions being when there was a strong cultish leader, e.g., Steven Gaskin, or of course Carlos Castañeda.

  • @christopherskipp1525

    @christopherskipp1525

    2 ай бұрын

    How about Charles Manson? He was sort of successful for a while.

  • @juanfervalencia
    @juanfervalencia8 ай бұрын

    I could easily watch your videos all day long.

  • @bl02569x
    @bl02569x5 жыл бұрын

    When I read Castenada's books in the late 70's I was fascinated by the style of his writing like a child stunned by the wild ride he was on. I found them most entertaining. Later in the 90's I then caught wind of his Tensegrity movement and the drift towards a cult. When I first heard of his death an later about his "Witches" gone missing my imagination once again went wild for a while. Sean with your video you helped me to put this into a context. Thanks for that!

  • @MarciaMatthews
    @MarciaMatthewsАй бұрын

    Good research, thanks!

  • @sharonhearne5014
    @sharonhearne5014Ай бұрын

    I read many of Castaneda’s books - “Journey to Ixtlan” being my favorite - but when in his later books the Toltec’s were flying around in warlike fashion and Castaneda’s protégés were climbing the walls in his studio I decided this was all too bizarre and frightening for me to continue because I had no intention of following those paths. Castaneda’s descriptions were so believable that I give credibility to their being authentic: I had a friend - the head of a sculpture foundry in N. Mexico who claimed drug-riddled trips into isolated locales in Mexico which sounded very much like those Castaneda described.

  • @JorgeMoreno-bm2oz
    @JorgeMoreno-bm2oz10 ай бұрын

    I am a big fan of Castaneda, I read all his books up to Eagles Gift, I was always skeptic of his "adventures" with Don Juan, but there was a lot to learn from his life lessons, I am pretty sure they were borrowed from oriental religion, but they are still valid. After Eagles Gift it became too much slush. I always thought it was fiction/new-age, but it was still lots of things to reflect on one's own life. I value his work and don't judge him for who he may be.

  • @brownieking69
    @brownieking693 жыл бұрын

    Would be intetesting to see where his money went. Maybe that could give some clues.

  • @austinzobel4613
    @austinzobel46135 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this... its been 10+ years of wondering about Carlos Castaneda. Psychedelic experiences almost seemed to be alluding to things they mentioned, so I wondered if more was true... but I always had an investigative reservation on accepting things as fact... just taking experiences as I found them There are definitely mechanisms and dynamics of reality that are hard to explain... like the non-linearity of time... but these recent conclusions based on the cult-like events really paint it all differently than I expected. I know after research that Freemasonry and Mystery Schools run the world, and evil and cults are everywhere... some much more quiet than this... but these ideas/concepts really affected many to rely on themselves for salvation! Trusting in oneself is foolish when it comes to this large realm of spirit/consciousness after death... Could this have all been an agenda for the world disseminated through Carlos given to him from other groups of New Age/Cult like Mystery Schools?

  • @wjbkjay23464
    @wjbkjay2346410 ай бұрын

    I read Casteneda 45 years ago. I remember the end of one book where he with Don Juan and Don Juan Genaro solemly lead a group Nagual/Yaquai's up to the top of a high steep mesa and the rested at the edge of a cliff. The group seemed bemuddled with depressed issues and some of the group had actually made the climb to hurl themselves from it. It was actually the warriors last stand, but maybe it was really suicide as their complex problems of witchcraft (sorcery) had made them ill. Through death they would move on. Rise to a star.

  • @christopherskipp1525

    @christopherskipp1525

    2 ай бұрын

    I guess pure bunk can make a good fairy tale.

  • @alyjiyu

    @alyjiyu

    Ай бұрын

    All these years later... I still pondered taking a leap from that mountain. Impressionable Fools like me (at the time) mixed metaphor & reality. I didn't have discernment back then, and took his stories quite literally. In fact, back in the 70's, I consumed them as if they were true, and followed a path of exploring the nature of consciousness rather than do/ make something sustainable for my life in the real world. Really bad choice on my part.

  • @REMONSTER
    @REMONSTER4 жыл бұрын

    "So now, less than five years later, you can go up on a steep hill in Las Vegas and look West, and with the right kind of eyes you can almost see the high-water mark-that place where the wave finally broke and rolled back.” HST

  • @jmpsthrufyre

    @jmpsthrufyre

    3 жыл бұрын

    Both great writers Imo

  • @magickmagazine7675
    @magickmagazine7675Ай бұрын

    Well done, very impartial article

  • @MrDometheo79
    @MrDometheo793 жыл бұрын

    Superb video mate. Much obliged🤗🤗 His books are far above his own life...interesting to see how he, himself perceived them. Indeed...even if he was a master scammer....the ultimate Irony of Ironies. That said, various themes and concepts in Castanedas books can be found in various other esoteric traditions. Buddhism and various other practices from India. Indeed.....meditation and silence are KEY aspects of all altered states of awhereness.

  • @SeanMunger

    @SeanMunger

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @OneSupreme08
    @OneSupreme082 ай бұрын

    Yeah the fact is that Carlos had some spiritual powers awakened. Hindus call those siddhis. With this he created the power and influence the people to follow him and also created enormous wealth. At the same time he was advanced spiritually no doubt about it. But many yogis who awake such powers then misuses them and fall into the wealth, fame and name, and never reach full enlightenment. Carlose could have been enlightened but he failed and abuse the power. Of course people wanted to be with him and serve him cause such people have unlimited energy and we like to feed from their energy. But actually one should connect with themselves and in this way with cosmic powers and not be dependent on outside GURUS ! This only increased weakness and immaturity and those witches are example of misuse.. were used in this way and got blinded and mad. Probably they and many others commited suicide or end up mentally and emotionally damaged as their guru did not fulfil his promises to them. AUWCH !!

  • @user-cp7xn5pb4d
    @user-cp7xn5pb4d10 ай бұрын

    Not one mention of the late Maria Sabina who was with all respect Don Juan. Maria’s daughter has the knowledge Carlos lightly touches upon but very hard to contact

  • @dannacollins2520

    @dannacollins2520

    Ай бұрын

    There's always a genuine story somewhere. Note he changed th sorceress 🎉to sorceror of course. Too bad those witches were sacrificed for his ego.

  • @fuckenps3
    @fuckenps34 жыл бұрын

    Informative and concise video, subbed!

  • @SeanMunger

    @SeanMunger

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the sub!

  • @lovman
    @lovmanАй бұрын

    Thanks for this video. First time seeing your work. I will check out others. I am revisiting Carlos Castaneda this week, after having read 4 of his books in the 1970s. I never really knew his story or the story of his cult after his fame in the 1970s. I revisited this because of several events in my own life related to one thing that "Don Juan Matus" said to Carlos and it happening in my own life. There have been other articles on this, including one in Salon in 2007 by Robert Marshall who also wrote a novel based on this, "A Separate Reality", which I have not read.

  • @LeoOfJudah
    @LeoOfJudah5 жыл бұрын

    Too long video? Not long enough! Thanx and subbed

  • @Joric78
    @Joric784 жыл бұрын

    Carlos Castenada wasn't the first. Cyril Henry Hoskin AKA Tuesday Lobsang Rampa pulled a similar stunt with "The Third Eye" in 1956. Although I'm not aware of him going beyond the books and founding a cult.

  • @thunderbirdvg4797

    @thunderbirdvg4797

    4 жыл бұрын

    How weird, I just finished reading that book ( of T. Lobsang Rampa )before seeing this clip... 😮

  • @christopherskipp1525

    @christopherskipp1525

    2 ай бұрын

    There is always the next con man.

  • @michaelbailot5479
    @michaelbailot547910 ай бұрын

    Hi Sean, Three of these women were published authors. Who collects those royalties? Great report!

  • @kernjames
    @kernjames10 ай бұрын

    I love this video. Castaneda was a incredibly great writer, and it made his stories seem very real. He also knew that Americans were very hungry for what he wrote about. He wrote what everyone wanted to hear and believe at that time in history. Americans are still hungry for mythology and spirituality. Look at all the Big Foot, UFO, DogMan, and inter dimensional stories and videos on KZread. They all dabble in the paranormal world that goes beyond science and common reasoning. Castaneda was a genius to have written such elaborate and fantastical stories, about his adventures with someone that didn't even exist. But he also screwed up some people's lives along the way. How many people he left "emotionally gutted" is hard to say. Castaneda talked about certain plants and how to use them according to the Don Juan's instructions. I knew of a guy that ingested the seeds of one of those plants and he went a little crazy after that. Castaneda in his writings said not to ingest the seeds, but for some people that is not a deterrent. It was very sad that some people took Castaneda's BS stories for real. I won't mention the plant and its seeds, so as not to get someone curious about ingesting the seeds themselves. Through his phony teachings, Castaneda hurt people both physically and emotionally. I remember hearing about his death. I felt a bit vindicated that he died. He hadn't disappeared as he suggested he would in all his books. He had died a physical death just like anyone else. Unlike he said Shaman were supposed to do upon knowing they were going to die, Castaneda didn't go out and die in the desert. It sounds like the women actually did what he claimed the Shaman do upon knowing they are going to die. They disappear.

  • @MelissaThompson432
    @MelissaThompson4329 ай бұрын

    His wife (Margaret) has suggested that Matus was a composite character, like Plato made a fictionalized Socrates a character in his work, in order to personify certain themes or ideas. She also hypothesized that Matus' name was inspired by Castaneda's fondness for Mateus wine. Under these circumstances I can't see him, the writer, as a fraud and liar; just that he was too "clever" and people misunderstood his writing style. I read him as a teenager, and I didn't get a lot of what he wrote, but I did understand that it was fiction, even if I didn't understand that it was meant to be symbolic. I found an article by Daniel Miller that I tend to agree with. I think he started writing the books to describe something he aspired to, thinking that if he wrote long enough, the answers would come to him. And when they didn't, he fell into a cynical con game he practiced because he was tired of trying; and because he liked adulation, which might have kept him in a condition too material to get free of the world. Ironically. I would have liked to fly, but there was no way I was ever going to pee on my fingers to make it happen. Castaneda was not a very good writer. As a result, I haven't thought about him in about 50 years.

  • @mattgoodmangoodmanlawnmowi2454
    @mattgoodmangoodmanlawnmowi24542 ай бұрын

    Thank you. Fantastic journalism. I always thought CC had genuine spiritual knowledge, but that he was also reinventing himself in pursuit of his personal objectives. Sounds like a combination of talent, drive, genuine knowledge & personal objectives. Sounds fairly rational, intelligent and human. He doesn’t offend me. Disillusioned former true believers do not alter my mixed assessment. Take what you can use and leave the rest. -Dan

  • @veronica_._._._

    @veronica_._._._

    2 ай бұрын

    You forgot grift. The majority of his critics never stepped in his horse shit in the 1st place. Obviously syncretic and lacking coherence.

  • @msolomonii9825
    @msolomonii982510 ай бұрын

    Why the appeal?, I think it's pretty simple, he offered hope of something more then the dead materialism of our "culture", and in the beginning before he was seen through he had the veneer of scientific accreditation to back it, make it "believable".

  • @pandamonium4506
    @pandamonium45062 ай бұрын

    Appreciate your no-nonsense approach to this story.

  • @Man_fay_the_Bru
    @Man_fay_the_Bru2 жыл бұрын

    I read one of his books& believed it right up till watching this video.

  • @chadcowan6912
    @chadcowan69122 ай бұрын

    I read almost every book of Castaneda's in my early 20's after an ex-girlfriend gave me "The Active Side of Infinity." The one quote that sticks with me was related to the abundance of "crackpots" within the spiritual community. Ironically Carlos's character was not "impeccable." Like the fraudster gurus before him and, the wu wu crowd that followed, fragmented teachings mixed with narcissism didn't hold water. On the other hand, where did he come up with "Magical Passes?" It is pragmatic and concise, with effects similar to Qigong. It's hard to fake a whole-body exercise routine with therapeutic effects.

  • @aintnobodygottime4dat
    @aintnobodygottime4dat26 күн бұрын

    very good report 👍🏼

  • @PiethagorasTearem
    @PiethagorasTearem9 ай бұрын

    There are many states of consciousness. Conscious, unconscious, drunk, high, and sober

  • @stevengill1736

    @stevengill1736

    2 ай бұрын

    Don't forget dreaming! 😊

  • @explosivefreak666
    @explosivefreak6665 жыл бұрын

    Thanx for the vid mate... It is apreciated.!I aswell have entered altered concious states, and some of Castaneda's writings were describing what I was experiencing.! That is about 30 years ago, as I stopped with it for no particular reason. .. That's just all I can say that actually did happen...

  • @trackerbuckmann1627
    @trackerbuckmann16275 жыл бұрын

    You have great content.

  • @RawOlympia
    @RawOlympiaАй бұрын

    I stayed at a bed and breakfast in Port Townsend, WA, a long time ago, and the owner of it told me that one of Castenada's witches had spent the summer there, at his rambling Victorian manor.