Eris, you say you do spiritual work, use a drum to go into trances, and talk to nature spirits. How, exactly, does your practice differ from what is currently known as Harner "shamanism" (using a drum/rattle to go into trance states wherein one encounters "spirits" and "does spiritual work")?
If what you do and what he sold are very different, what are you justifying? Since you got here, you've made it clear your posting at NAFPS is all about you and what you want. Can't read your mind, but you seem to have wanted the following answers and failed to get them:
"Yes, as long as you don't call it 'shamanism,' everything you do is just fine by all the indigenous peoples of the world" and "You should definitely 'follow your Sami blood,' because your other ancestors are boring."
You're not going to get those answers here, and I suspect you're going to go on doing whatever you want to no matter who has a problem with it. So, unless you intend to start engaging with the board's actual topic, exactly why are you here?
If what you do isn't "shamanism," then good. If it's so close to "shamanism" that you have to spend a paragraph explaining the difference, maybe the difference isn't as big as you think it is.
Surely you, like almost everyone else here, have encountered the following sentiments: Real medicine people don't call themselves "shamans." Real medicine people don't charge money. These are true, at least as far as I know, but they're not "get out of jail free" cards--they don't make anything anyone does acceptable.
Smart Mule -- I wrote the following in my introduction post several days ago. "I am a 56-year-old Caucasian woman living near Denver, Colorado. (I have ancestors who were of the Sami people, and it comes out in my physical appearance, but I was not raised in their culture, so basically I'm pretty whitebread.)
I've performed spiritual work for the last quarter century. I may use a drum to help put my mind into a trance state. I may dance. I may seek guidance and assistance from nature spirits. I may play a flute. I may use physical representations of a spirit in an attempt to help connect with them. But I do not claim to be a "shaman", nothing I do is taken from Native American rituals (nor do I claim it to be), and I have never charged for my services."
I am not a "shaman", I do not practice "shamanism", and I never said I have.
I know I am not "Sami" nor of the land where they traditionally live. Nor am I Romanian or Norse, even though I have distant relatives from those areas. I grew up in Texas rural culture.
And I'm sorry that the word "blood" seems to disturb you. Where I am from, "blood" is often used to mean "ancestors". For example, it is not uncommon to hear somebody in my area say something like they have "New York blood" to mean their parents were from New York. I will avoid using that word for that purpose anymore.
Thank you.