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Where the Spirits Ride the Wind: Trance Journeys and Other Ecstatic Experiences Kindle Edition
“And suddenly the understanding of my own vision washed over me like a mighty wave . . . For life or for death, I was committed to that mighty realm of which I was shown a brief reminder, the world where all was forever motion and emergence, that realm where the spirits ride the wind.” —from the Prologue
Anthropologist and spiritual explorer Felicitas Goodman reexamines our notions of the nature of reality by studying the ritual postures of native art assumed by her subjects during trance states. For readers desiring to discover this world of ancient myths, she has included a practical guide on how to achieve such ecstatic experiences.
“The book is clearly written for the general reader and includes many descriptions of trance experiences. It may serve as a good introduction to the nature and appeal of the shamanic revival in modern Western cultures.” —Theological Book Review
“A case study in experiential anthropology that offers a unique mix of autobiography, mythology, experiential research, and archaeological data to support a challenging thesis—that certain body postures may help induce specific trance states.” —Shaman’s Drum
“This is a spellbinding and exceptionally readable book by an extraordinary woman.” —Yoga Journal
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherIndiana University Press
- Publication dateAugust 22, 1990
- File size6.4 MB
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.
About the Author
In 1965, at age 51, she returned to graduate school completing a master's degree at Ohio State University in linguistics in 1968 and a doctorate in cultural anthropology in 1971. From 1968 until her forced retirement in 1979, she taught linguistics, cultural anthropology and comparative religions at Denison University, Ohio.
Contributions to anthropology
Felicitas Goodman made two major contributions to the field of anthropology: one concerned "glossolalia" or "speaking in tongues;" the other concerned religious ecstatic trance.
Felicitas noted frequent discussion of an odd kind of speech people spoke while they were "possessed." As a linguist, this intrigued her. Ethnographers called it "unintelligible speech." She developed a working hypothesis that the striking accent and intonation patterns of such speech, as well as certain phonetic features were NOT a different kind of natural language, which was the "received view" on her field. (1969. "Phonetic Analysis of Glossolalia in Four Cultural Settings." Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 8: 227-239.)
Religious ecstatic trance
Dr. Goodman's research, publications, and on-going experience in this field are her major contribution to anthropology. In her book, Where the Spirits Ride the Wind, she notes how trance experience was a normal part of her life until the age of puberty when she was advised to leave behind the experiences of childhood. Happily, Felicitas did not do that.
The Cuyamugue Institute in Santa Fe, NM
In 1963 she purchased 270 acres for her in the area known as Cuyamungue, the name of an ancient pueblo in the area. In 1965, she discovered a place to erect a building on her property, and thus the Institute had its beginning. Cuyamungue: The Felicitas D. Goodman Institute which continues her research and holds workshops about the postures which are one of the doors to the alternate reality.
Product details
- ASIN : B00I9VHNCU
- Publisher : Indiana University Press (August 22, 1990)
- Publication date : August 22, 1990
- Language : English
- File size : 6.4 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 379 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,285,315 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #353 in Religious Studies - Sociology
- #457 in Shamanism (Kindle Store)
- #725 in Native American Religion
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Felicitas D. Goodman, Ph. D.
Academic background
Felicitas Maria Johanna Daniels was born of ethnic German parents in Budapest, Hungary, on January 30, 1914. She was the elder of two children. In her youth, she was educated by the Roman Catholic order of Ursuline nuns, though her family was Lutheran. As a young woman, she attended the University of Heidelberg (Germany) and in 1936 earned her degree as an interpreter. It was here that she met her future husband, Glenn H. Goodman, an American from Ohio.
In 1947, Felicitas, Glenn, and their first three children immigrated to Columbus, Ohio, where Glenn became a professor of German at Ohio State University. Her fourth child was born a few years later. During this period, Felicitas taught German and English and worked as a translator of scientific articles.
In 1965, when she was 51 and her children were grown, she returned to graduate school completing a master’s degree at The Ohio State University in linguistics in 1968 and a doctorate in cultural anthropology in 1971. From 1968 until her forced retirement in 1979, at age 65, she taught linguistics, cultural anthropology and comparative religions at Denison University, Granville, Ohio.
Contributions to anthropology
Felicitas Goodman made two major contributions to the field of anthropology: one concerned “glossolalia” or “speaking in tongues;” the other concerned religious ecstatic trance.
As she plunged into her graduate anthropological studies, Felicitas noted frequent discussion of an odd kind of speech people spoke while they were “possessed.” As a linguist, this intrigued her. Ethnographers called it “unintelligible speech” or “unintelligible gibberish.” This speech reminded her of Bible stories about the “unknown tongues” spoken by the Apostles at Pentecost (Acts 2:1-13). For a seminar in anthropological linguistics conducted by Erika Bourguignon at Ohio State, Felicitas chose “glossolalia” as the topic of her paper.
Dr. Bourguignon supplied her with sound tapes of such speech from Pentecostal denominations in Ohio, Texas, and the Caribbean. On the basis of this research she developed a working hypothesis that the striking accent and intonation patterns of such speech, as well as certain phonetic features were NOT a different kind of natural language, which was the “received view” on her field. These features expressed bodily changes that a person underwent during trance, accompanying or possibly even facilitating the religious experience. (1969. “Phonetic Analysis of Glossolalia in Four Cultural Settings.” Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 8: 227-239.)
To test her hypothesis further and explore its possible cross-cultural significance, she conducted fieldwork with Spanish-speaking Pentecostals in Mexico City in 1968. This experience validated her hypothesis: the syllables uttered during speaking in tongues were different, but the accent and intonation pattern, as well as certain phonetic features, were the same. They seemed biologically fixed.
But would these insights hold for non Indo-European languages? She conducted further field-work among Maya (Pentecostal) speakers in Yucatan which confirmed her hypothesis. Her study remains the definitive word on this phenomenon to this day. (1972. Speaking in Tongues: A Cross-cultural Study of Glossolalia. Chicago: University of Chicago Press; 2001. Maya Apocalypse: Seventeen Years with the Women of a Yucatan Village. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press). Glossolalia is simply patterned vocalization without content.
Religious ecstatic trance
Dr. Goodman’s research, publications, and on-going experience in this field are her major contribution to anthropology. In her book, Where the Spirits Ride the Wind, (1990, Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press), she notes how trance experience was a normal part of her life until the age of puberty when she was advised to leave behind the experiences of childhood. Happily, Felicitas did not do that. The interest remained with her throughout her life. Felicitas recognized two dimensions to reality: consensual and alternate. Consensual reality is the arena of common, ordinary, human experience. Alternate reality is parallel to consensual reality. It is the abode of the spirits, the ancestors. This, of course, is how Felicitas understood and interpreted reality in the contemporary western world. It was very different in antiquity. Until the time of Origen (circa 253 AD), the notion of “supernatural” simply didn’t exist. Reality was one: spirits, gods, ancestors, and humans lived in one world. This is why biblical and other ancient reports speak of humans communing with spirits, deities, or ancestors on a regular basis.
Felicitas believed that the spirit world (the abode of the deity and the deity’s entourage) could be accessed by humans, and this chiefly in an alternate state of consciousness (ASC). With her students at Denison University, she developed a ritual to enter the ASC and make contact with the spirit world. Ritual is essential to this contact.
The Cuyamugue Institute in Santa Fe, NM
Felicitas went with friends from Ohio State University to Santa Fe, New Mexico. She fell in love with it and the ambient Native American culture almost immediately. She began to search for small property in the area, and in 1963 her realtor found 270 acres for her (more than she wanted) in the area known as Cuyamungue, the name of an ancient pueblo in the area. In 1965, accompanied by friends and relatives, she discovered a place to erect a building on her property, and thus the Institute had its beginning.
Because she continued to live in Columbus, OH, she divided her time between there and Cuyamungue. In 1978, Dr. Goodman founded the Institute which today is known as Cuyamungue: The Felicitas D. Goodman Institute which continues her research into altered states of consciousness and holds workshops about the postures which are one of the doors to the alternate reality.
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- Reviewed in the United States on December 17, 2017An amazing book from an amazing cultural anthropologist.
- Reviewed in the United States on April 16, 2017Thank you very much for your cooperation!!
- Reviewed in the United States on June 18, 2015A wonderful fascinating read.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2004First of all I'll state why I read this book. I practice the martial art called Aikido which brought me to get interested in the body energy (Ki/Chi). I also practice Chi-Gung and Tai-Chi. One of my Aikido fellows is a physical therapist and he frequently talks about native-american healers and non-ordinary state of reality. So in turn I became curious to know something about shamanism, even because I came to believe that all this "energy stuff" boils down to few principles regardless as to whether it is applied to combat or healing or whatever else.
I am in no way an expert in this specific field. This having said, I enjoyed reading this book even if English is not my first language. It is well written, and a part of it is very interesting. The author's path toward her meeting with the spirits is intriguing. Tension drops where the too many reports of trance experiences cease to be of general interest while eventually maintaining some relevance only to those who are deeply into this activities. The interpretation of the reports is down to a bare minimum.
On the other hand the author is rather self-involved and she fails to answer some questions someone like me would like to know the answer to. The healer/shaman needs to enter the otherworld to heal or to foresee the future or to fullfill an inner call, I understant that. But "WHY" would ordinary people want to enter a non-ordinary reality when they are not healers? Trancers melt into the ground, fly with big eagles depending on the postures. So what? Is this kind of trance different from smoking pot? Could trance ecstasy still be relevant in our society as the author seems to suggest? The author states that in our modern society we use high-tech surrogates for our innate need of trance. I can buy that but is it proved? Does it mean that posture-induced trance, as opposed to LSD-induced trance, is brain-friendly and approved by DEA? By the way, is trancing brain-friendly or can it fry someone's head? It eventually can as it is somehow connected to demonic possession. What is the real relationship between the use of allucinogenic substances (the mighty Sixties stuff) and shamanic extasy? The information contained in this book is very diluted and obliterated. The discovery that some postures can mediate ecstatic trance is extremely exciting but it doesn't take a whole book to tell that.
I am having the impression that Dr Goodman's main goal in writing this book it to prepare a fertile ground for her future grant applications. From a perspective of a grant applicant I appreciate the effort. From the perspective of a reader I would have appreciated a more concise and more complete book
- Reviewed in the United States on September 3, 2014Book had underlining in the text, not sure if that was mentioned in the description. Would have preferred to not have these from another's readig.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 8, 2021This is the origin story of the work of a daring scholar/mystic who retrieved an ancient worldwide practice from the dawn of time, giving this work a deep academic base. This is a simple practice with profound results. Cuyamungueinstitute.com, the world wide headquarters in Santa Fe, NM now offers free experiential events on Zoom to give this work a try. You can have profound and vivid experiences on your first try. This is based on the physiological shift that a simple ritual can induce, as this knowledge is embedded in our DNA, so is universal and accessible by everyone with a healthy nervous system and the willingness to journey. Listen to what the online, international community has to say. This is a way to reclaim direct access to the wisdom of the ages.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 18, 2015One of the best books for laymen (& laywomen) on the study of trance poses worldwide, period.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 16, 2014This book came to me in good condition and the cost was very reasonable. I am enjoying the interesting content.
Top reviews from other countries
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Marianne M.Reviewed in Germany on September 30, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars Ein Geschenk.
Die deutsche Ausgabe kenne ich gut. Für eine englische Freundin habe ich die englische Ausgabe gesucht. F. Goodman hat sehr interessant geschrieben und zeigt Grenzerfahrungen auf, die sie hinter unsere "Wirklichkeit" sehen lehrten.