Shamanic Swish is proposed as a somatic mechanism for facilitating rapid internal changethrough deliberate multi-sensory saturation and cross-modal synesthesia during non-ordinary statesof consciousness. Drawing from 70,000 years of documented anthropological evidence,neuroscientific findings on shamanic trance states, and clinical observations of ritual healingpractices across cultures, this model describes how rhythmic auditory input (A), sustainedkinesthetic anchoring (K), and emergent visual imagery (V) combine to produce neural integrationassociated with rapid state transformation. Unlike isolated visual-cognitive interventions, ShamanicSwish leverages theta and gamma oscillations, altered functional connectivity, and cross-modalbinding to install new embodied patterns at the implicit-memory level. This manuscript integratesEEG/neuroimaging data from shamanic trance studies, ethnographic evidence of multi-sensoryinduction sequences, clinical outcomes from neo-shamanic interventions, and somatic theory topropose a testable model of how ancient ritual technologies achieve measurable psychological andphysiological change. Future clinical applications are discussed.
Magnus et al. (Mon,) studied this question.