Part One: Stopping the World – Becoming Accessible to Power

Following a revelatory peyote experience that marks him as “chosen,” Castaneda is guided by Don Juan onto the warrior’s path, where “dreaming” is revealed not as fantasy but a tangible realm for accumulating power and discerning reality. Don Juan instructs Castaneda on the discipline required to “set up dreaming” and become “accessible to power” through conscious engagement. This culminates in a practical, yet unsettling, lesson at a “place of power” where Castaneda confronts a seemingly monstrous, dying creature, ultimately rationalizing it as a burnt branch, prompting Don Juan to explain that Castaneda missed a vital opportunity to “stop the world” by failing to sustain his perception of the power-infused object.

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Part One: Stopping the World – Becoming a Hunter

Don Juan challenges Castaneda’s initial desire to learn about plants by pushing him to understand the concept of beneficial and enemy spots through a double perception technique achieved by crossing his eyes, emphasizing that true understanding comes from feeling rather than intellectualizing. He then shifts Castaneda’s focus to hunting, explaining it as a way of life that demands responsibility and precise action in the face of death, the hunter, ultimately revealing that he, too, is a hunter and warrior, unlike Castaneda, whom he provocatively calls a “pimp” for not fighting his own battles.

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