KAMBO
![Kambo](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/be3c77_75221744a7b544c2952ac7e46946c105~mv2.jpeg/v1/fill/w_525,h_350,al_c,q_80,enc_avif,quality_auto/kambo%20frog.jpeg)
KAMBO
Kambo treatments involve a deep physical and energetic cleansing of the body that can be used to address a number of conditions.
Kambo is an ancient and sacred medicine derived from the Giant monkey frog in the Amazon basin. Both the frog and its secretion are known as Kambo, sapo, Acaté, Dow Kien, Kampù. Giant monkey frogs sing a very distinctive song which makes it easy to find them at night. Once the tree frog has been acquired it is delicately stressed to induce the secretion: a waxy substance scraped onto wooden paddles from the back and legs of the frog. The frogs are unharmed in the process. The wooden pallets are dried and wrapped in a corn skin.
To reconstitute, the dried secretion is traditionally combined with the saliva of the person serving the medicine, so that their energy transfers to the person receiving. Water can also be used, however many of the energetic and spiritual characteristics will be missed. It is then divided into dots to be applied to small points (about ⅛” in diameter) that are burned through the top layer of the skin with a smoldering piece of titica, or tamishi vine. The number of burn points varies according to body size, experience, reasons for application, and sometimes the practitioner’s tradition. While 5 points are more common for a beginner, more or less may be required. Once the application points have been created the medicine is applied. Aided by kambo’s vasodilating peptides and pro-inflammatory agents, the kambo is absorbed into the system, within seconds.
Prior to the application, large quantities of liquid is consumed. Traditionally the tribes use cassava or massato (a fermented yucca or banana gruel). Occasionally they will use diluted papaya or other juice, and as an absolute backup, about 500ml of water. The immediate effects of kambo are intense but short lived, usually lasting no more than 30 to 40 minutes. They may include a rise in temperature, sweating, shivers, and dizziness as the heart rate increases. Blood pressure may also rise or fall dramatically. Many people report a tingling or burning sensation similar to electricity that starts at the points of application and spreads throughout the body. Some may even feel a heightened awareness or a drunken high feeling.
Nausea is to be expected during kambo as physical purging (either by vomiting, sweating, or defecating or both), emotional purging, or mental purging take place. Other effects may include pressure in the head and neck, stomach pain, inflammation of the throat, dry mouth, blurred vision, difficulty moving, numbness, and swollen lips and tongue.
Kambo treatments involve a deep physical and energetic cleansing of the body that can be used to address a number of conditions ranging from depression, CFS, autoimmune, migraines, laziness, chronic pain, removal of infections and/or toxins, and other issues.
Kambô: Scientific Research and Healing Treatments
Kambô’, ‘campu’, ‘sapo’, ‘vacino da floresta.’ These are all names for the waxy secretion of a tree frog living in the northwestern part of the Amazon rainforest (in Colombia and on the border between Peru and
Brazil). The scientific name for this frog is ‘Phyllomedusa bicolor’ or ‘Giant Monkey frog’. In this article, I will use the name ‘Kambô.’ Originally, 53 tribes used this secretion but now only 13 small tribes still use it. It is used to get rid of ‘panema’, the name they give to bad luck, as well as for ‘hunting magic’ and as a powerful medicine against snake bites, malaria, yellow fever and other epidemic diseases.
Scientific research on kambô: nine powerful bio-active peptides
cientific research on the secretion of this frog started in the 1980’s. Nominated for the Nobel prize, Italian scientist Vittorio Erspamer of the University of Rome wrote that this secretion contains a ‘fantastic chemical cocktail with potential medical applications, unequaled by any other amphibian’ (1). ‘Among the several dozen peptides found in kambô, up to 7% are bio-active.’(1) They bind with receptor sites situated in the brain, triggering chemical reactions in the human body. So far, researchers have found nine bioactive peptides that have a potent effect on the gastrointestinal muscles, gastric and pancreatic secretions,
blood circulation, and on the stimulation of the adrenal cortex and pituitary gland. ’Phyllomedusin strongly affects intestines, bowels and contributes to deep purging. Phyllokinin and phyllomedusin are potent vessel dilators, increasing the permeability of the blood-brain barrier. This facilitates access to the brain of these two, as well as the other active peptides. Caerulein and sauvagine cause a fall in blood pressure accompanied by tachycardia. They stimulate the adrenal cortex and the
pituitary gland, contributing to heightened sensory perception and increased stamina. Both of these peptides have a strong analgesic effect, enhance endurance, increase physical strength and in general, enhance the capacity to face pain and stressful situations. They possess medical potential as digestive aids, and have demonstrated analgesic effects for those with renal colic pain due to peripheral vascular insufficiency and cancer pain. Dermorphin and deltorphin are potent opioid peptides 4000 times stronger than morphine and 40 times stronger than endogenic b-endorphines. (1). In the 1990’s, a new peptide, adenoregulin, was discovered by John Daly’s team at the National Institute of Health in the USA. Adenoregulin works in the human body through the adenosine receptors, a fundamental component in all human cell fuel. These receptors can offer a target for treating depression, stroke seizures and cognitive loss ailments such as Alzheimer’s disease. Scientific research on the peptides of kambô are opening up new perspectives on how the human brain works. The properties of kambô peptides cover a wide range of potential medical uses: treatment of brain diseases such as Alzheimer’s and
Parkinson’s, depression, migraines, blood circulation problems, vascular insufficiency, organ diseases, skin and eyes issues, fertility problems in women and men, AID’s, hepatitis, cancer, etc.
Other interesting medicinal properties of this secretion are its anti-inflammatory effects, its capacity to destroy microbes and viruses and heal infections. (1) Due to the presence of these nine peptides, kambô is one of the strongest natural antibiotics and anesthetics found in the world and one of the strongest, natural ways to empower our immune system. The kambô treatments have short and long term effects. ‘Short term, the effects are a state of alertness, good mood, enhanced resistance to tiredness, hunger and thirst’ (1), the capacity to easily concentrate and focus, and a still mind which can last for several days or weeks. Long term, kambô empowers the immune system, overcomes fatigue and improves one’s state of health.
With kambô, we have the opportunity to wake up the body to its full natural potential. The people who regularly receive this ‘vaccine’ do not get sick and have plenty of energy. Restoring a natural balance, it prevents the onset of complaints induced by viruses. Even cancer does not have a chance to grow, in some cases. For the best results, it is advisable to receive kambô regularly. In the case of heavy diseases, addictions or accumulated toxins from pharmaceutical medicines, it may be helpful to double the treatments for awhile. In this way, the cleansing effects of the kambô treatments will build on one another and will last longer.
During a treatment, kambô immediately scans a person’s energy field and starts to work exactly where it is needed. The process is different for everyone and the course of treatment should be planned accordingly. I have witnessed some people getting healed in one treatment, especially those with eye or ear problems. For people with addictions, results can also happen fast. Complicated cases may take longer. We may call this frog secretion a medicine, but it doesn’t actually work as a typical medicine nor as a drug. It simply wakes up the body’s organs, endocrine system and defense systems to their natural functions.
How the indigenous tribes of the Amazon do it
Although difficult, the frogs can be found on the trees when they are singing, announcing the rain. The tribe members traditionally harvest the frog at dawn, also singing.’(2) In some traditions only the shaman crops the frog. The frogs are extremely poisonous and don’t react when captured because they don’t have any natural predators in the forest. They are actually hard to swallow, and if a snake tries, it desperately spits them out.
To harvest the secretion from the frog’s skin, the frog is stretched by strings tied to its limbs into the shape of an X. As uncomfortable as it may look, the frog is not harmed during this process, and is released afterwards in perfect health. The secretion is crystallized onto wooden sticks and can later be prepared for use by mixing the dried secretion with a few drops of water.
The ‘medicine’ is applied by burning tiny holes in the skin with the tip of a glowing stick. The effect is immediate, as it runs in the body through the lymphatic system. The body becomes warm and the heart beats faster than normal until the person vomits the water they had been drinking in advance. All this lasts about 15-20 minutes.
Kambô, as well as other native medicines, is based on the principle of the transmission of energy from the shaman to the person who receives the treatment. The indigenous people know different ways to give this vaccine and every tribe has developed different rituals. The Katukina and the Matses tribes take kambô burns several times a night before hunting. The number of burns, the frequency of the treatments and the intention varies in each tribe. The main reason to take kambô is to remove ‘panema’, which is translated as bad luck, depression, laziness, sadness, or a condition attracting difficulties and disease. When nothing is going right then it is the right moment to take kambô, according to the tribes. In some tribes, kambô is also used as a tool for the young, to teach them discipline.
According to the indigenous people, kambô is first and foremost a Spirit of the forest who is to be treated with respect. Harming the frog could offend the animal and result in severe misfortune. The Matses combine kambô with nu-nu, a snuff which informs the hunter through visions of when and where prey will offer itself. The tribal members say that shamans see the frog in their visions and dialogue with it. Many changes have happened in the Amazon during the last century from when city people moved to the rainforest to work in the rubber factories. For some years now, kambô has been used outside of the Amazon rainforest and is no longer the exclusive realm of the native tribes. New uses for kambô have come about as people who were taught by the natives started using it outside of the native tribal culture.
One of the pioneers who brought kambô to the cities was Francisco Gomes (or Shiban), who lived with the Katukina. Francisco Gomes was a caboclo, someone of mixed descent, part white and part native. His son, Genildo Gomes, founded an association centered around kambô in the Jurua region of Brazil in 2002, called AJUREMA. There are different philosophies among those who administer kambô, particularly between the Katukina and the caboclos. The caboclos set more rules and restrictions in order to make kambô treatments safe for people who are less strong than the native people and might take this medicine for other reasons than for hunting or healing malaria. Some of the restrictions include not giving this medicine to people with heavy heart problems, to pregnant women in their first trimester and to children under ten years old.
For the caboclos, the basic treatment is three doses, given at intervals of time which depend on the capacity of the person to take kambô. According to this method, the interval between two treatments should be a maximum of 28 days, or one moon. Longer than that, then the kambô will have to do all its work all over again.
During this three month treatment the treated person gets an increasing amount of points (5-7-9). The Katukinas ingest from three to five liters of a corn soup during the night before the treatment, while the caboclos drink about two liters of water a few minutes before the application. Both the Katukina and the caboclos require that one avoids solid food and salt at least 12 hours before the treatment.
Spiritual aspects
In his article, “Kambô, the Spirit of the Shaman,” Marcelo Gomes writes that kambô ‘establishes a chakra realignment, a mark for organic and psychological reorganization, from which the person changes their patterns of health’(6). Kambô is a fire medicine. When combined with the water that is drunk before the treatment, an alchemical transformation happens and old toxins are released through vomiting or urgent defecation. This cleansing process works not only on a physical level but also on a spiritual one. The frog, connecting us with our natural wisdom, mirrors our negative habits, showing us what we should avoid and what we could do in order to improve our condition.
Kambô unfolds the changes we need to make, in an effortless, natural way. Many of us think, ‘I want to be better’, ‘I want to stop smoking,’ etc. When we try to reach a certain result with our willpower, we are actually fighting. We’ve done so for many generations. With kambô, a natural wisdom is taking over our healing process. We know without thinking what we have to do or not to do in a certain situation. We become able to drop unhealthy habits and fixed ideas. In my experience, ideas are often the main obstacle, blocking us from our healing. Kambô affords us the energy we usually don’t have but that we need for our spiritual path. Removing the cloud of ‘panema’ around our energy field, we become more open to receive from Spirit.
Bio-piracy and rights of the Indigenous Tribes
Studies on the indigenous tribes using kambô started in the 1930’s. After the 1950’s, western scientists became interested in investigating this secretion. In the 1980’s, during his visits to the Matses in Peru, anthropologist Peter Gorman documented his experience of the kambô treatment he received. Most of the scientific information you read in this article comes from his article, ‘Making Magic.’ He sent samples of phyllomedusa bicolor to western universities. In that same time period, pharmaceutical companies registered the first patents of kambô peptides. Not surprisingly, the global pharmaceutical industry showed a keen interest in the medicinal properties of the frog’s secretion as they did in other medicines coming from the Amazon (Notably, the blood pressure medication Captopril was developed in the 1970’s from the
venom of a Brazilian pit viper). Although some of the peptides found in the frog’s secretion have been successfully reproduced in laboratories and patented, it has not led to any new pharmaceuticals being marketed.
In 2003, the Katukinas, guided by chief Fernando, denounced the misuse of kambô and accused the pharmaceutical companies who had patented kambô peptides of bio-piracy. They claimed the rights of the medicine belonged to the Katukinas and other Amazonian tribes. In 2004, an alliance between the Katukinas and the Brazilian government formed, aimed to ensure that profits generated from the development of the kambô’s secretion would benefit Brazil. Since then, the Brazilian government has banned the use of kambô in Brazil and any publicity of its properties.
Recently, a new association, M.A.T.S.E.S, has been created in Peru, where kambô is still legal, by Dr. Dan Pantome. The aim of this philanthropic association is to support the native tribes who live in the Amazon and to protect them from speculations made by outsiders. As Dr. Pantone writes, ‘protecting the native people of the Amazon means to protect the rainforest’ because in this way the rainforest will be not manipulated by the interests of outsiders who don’t care about it. The whole area where the Matses live has recently been sold to an international oil company. In the 70’s the Matses themselves were bombed by helicopters after they attacked workers who were building a highway on their territory. The cultural changes faced by the indigenous Amazonian tribes are developing at such a fast pace that there is not much time to protect the very developed knowledge their culture has produced. It is good to remind ourselves that an international law to protect these indigenous people, their traditions and the Amazon
forest is urgently needed. The knowledge of the indigenous people is a precious gift to mankind, which has already helped many of us. I think we should do everything in our power to protect it.
References
1) P.Gorman, ‘Making magic’ from Omni, July 1993
2) Marcelo Bolshow Gomes, ‘Kambô The Spirit of the Shaman’
3) ‘Ruolo dei peptidi antimicrobici nell’immmunita’ innata’, Universita’ di Roma.
Articles and essays
S. A. (1984) Ph.D. dissertation (Columbia University, New York).
V. Erspamer, G. F. & Cei, J. M. (1986) Comp. Biochem. Physiol. C 85, 125-137.
‘Sostanze bioattive: dalla pelle di un anfibio al cervello umano’, Accademia delle Scienze, Universita’ di Roma, La Sapienza, 1987