He learned about the use of cocoa as a drug by searching the web, brought kilos of the stuff back down from the rainforest, and so came the incarnation of Keith
the Chocolate Shaman.
I reach
the Chocolate Shaman's cottage on the village outskirts in the early afternoon.
Eventually, Keith
the Chocolate Shaman comes out of the crusty kitchen and looks behind us to the volcanoes across the lake; they possess all the spiritual energy in the world he says.
Lake Atitlan in Guatemala — the 1.8 - million - year - old 600 - meter - deep volcanic lake located a couple hours from Guatemala City — is usually the highlight of anyone's trip to the country, with its picturesque volcanoes towering over the lake, the small villages clustered along the shorelines and
the chocolate shaman who seek spiritual enlightenment in cups of cocoa.
Then Keith
the Chocolate Shaman goes on to talk about how there are two things in the world, love and fear.
The Chocolate Shaman would say it's because I fear breaking through to real happiness.
Having lived around the shores of Lake Atitlan for a month or a year, most everyone knows each other, and most come week after week for
the Chocolate Shaman's group sessions on Wednesdays and Sundays.
Not exact matches
A socially responsible chocolatier and
shaman has been giving the profits from the sales of Shaman Chocolates to the Huichol Indians of the Sierra Madre Moun
shaman has been giving the profits from the sales of
Shaman Chocolates to the Huichol Indians of the Sierra Madre Moun
Shaman Chocolates to the Huichol Indians of the Sierra Madre Mountains.
More on Fair Trade
Chocolate:
Shaman - Run
Chocolate Company Gives Aid to Huichol Indians Divine
Chocolate: The Big Winner Quiz: How Much Of Our
Chocolate Is Tainted By Slavery?