How to make and perform a sweat lodge
The sweat lodge has its origins in native American tradition; many of the tribes
who inhabited the continent before the arrival of the Europeans used sweat lodges
of one form or another for purification and cleaning. They would sit under skins
and splash water onto hot stones, sometimes adding sage or pine needles to the
mix. It is not too hard to make a sweat lodge; a group of half a dozen or so
people with a clue what they are doing should be able to put one together in a few hours.
Sweat lodges in the form that I know them replace the skins with a bender - a construction made of canvas stretched over bent branches of hazel or similar wood.
The Site
The first thing you need to do if you are considering building a sweat lodge
is to find a suitable site. Ideally there should be space to put the bender
and a fire very close to a body of water suitable for jumping in post-sweat.
Usually the entrance of the lodge should face the fire, with a gap of a few metres between the two.
The Rocks
Collect rocks the size of a large potato and bigger. Get a good pile of them
together - heat more than you think you will use, just in case. Never use quartz,
which is liable to explode in the fire and shatter like glass. Sedimentary and
porous rocks, too, are usually best avoided; it's very rarely worth looking in a river for stones.
The Fire
The rocks will need to be heated for a couple of hours to get them glowing
hot right to the core. Make a medium-sized fire, preferably well-sheltered so that
it doesn't waste too much heat and need too much tending, and once it is going
put the rocks in the middle so that the fire is burning on all sides of them.
Building up the fire a bit over the top of the rocks will provide an added layer of protection in case any of them do pop.
The Pit
Where the centre of the lodge is going to be, dig a pit a foot or so deep and
almost as wide. It should be big enough to accommodate all the rocks you are
using with a good few inches to spare. Sweat lodge rocks are very dangerous;
it is possible to get badly burned without even touching them,
so always leave enough space to make it hard for people to get too close to them.
If possible put a grille over the pit once the rocks are in place, as well;
if you do have a grille, make sure you don't make the pit too wide to take it.
The Lodge
The sweat lodge itself is a pretty standard bender, usually made from branches
of hazel woven together and covered all over with more than one layer of canvas and/or tarpaulin.
If you don't know how to make a bender please see wertperch's writeup there; a makeshift sweat lodge bender needn't be quite as sturdy as the kind of bender wertperch describes, and it shouldn't be as large, but the basic process of construction is the same. The bigger
the space the harder it is to heat, so the best sweat lodges are verging on
cramped - make them just high enough to sit up in. The
lodge should be very nearly air-tight, so make sure the covering goes right
down to the ground on all sides and don't leave any gaps apart from the entrance.
The entrance should be sealable but not too hard to open just a crack.
The Nudity
The best kind of sweat is a naked sweat. Any covering at all will trap
sweat, obstruct the flow of steamy air past your body and get in the way of wiping away the little balls of dirt and dead skin
which form during a sweat. The most satisfying way of drying off afterwards is also to wipe any loose liquid from your body and then stand around
the fire in the buff - this might sound like it would get cold but most people
find that they don't feel the chill at all for a long while after they finish
sweating.
However, not everybody is comfortable with people they don't really know all that well getting naked in front of them, let alone getting naked themselves. Don't let nudity get in the way of a sweat; if people
are uncomfortable with it just cover up, and maybe have a separate naked sweat
later or whatever.
The Sweat
Once your rocks are glowing hot, transfer them very carefully to the pit,
using something which won't burn and which puts a good distance between you and the stones while you carry them;
then put the grille in place. Have a good supply of water to hand - you will need
it for drinking as well as for splashing on the fire. Sweating is a thirsty
business. A little fresh sage or other herbs thrown on the rocks is worth experimenting with;
if you have the time and the inclination you could even brew up a Finnish-style 'löyly tea' mix in advance, with sage, basil,
rosemary, bay and other herbs. The rocks themselves will often release a smell
when you water them. As long as the odour is not so strong as to be unpleasant,
this is nothing to worry about. What you are smelling is gas which has been
trapped in the stones for thousands of years, ever since it bubbled through in the stone's lava years.
People should enter the lodge one at a time with great care, all circling the
same way around the perimeter until they get to their place. Once everybody is
settled, the water is in place and the entrance sealed, the steaming can commence.
Whoever is in charge of the water should dash some on to the hot stones, starting
with perhaps a cupful to get things started. After that the water should be
added a little at a time as people see fit. Many people enjoy a sweat most when
it is at its most intense, but not everyone can take the same amount of steam
and heat so the sprinkler should proceed with caution and consideration.
If someone wants to leave, everyone should shuffle around to allow them to
get out without trying to clamber over people. Often it is nice to take a break,
maybe dip in the water, get some fresh air and then return to the sweat.
The Dip
Warm to the core after a good sweat, there is nothing better than to plunge
into a stream or lake. Rinse off the sweat; shed your old skin. When you are
done, dry off around the fire, get some clothes on and return to the world a
new, cleaner person.
For a personal account, see also My First Sweat Lodge.
www.cyberbohemia.com/Pages/sweat.htm
http://www.welcomehome.org/rob/sweat/sweat.html