The Andean worldview is the cosmological system developed by the indigenous peoples of the Andes—primarily Quechuas, Aymaras, and Kichwas—over millennia. It remains alive and operational in rural and urban communities in Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, northern Chile and Argentina, and sectors of southern Colombia.
Structuring Principles:
Pachamama (Mother Earth): the earth is not a 'resource' to be extracted but a living mother with whom a reciprocal relationship exists. Offerings (payments to Pachamama) and agricultural rituals are part of the natural order, not folklore.
Ayni (reciprocity): a fundamental principle of Andean life. Every relationship—between people, between humans and nature, between the living and the dead—operates through reciprocity. What is received is returned, not necessarily to the same party, but to the system.
Sumak kawsay (good living, in Quechua) or suma qamaña (in Aymara): a concept that articulates a good life not as material 'development' but as balanced harmony between the human community, nature, and the spiritual dimension. It has been incorporated into the constitutions of Bolivia (2009) and Ecuador (2008) as a guiding principle.
Apus, achachilas, mallkus: spirits of the mountains, of ancestors, of water. They are part of the relational system—they are not metaphors, they are real interlocutors in the cosmological system.
Importance for the transgenerational field: for many Andean clients or those of Andean descent, the spiritual dimension of working with ancestors is NOT an extraneous or optional element—it is a fundamental part of their system of understanding the world. Reducing the systemic approach to purely Western psychological interpretations ignores their own cultural framework.
For Constelando: many Spanish-speaking clients have Andean roots (consciously or unconsciously). Awareness of this worldview allows us to accompany their work with ancestors by respecting their own cultural framework, not uncritically imposing Hellinger's European framework.
Bibliography
- Soul's Images — Family Constellations and Shamanic Rituals — Daan van Kampenhout. Alma Lepik, 2008.
These books are in the reference library that nourishes Constelando el Origen.
Related terms
Ancestral altar (ritual practice)
A practice present in many traditions (Mexican, African, Asian, Andean): a physical space where ancestors are honored with photographs, objects, or candles. A complementary tool for systemic work.
See entryHonoring ancestors (ritual of recognition)
The practice of formally recognizing ancestors —named or anonymous— as part of one's own system. A systemic movement that restores the flow of the lineage without necessarily confronting the living.
See entryAncestral memory
The set of experiences, traumas, and learnings lived by ancestors that a descendant carries unknowingly, manifesting as inexplicable symptoms, patterns, and attractions.
View profileDaan van Kampenhout
Dutch Constellator and healer. Integrates Family Constellations with shamanic ritual traditions. Author of 'Images of the Soul'.
View profileA session that names what hurts
If you recognize this dynamic in your own story, a Family Constellation can reveal where it comes from and what movement brings order to it. Daniela respectfully accompanies each case.
Sessions in Spanish only
