In the book, Castaneda continues his description of his apprenticeship under the tutelage of Don Juan. As in his previous book,
The Teachings of Don Juan: A Yaqui Way of Knowledge, Castaneda describes the experiences he has with Don Juan while under the influence of the
psychotropic plants that Don Juan offered him,
peyote (Lophophora williamsii) and a smokable mixture of what Castaneda believed to be, among other plants, dried mushroom of the genus
Psilocybe. The main focus of the book centered on Don Juan's attempts at getting Carlos to
See, a practice best described as, in Castaneda's own words, "perceiving energy directly as it flows through the universe". The book contains an introduction, an epilogue and two separate parts. Part One, "The Preliminaries of 'Seeing'", describes his re-initiation into the apprenticeship from which he withdrew in late 1965, and also describes his introduction to another
brujo (sorcerer) named
Don Genaro. Part Two, "The Task of 'Seeing'", elaborates on the mental processes involved with
Seeing, and begins with Castaneda realizing that the plants are a necessary tool to arrive at
Seeing. == Sources ==