When approaching the multiplicity of the spiritual experiences of healing, ethnographers are often presented with ideas of the existence of other worlds that may intersect with the so-called material or physical worlds. This book addresses the density of ethnographic experience that can potentially decondition personal ontologies and epistemologies, unfolding a process of transformation, analogous to healing. Epistemological embodiment signals that personal scholarly experience of the unknown be it in the form of trance, or as the embodiment of an other shapes the concepts of healing, body, trance, self, and matter by which ethnographers craft out analysis.