Who doesn’t love a rainbow? So, let’s talk about rainbow energy.
Let’s start by putting to rest one of the biggest and most persistent myths about the rainbow: that it was a symbol of the Inkas and of the Tawantinsuyu, the Inka Empire. The information circulating on the Internet that the Rainbow Flag, which you can see flying around Cuzco and nearby areas of Peru, was in any way associated with the Inkas and the Tawantinsuyu is false. As the National Academy of Peruvian History says: “The official use of the wrongly called ‘Tawantinsuyu flag’ is a mistake. In the Andean World there did not exist the concept of a flag, [and] it did not belong to their historic context.” The Congress of the Republic of Peru concurs. So how did the rainbow flag come to be the
“official” flag of the city of Cuzco, which historically was the administrative center of the Tawantinsuyu? Chalk it up to marketing—by a radio station!
The rainbow flag seen around Cusco was created in 1973 through the influence of Raúl Montesinos Espejo on behalf of the Tawantinsuyu Radio station, which wanted something special with which to mark the twenty-fifth anniversary of its creation. Raúl Montesinos Espejo claimed that the rainbow was an emblem of the Inkas, but never produced any evidence to support that claim. However, that claim entered the stream of misinformation that plagues the Internet.
So, what can we say about the rainbow from an Andean perspective? Here’s what I have discovered. Although I assess sources as carefully as I can, I cannot attest that every fact about the rainbow shared below is accepted by the majority of scholars, anthropologists, folklorists, and others who share information about the Andean concept of the rainbow.
Depending on the dialect of Quechua you are using, the most commonly used words meaning “rainbow” include k’uychi, kuychi, chuychu, cuichu and kurmi. In the Amazonia regions, it is chirapa. Originally, the rainbow as a spirit being was not considered a “high” spirit or on par with the gods. But, the story goes, eventually the Inka nobles elevated it to equal stature because they considered it a symbol of the beauty of nature—but beauty that was reserved only for the nobles. Even once elevated in stature, K’uychi’s ranking was less than that of the two great yanantin deities, Tayta Inti (Father Sun) and Mama Killa (Mother Moon), and he was considered to be in service to them. Some scholars say that Chinceros, a village in the Sacred Valley not far from Cuzco, was considered the birthplace of the Inka rainbow deity, and so Chinceros is sometimes referred to as the “community of the rainbow.”
The Inkas generally came to see K’uychi as an important deity associated with agriculture, fecundity, and fertility in general, since during the rainy (agricultural) season it was common to see a rainbow stretching across the sky. The Inkas saw K’uychi as responsible for regulating the cycles of rain and sunshine, which are so important for the health of crops. They even considered the rainbow a protector of the crops. He is celebrated and venerated in festivals devoted to him, the main one occurring in December, which is in the rainy season in Peru. During this time, and at others, the Inka and the common people honored K’uychi by offering him sacrifices of llamas or other animals (and, as some sources indicate, perhaps even child sacrifices).
You may have notice I used the pronouns “he” and “him” in relation to K’uychi. The rainbow god was considered male. The attribution of the male gender to K’uychi may have had something to do with how the Inkas associated this spirit being with the Amaru, the anaconda. They sometimes represented K’uychi
as a double-headed serpent: the head on each end of its sinuous body burrowed into the earth (submerging into underground springs) and the body arced across the sky. In other representations, the rainbow as serpent is depicted as held aloft by the jaguar god. K’uychi, though, is represented in its more common form as an arc of seven colors in its own temple within the sacred sanctuary of Qoriqancha.
Rainbows are associated with the occurrence of storms, and so with lightning, thunder, and hail. These same associations are attributed to the black (female) cat deity, Choque-Chinchay. Since both Choque-Chinchay and K’uychi were the harbinger of storms, and the forecasters of rain, hail, thunder, and lightning, an association formed between these two heavenly deities as well.
Andeans identify two kinds of rainbows: the celestial or hanaq pacha rainbow and the terrestrial or kay pacha rainbow, and their import for human beings could not be more different. The celestial rainbow was seen as a bridge between the hanaq pacha and kay pacha, and is associated with joy, healing, and beauty (as well as rain and fertility). The terrestrial rainbow is one created by light striking the surface of water, such as a river, puddle, or even the water filling the basin of an ornamental fountain. Seeing such a terrestrial rainbow can be dangerous, even causing illness. The Q’ero confirmed this view of earthly rainbows, but also ascribed danger to celestial rainbows as well. Back in 1995, I and a few friends were spending an evening sitting under a starry sky in the Raqchi sanctuary and talking with a group of six or so Q’ero paqos who (through a translator) told us about the rainbow, sharing information that is not found in the anthropological literature and, in some cases, contradicting that information. Here are how their comments were translated:
“When the rainbow emerges, all the magic of the sky weakens and withdraws; the sun even weakens. That’s why a rainbow is so powerful and dangerous. You should never watch a rainbow being birthed, because you can go mad, lose your mind. The rainbow is birthed of the water and the stars, and it is not until it puts on its disguise, its clothes, that anyone can see it. Without its disguise, it is invisible. You can
never see its original form; you can only see it when it puts its clothes on, its cloak.
“On Tuesdays and Fridays, seeing a rainbow is good luck, but on [Mondays], Wednesdays and Thursdays it can make you sick, giving you diseases that even the doctors cannot recognize or treat. However, paqos are the only ones who are supposed to read the message of the rainbows that come out on Tuesday and Fridays. On Mondays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays, sorcerers [called layqas] can manipulate the power of the rainbow. On Tuesdays and Fridays, the rainbow is on the left-hand side of the mesa, and on Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays it is on the right-hand side of the mesa.”
The paqos even described some of the illnesses a person can get from seeing a rainbow on a Monday, Wednesday, or Friday: gum disease or mouth ulcers and stomach ailments of various kinds. It is interesting to note that, according to information I have received over the years, many paqos hold their healing “clinics” on Tuesdays and Fridays. I don’t know if there is any connection to the power of the rainbow. I believe that the reason these two days are seen as auspicious for healing has more to do with each day’s connection to a specific planet. However, that these two days devoted to healing work are associated with the left side of the mesa [paqo path] makes perfect sense, as the left side is the path of action, including healing. One comment specifically about terrestrial rainbows came from another Q’ero paqo at another time: if a woman happens to see a rainbow reflecting from the surface of a river as she crosses the river, the rainbow can impregnate her. (Another sliver of evidence that the rainbow is considered a male spirit!)
As you can see, we risk misunderstanding the Andean culture, past and present, if we project our own nature myths onto them. For most Andeans, there are no pots of gold at the end of celestial rainbows. Just healthy, thriving crops. And the only thing we should do if we see a rainbow shimmering on the surface of an earthly body of water is avoid it!

Kawsay means to live, to be alive. Other ways of saying this include kusisqa kawsay, which means to have a happy life; and allin kawsay: to live the right kind of life or a life of goodness.
there is no reason we cannot choose to have both. In the Andean tradition, there is no moral overlay on energy, so we can direct energy to influence the kawsay pacha to manifest both.
we trust, can rely on and confide in, and can be our “true” self with—and for whom we provide the same level of intimate emotional stability, availability, and honesty.
in the process. In the Andean tradition this is phutuy, the “flowering” of our Inka Seed.
or the work of the devil. Then he counters that prejudice by explaining the physicist’s point of view (and for us, a fourth-level paqo’s point of view): “. . .the way magic is used is completely up to the magician. The power itself, like any fundamental force of the universe, is morally neutral.”
are taught to take full responsibility for our own energy. All we can say is how to the energy feels to us, and we say nothing about the actual energetic state of the other person. So, when we meet with someone who feels heavy to us, all we can truly say is that we feel a flow of hucha. We can’t say with certainty that the other person is actually carrying a lot of hucha. What we may be perceiving is the hucha we are unconsciously generating within ourselves as we interact with the other person. Of course, we can use our commonsense, and sometimes it is obvious from the other person’s words and behaviors and other less-obvious clues that he or she is carrying a lot of hucha. We can choose to reduce our interaction or end it. But as paqos we want to be able to be in sami-filled relationship with everybody and everything, so we attend to ourselves. We bring self-inquiry to our perceptions, asking questions such as “Why do I feel such heaviness when I touch this person’s poq’po (energy body)?” “What can I do to shift this heaviness to sami?” We take responsibility and use our tools: doing saminchakuy on ourselves or hucha miqhuy on the flow of energy between ourselves and the other person. We don’t just say, “That person is heavy. Not my problem.” We say, “I feel heaviness in response to my interactions with this person. Let me refine my own energy so that I feel sami, or at least less hucha, in our future interactions.” That’s the impartiality we bring to our relationships and our energy work. Ideally, we reserve personal judgment as much as possible and deal directly with the energy flow.
The joint karpay is given by a chunpi paqo. But just what is a chunpi paqo? Is he or she different from a “regular” paqo? If so, how? We will look into these questions in this post.
apus, whose power covered a wide region. A paqo would progress along the qanchispatañan by working consecutively with the power of each type of apu.
to the lower levels of development, there can be no faking being a fifth-level paqo.
is not a system in which we have to earn or deserve the good things in life. It is not a reward system, and it not a moralistic system. It is a core energy dynamic where like energy generates more like energy and attracts like energy.
how we may be giving out even less than we think we are! In other words, what we see as lack actually is the universe being generous! There are many other possibilities, and I raise the issue here, right up front, to provide us with a sobering reality-check about what it means to understand the ayni feedback, both from our fellow human beings and from the living universe.
the world and others. A developed seventh eye is in its own way compensatory: it provides additional information so that we do not fool ourselves, especially through conscious rationalization. The qanchis ñawi is an intellect-free—and a story-free—zone! It is focused on the actual energetics of the interaction rather than our oh-so-human perception of that interaction. It connects us to the “truth meter” that is our Inka Seed.
point, I discovered how when I project hucha, hucha feeds back to me and even enlarges. That hucha was not a punishment—it was just feedback. The measure in which you start to discover that for yourself, you are going to start to be careful with what you are projecting in every aspect of your life.”