Taisha Abelar was one of Carlos Castaneda's main disciples and lovers, and here I will put the information I find about her.
HER LIFE
Taisha was born on August 25, 1945, in a refugee camp in Weidenberg, Germany. She later emigrated to the United States.
She
met Castaneda in Los Angeles in 1964 when she was 19 and he was 39. At
this time, they were both studying at the University of California, Los
Angeles (UCLA).
From
that day forward, she was his devoted disciple until Castaneda died in
1998. Then Taisha, along with some of his other devoted disciples,
decided to commit suicide.
For more details about her life, read:
• His biography (I'll add it later)
HER DIFFERENT NAMES
Castaneda asked his disciples to change their names, and Taisha did so as well.
Her birth name is Maryann Simko.
She later changed her name to Annamarie Carter, but was also known as Sheila Waters, Ricky, Alphonsina, Anna Maria Cordova, Annie, Madeline Rigo.
And her most famous name is Taisha Abelar .
HER STATUS IN CASTANEDA GROUP
Castaneda
stated that, besides himself, three other women (known as "the
witches") had also known and been disciples of the nahual Don Juan, and
Taisha was one of them. He added that he had become their new
guide. But most likely that all these assertions were lies and in reality Taisha was part of Castaneda's inner harem.
HER BOOK
In 1992 Taisha published a book entitled "Where the Sorcerers Cross" in which she recounted her alleged encounter, training and initiation by the group of sorcerers of Don Juan.
PHOTOS
Taisha imitated Castaneda's habit of remaining very secretive, but over time some photos of her have been found.
This photo shows Taisha when she was young:
The following photos were published in the November 1974 issue of Samurai Magazine where Taisha appears practicing karate with Florinda Donner (another of the witches):
TAISHA DESCRIBED BY RICHARD JENNINGS
Richard
Jennings was a student of Castaneda during his later years; he knew
Taisha well, and about her he commented the following:
« Taisha Abelar, was, if not the first of Castaneda’s lovers/cult members (that was probably Joanie Barker), certainly the one who served in that role the longest.
After meeting him when she was only 19, she somehow found a way to live with him throughout his entire self invented, philandering, megalomaniacal life. She was also arguably the most accomplished of his many lovers and cult members.
Taisha came from a close knit family that had survived the destruction and displacement of WWII, and her siblings all went on to academic distinction and professional careers.
She herself not only published articles on a variety of subjects in her early years, but also legitimately gained her masters and Ph.D at UCLA, unlike Florinda who plagiarized her attempted thesis and was expelled from UCLA’s Ph.D program.
Although taken over and groomed by Castaneda from a young age, she was very practical and worldly in her own way, and Castaneda came to depend on her for those qualities. And she procured for him Florinda, among others, as a lover and disciple, receiving her as a lifelong housemate in return.
My impressions of her
For me, when I got involved with the group in early 1995, Taisha was the most magical of Castaneda’s circle. Her lectures vividly made us experience her imagined stalking lives as various characters, and their intense, often miserable, but invariably extreme experiences.
During the course of the same evening’s remarks, she would make us laugh out loud and sob with uncontrollable tears. Her matter-of-fact telling of the most outlandish tales (e.g., flying for miles through the air in a treehouse), made those stories feel all the more real. She truly seemed to transport us somewhere––to move our assemblage points, in Castaneda’s vernacular—to something outside ordinary reality.
Although I had many more encounters with Florinda, who was the most gregarious of the inner circle, as well as Kylie and Talia, whom I was able to help with many practical tasks, it was Taisha—whom I mainly saw only at the workshops and Sunday sessions, and then a few times for tea in Castaneda’s compound where she lived on one side with Florinda—for whom I had the most respect and admiration.
As Amy Wallace, my closest friend and confidant in Castaneda’s world, shared with me, in real time, her experiences with Taisha in those final days before Castaneda’s death, I gained a different view of what Taisha had become. The first and most lasting disciple had given in to Castaneda’s imagination with her whole heart and her own active imagination, ultimately coming to believe both his tales and teachings, as well as her own “dreamed” or “actively imagined” stories about Castaneda’s imaginary teachers.
When Castaneda came to his end and wasn’t capable of helping her and the others who had been with him so long to “burn with the fire from within,” she was absolutely and understandably devastated. She had given her life, her soul, her total commitment to Castaneda’s philosophy and worldview. Genuinely there was no life for her outside the one she had spent as Castaneda’s “colleague“ and indefatigable supporter. One senses she didn’t want to die, but really had no option but to attempt to join her beloved, her lifelong guru, in death. And she committed to this suicide pact as fervently and stoically as every other task she had had to complete in service to her personal savior.
So Taisha’s chronology was particularly painful for me to put together, and once done, I wrestled with making it public. When her brother and sister-in-law, who ultimately shared with and confirmed for me essential family history after I tracked them down, asked me to keep it unpublished, it wasn’t hard for me to agree.
By contrast, my deep anger at Carol‘s ongoing deceptions, and her cruel and callous treatment of Amy and others in the group, made it easy for me to share through the private Sustained Action mailing list, and ultimately this site, what I had learned about her real story, which totally debunked the oft repeated canard that she had “bodily disappeared” from this world for 10 years. For the highly intelligent, talented, true believer Taisha, on the other hand, I felt, and still feel, only deep pity, sadness and regret at her inevitable decision to take her own life.
But the time has finally come, a quarter of a century on, to complete the real story, the truth of the destructive cult that Castaneda—a philosophical inspiration to so many—created to amuse and occupy himself, especially in his last decade. I didn’t come on the scene until the last three years of his life, but those 40 months or so were intense and all consuming for me. I can just barely imagine, then, how deeply stuck and dependent someone like Taisha had become, having been seduced and controlled by Castaneda from her late teens on, for over three rollercoaster decades. »
CONCLUSION
Taisha
was initially just another victim of Carlos Castaneda, but
she grew accustomed to lying, living very well, and being admired by
beguiling others. She ended up participating in and believing the
fantasies Castaneda had invented for her. But when her mentor and lover
died, she preferred to take her own life rather than face the collapse of the fantasy where she had been placed on a pedestal.

