What is the breath?
Breathiarianism is a spiritual practice in which practicing claims to exist without any food or water. The prerequisite for breathing is that something except food or water can maintain a person, usually either a life force or sunlight and the air itself. It is usually associated with esoteric spiritual practice and is often part of a greater spiritual tradition. For example, many people who practice breathingism believe that they are closer to the ideal state of existence, where the body becomes a "energy" form of light, rather than its material form.
Breathiarianism is most often associated with eastern spiritual practices that often combine brass learning. It also seems that certain faiths of Jaine are associated with breathing, and some people who have achieved perfect enlightenment were said to exist without food or drink. In this context, breathing can be seen as a natural result of extreme asceticism, which has been made to its furthest conclusion. In recent yearsThere have been a number of highly profile cases of people who claim to practice breathing, as well as a number of deaths trying to attach to a lifestyle. The most famous defense attorney is most likely the Ellen Greve woman, who adopted the name Jasmuheen. During the 90s.
In 1999, the TV show 60 minutes was tested on these claims, but the results indicate that it could not stay without food or drink. Jasmuheen quoted problems in the environment and experiment itself, and although the doctor said that she had already started showing signs of physical trauma, the days of the days continued to defend breathing as a healthy practice for those who were ready for it.
also at the end of the 20th century and at the beginning of the 21st century. A number of people died of breathing. This caused somewhat distinctive verA shout and marked those who advocated breathing as dangerous fraud contributing to the death of the innocent.
Breathiarianism does not only exist as a concept of spiritual teachings Yogic and Jain. Some experts of Chinese esoteric disciplines have claimed to be kept without food or water for many months. It seems that some Egyptian sources also advocate life without food or water as a way to overcome the deadly body. And the concept of breathing is not unusual in Catholicism, where news of saints who have lived for many years without eating or drinking anything - or in many cases only communities - are quite common.
Breatharanism is often considered one of the more absurd esoteric claims made at a modern age. Many popular skeptics even refuse to give the credibility of public questioning in any length. However, this remains a relatively widespread belief in certain spiritual and religious circles, and it seems that it is unlikely to disappear soon.