Thursday, October 21, 2021

Breatharians prove food is optional (video)

 
The ascetic Siddhartha starved himself as yogic penance
One time when the wandering ascetic Siddhartha Gautama (the Future Buddha) was starving himself by fasting too much, he fainted.

The devas ("shining ones") in the forest talked about him. One insisted he was dead, another said no, this is just the way shamans behave, going through their self-mortifications.

Since he would not eat due to penance or as a misguided means of self-purification (tapas) to burn up previous bad karma, the devas decided to feed him their food by "pouring it into his pores."

What could their "food" have been but prana (subtle breath, spirit, animating energy, that ectoplasmic stuff with which the gods animated clay to fashion human beings "in the beginning" according to the Ceramic Theory of how we came to be as made popular by the Abrahamic faiths).

Prince Siddhartha renounces worldly luxuries
It's true. Humans do not need food, a digestive tract for its breakdown, assimilation, and excretion. That's a gross way to go about life.

We can be much more angelic here and now, subsisting on prana (spiritus) and amrita (ambrosia), the "food of the gods" (theobroma), "gods" being deities and unseen light beings around us in addition to hybrid humans mingling with lower-space beings who descend from the height to get down to earth. Expert yogis know it's possible, even today in the Kali Yuga, the "Decadent Age."

The Strange World of Breatharianism
(Atrocity Guide, Oct. 24, 2020) In 2013 a YouTuber named Naveena Shine documented her attempt to become a breatharian — a person who nourishes him or herself with breath and light rather than material food.

The prince saw the Four Messengers:
Aging, Illness, Death, and Renunciation
Breatharianism has been operating in the far fringes of New Age esoterica for decades, with actual practitioners who are largely ignored and a history of fraudulent gurus, public humiliation, and tragedy that is much publicized.

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