Tibetan monks display superhuman skills, surprise Harvard (Video) scientists

When you think of superhuman abilities, Tibetan monks will surprise you as one of the rare people in this world who have learned to unlock their hidden potential. In fact, these monks are fascinating in many ways, and they possess a profound wisdom about existence and life that exceeds many lessons. [...]
In fact, these monks are fascinating in many ways, and they possess a profound wisdom about existence and life that exceeds many lessons. They are best known for their media techniques that many people fear.
Indeed, even Harvard scientists have been amazed at what monks can accomplish through meditation on things that are designed to be impossible for a person to achieve. They seem to have learned how to control every aspect of their being and thus become superhuman, reports <x0Hidden-truth”, Periscopi broadcast.
This is what Professor Herbert Benson of Harvard Medical School discovered on his trip to the Himalayas in the 1980s. His experience with monks in remote monasteries is one that Harvard scientists have yet to decipher.
Benson reported that he had observed the Tibetan monks meditating on conditions that were impossible to endure, the monks would sit and meditate on a rock saw at a height of 15,000 feet [15,000 m] and at temperatures that dropped to zero degrees of Fahrenhe, naked but that their bodies have warmth.
The meditation technique they use is called g tum-mo and with it, they are able to increase their body temperature considerably.
“You and I will have an uncontrolled shake and we will probably die of low blood pressure”, Benson explains. “They were quite comfortable there simply conducting their average heat yoga Tum-mo”.
Benson wanted to find out exactly what happened in the brains of these monks during this interesting meditation, so he brought some tools from Boston to study the case.
They were surprised to find that during their advanced meditation techniques, teachers were able to reduce their oxygen consumption to 64%.
To put this in perspective, the oxygen consumption of a regular person falls by 10-1.5% while asleep and about 17% when doing simple meditation. This was the biggest drop in oxygen consumption ever recorded in experiments with a simple soothing” procedure, Benson explains.
Moreover, during their meditative state, Benson and his team recorded a visible drop in blood flow across the entire brain”, while the attention of brain control and autonomous functions (such as blood pressure and metabolicism) became more active.
However, even under such conditions, the results of experiments were surprising to the scientific community, and there are still few explanations of how these monks are able to directly control their bodies in a way that is considered impossible for humans.
After all, these monks are as human as any of us. Does this mean that we all have such potential that we are unaware of?
Benson managed to take something from his experience with Tibetan monks he developed a technique that he calls “exacerbating response” It describes this technique as “the psychological state against stress” and serves to lower metabolism, blood pressure, and respiratory degree.
He and his colleagues at the Mind/Body Medical Institute at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston use this technique to treat stress-related diseases, such as anxiety, mild and moderate depression, excessive anger, insomnia, high blood pressure, and even infertility.
The reaction of relaxation involves repeating a word, a sentence, or short prayer, leaving the mark of any intervention.
I want to investigate which advanced forms of meditation they can do to help control the physical processes that were once thought to be uncontrollable, Benson notes.
Whatever truth lies in meditation, it's the same truth that has made Tibetan monks look super-human to all of us. And unless you should try to become superhuman, at least you can invest a few minutes a day to achieve a healthier state through simple meditation./Periscopi/