ZYGOMA



QUESTIONS?

A mostly medical-themed tumblr.

Mental disorders, congenital disorders, diseases, deformities, infections, parasites, surgeries, injuries, treatments, psychology, anthropology, sociology, medical illustrations, medical art, etc.

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474 | 12.11.2011 | 6 months ago


homofuck:

deformutation:

reblololo iwritewordsgood pareidoliac blaaargh
 Arisada Hōin, 300-yr-old “living mummy” at Kanshūji temple (Fukushima)
To become a living mummy, monks had to undergo a long and grueling three-step process.
Step 1: For 1,000 days, the monks would eat a special diet of nuts and seeds, and engage in rigorous physical training to strip the body of fat.
Step 2: For another 1,000 days, they would eat only bark and roots in gradually diminishing amounts. Toward the end, they would start drinking tea made from the sap of the urushi tree, a poisonous substance normally used to make Japanese lacquer bowls, which caused further loss of bodily fluid. The tea was brewed with water from a sacred spring at Mt. Yudono, which is now known to contain a high level of arsenic. The concoction created a germ-free environment within the body and helped preserve whatever meat was left on the bone.
Step 3: Finally, the monks would retreat to a cramped underground chamber connected to the surface by a tiny bamboo air pipe. There, they would meditate until dying, at which point they were sealed in their tomb. After 1,000 days, they were dug up and cleaned. If the body remained well-preserved, the monk was deemed a living mummy.
Unfortunately, most who attempted self-mummification were unsuccessful, but the few who succeeded achieved Buddha status and were enshrined at temples. As many as two dozen of these living mummies are in the care of temples in northern Honshu.
The Japanese government outlawed the practice of self-mummification in the late 19th century.

homofuck:

deformutation:

reblololo iwritewordsgood pareidoliac blaaargh

 Arisada Hōin, 300-yr-old “living mummy” at Kanshūji temple (Fukushima)

To become a living mummy, monks had to undergo a long and grueling three-step process.

Step 1: For 1,000 days, the monks would eat a special diet of nuts and seeds, and engage in rigorous physical training to strip the body of fat.

Step 2: For another 1,000 days, they would eat only bark and roots in gradually diminishing amounts. Toward the end, they would start drinking tea made from the sap of the urushi tree, a poisonous substance normally used to make Japanese lacquer bowls, which caused further loss of bodily fluid. The tea was brewed with water from a sacred spring at Mt. Yudono, which is now known to contain a high level of arsenic. The concoction created a germ-free environment within the body and helped preserve whatever meat was left on the bone.

Step 3: Finally, the monks would retreat to a cramped underground chamber connected to the surface by a tiny bamboo air pipe. There, they would meditate until dying, at which point they were sealed in their tomb. After 1,000 days, they were dug up and cleaned. If the body remained well-preserved, the monk was deemed a living mummy.

Unfortunately, most who attempted self-mummification were unsuccessful, but the few who succeeded achieved Buddha status and were enshrined at temples. As many as two dozen of these living mummies are in the care of temples in northern Honshu.

The Japanese government outlawed the practice of self-mummification in the late 19th century.

  1. cocophony reblogged this from zygoma
  2. sophie-fatale reblogged this from psychologicalsuicide and added:
    reblololo iwritewordsgood pareidoliac blaaargh
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  14. wallabyy reblogged this from aprilfoolromance and added:
    That is dedication.
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  16. incrediblyfree reblogged this from aprilfoolromance and added:
    Arisada Hōin, 300-yr-old “living mummy” at Kanshūji temple (Fukushima)...To become a...
  17. cold--sweat reblogged this from missmelanieelizabeth
  18. motherless-child reblogged this from missmelanieelizabeth and added:
    Man, that sucks. I hear dehydration/starvation is a pretty lame way to go.
  19. acid-parfaits reblogged this from aprilfoolromance
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  22. fairiesbell reblogged this from trucydae
  23. lizettewebb reblogged this from jonnyfandango and added:
    I don’t know how I feel about this. It’s neat… but I’m not entirely into it for some reason :/
  24. autumninganymede reblogged this from abreathawayfromdeath
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