The mystery of the Tibet’s Samadhi cave

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The mystery of the Tibet's Samadhi cave

The Samadhi caves in Tibet are home to Buddhist monks who are said to have overcome death with a special meditation practice. The monks should put themselves into a kind of hibernation, limit the body functions to a minimum and let their minds run low. The spirit of the monks in the Samadhi caves is still active and minimally monitors body functions. However, the physical and chemical laws are overridden to prevent physical deterioration.

The monks of the Samadhi caves grow old

The mystery of the Tibet's Samadhi cave

Only selected locals are allowed to enter the Samadhi caves. They take care of the Buddhist monks who sit on the floor in a “Buddha posture” and have taken a deep trance posture. The Lama Daschi-Dorsho is said to be 162 years old and was the head of the Buddhists in Russia. Medical examinations of his body have shown minimal bodily functions, which is why it is suspected that he is still alive.n nThe Russian ophthalmologist, author and Tibet researcher Dr. Ernst Rifgatowitsch Muldaschew dealt with the Samadhi caves and the monks. As part of his work, he researched the “third eye” and he is convinced that earthly disasters can survive with the samadhi state, with the human body serving as a gene repository. China has been showing great interest in Tibet for decades, which could be due to the mysterious Samadhi caves.n nThere is an urgent warning before entering the Samadhi caves. Not everyone is allowed to enter the cave because it has an invisible mental shield that scans the visitors’ thoughts and decides who can enter the cave. Chinese soldiers are said to have felt unbelievable pain when entering the caves and deaths are also mentioned. Foreign forces are said to be active in the Samadhi caves to protect the monks and the things in the caves. These forces are said to be fatal to normal people. As Dr. Ernst Rifgatowitsch Muldaschew entered the caves, he did not carry any technical equipment with him on the recommendation of high-ranking Buddhist monks and also avoided talking. When entering the Samadhi caves, the Tibet researcher suffered a health shock, he felt sick and turned back. If he hadn’t turned, it would have been his death. He sees the enigmatic caves and their monks as a kind of gene pool for humanity.

Giants protect the samadhi monks?

The cave is said to be home to giants of inhuman appearance that are a few meters high and protect the monks. The monks are said to be in an undead state, according to stories of samadhi meditation, and despite their minimal bodily functions, they are said to still be alive. Tibet regards the Samadhi caves as a sanctuary and Mount Kailash as the center of the universe. It is considered to be one of the mountains most revered by Buddhists and which very few people visit.n nThe riddle of the Samadhi monks has not yet been solved and further research is not possible due to the protective shield described. The monks’ souls are probably outside the body, but they still seem to be connected to their body shell via a thin “spiritual bond”. The medical evidence of minimal bodily functions indicates a kind of living condition of the monks. They seem to be on the threshold between life and death, which most likely allows them to live for hundreds of years. In the samadhi state, the metabolism is controlled with strong consciousness, which leads to an immortal body that can last for millennia, except that the caves collapse or the body is destroyed.n nWe will never find out why the monks from the Samadhi caves put themselves in a meditative undead state and whether giant beings actually live in the caves. The Samadhi caves are largely unknown to the general public, but the topic is interesting and exciting. However, it is hard to imagine that the government of Tibet, for example, will allow a documentary channel to enter the mysterious cave system with the undead monks for research.

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