Anu Aggarwal Supports Paresh Rawal’s Urine Therapy Claim: Calls It “Amrit” With Anti-Aging Benefits
After Paresh Rawal’s urine therapy revelation, Anu Aggarwal backs him, calling it a Yogic practice with anti-aging and wellness benefits.
Urine Therapy and Bollywood: Anu Aggarwal Backs Paresh Rawal’s Unconventional Health Practice
Actor Paresh Rawal is currently stirring up controversy on social media after he revealed that, as part of the recovery process, he drank his own urine after having a knee injury. While the revelation attracted varied responses, Anu Aggarwal is now stepping up on the side of urine therapy, which the actor understands from his unusual lifestyle.
Speaking at a recent event in Mumbai, Anu went a step ahead to defend Paresh’s statement that urine use or Aamroli consumption is part and parcel of a very revered practice in Yoga. In a video by Instant Bollywood, she said, “Most people do not know that urine therapy is actually a mudra in Yoga. I myself practiced it. But you do not drink all of it- just some part which is called amrit (elixir).”
Anu proceeded to explain that the selected part of the urine had anti-aging factors. “It keeps the skin wrinkle-free and enhances the overall well-being,” she added. Her statements accentuated that even though modern science might look down upon such beliefs, the Yogic traditions have more then 10,000 years of history backing them as opposed to the merely 200 years’ legacy of modern science.
Paresh Rawal, on the other hand, had said that in a discussion with The Lallantop, he had been talking about a personal experience. He was hospitalized at Nanavati Max Super Speciality Hospital after injuring his leg. Action director Veeru Devgan told him to advise drinking urine upon waking. Veeru told him that it was very common for fighters and advised him to keep off alcohol, mutton and tobacco while he continued with simple meals and urine therapy.
Believing in that, Paresh decided to drink his morning urine as he would beer for 15 days. They had indeed remarkable results. The doctor was shocked. Cementing that was not expected so soon was visible in the X-ray. “I got discharged in 1.5 months when I was supposed to be discharged after 2.5 months,” he recalled.
The revelations, however, did not go down well with everyone. Dr. Cyriac Abby Philips, nicknamed on social media as ‘The Liver Doc,’ was swift to rebuff such statements and issued a warning against such unscientific advice. “Please don’t drink your urine (or others) because a Bollywood actor says so. There is no scientific evidence to support any health benefit,” he posted.
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While the medical fraternity bucks against such practices, the voices of endorsement from Paresh Rawal and Anu Aggarwal have sparked renewed interest among the public to search for ancient wellness traditions. Urine therapy has clearly turned out to be a topic of hot debate, either considered as a natural elixir or called pseudoscience, thus igniting new argument concerning the line drawn falls between holistic health and modern medicine.
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