Deleted member 7651
Kraken
- Joined
- Jun 4, 2020
- Posts
- 3,204
- Reputation
- 6,771
1830 Philadelphia painter George Catlin documented the lives of people in more than 50 native american tribes , they had different diets and traditions among them however he noticed they never had health problems and had perfectly healthy straight teeth , as the autists we are we also know what bone moggers native americans were .
"Native Americans explained to Catlin that breath inhaled through the mouth sapped the body of strength, deformed their face, and caused stress and disease (while) breath inhaled through the nose kept the body strong, made the face beautiful, and prevented disease. ‘The air which enters the lungs (mouth breathing) is as different from that which enters the nostrils as distilled water is different from the water in an ordinary cistern or a frog pond" Catlin wrote.
"In great detail, Catlin described how nasal breathing among the Plains Native Americans started at birth. After breastfeeding, for example, mothers would carefully close the mouths of infants, even standing over them at night to ensure their young mouths would remain closed while sleeping. As adults, Catlin recounted how tribal members would resist smiling with their teeth showing to keep even small amounts of air from entering the mouth."
This must be the ultimate suifuel for me a mouth breather since birth .
"Native Americans explained to Catlin that breath inhaled through the mouth sapped the body of strength, deformed their face, and caused stress and disease (while) breath inhaled through the nose kept the body strong, made the face beautiful, and prevented disease. ‘The air which enters the lungs (mouth breathing) is as different from that which enters the nostrils as distilled water is different from the water in an ordinary cistern or a frog pond" Catlin wrote.
"In great detail, Catlin described how nasal breathing among the Plains Native Americans started at birth. After breastfeeding, for example, mothers would carefully close the mouths of infants, even standing over them at night to ensure their young mouths would remain closed while sleeping. As adults, Catlin recounted how tribal members would resist smiling with their teeth showing to keep even small amounts of air from entering the mouth."
This must be the ultimate suifuel for me a mouth breather since birth .