Scary psychological treatments by ... buried alive
Psychologist Andrey Zhelvetro uses psychological treatments for his patients by placing them in the coffin and "buried alive" within 2 hours.
Explaining the principle of this method, psychologists believe that he buried the patient during treatment so that they "felt life".
The psychologist Andrey Zhelvetro placed his patients in the coffin before being buried in the ground as part of his psychological treatment course.
Psychologist Andrey Zhelvetro researches out psychological treatments by . burying patients alive.
His unusual method was known after a villager found 12 abandoned empty coffins in the forest near the capital Kiev in northern Ukraine. The villagers reportedly found a dozen newly dug graves at the scene and called the police. Police arrived at the scene, conducted surveys and the results led to Zhelvetro, who was supposed to admit that the casket was used by him in his psychological treatment.
According to psychologist, he brought his 12 patients to the forest, put them in the coffin and buried them for 2 hours. A video was shot by Zhelvetro and posted online for advertising purposes showing that one of his patients underwent this therapy. The clip shows the scene of a coffin being put into a newly buried tomb. A young man in a white shirt was placed in a coffin, then both the person and the coffin were placed down on the tomb and buried. A breathing tube is directed into the coffin so that the patient can breathe for 2 hours of treatment.
The patient was buried alive for 2 hours.
According to psychologists, this method will help patients "feel life".
Zhelvetro said: "I created this treatment a few years ago. I was the first to undergo this treatment. This process helps patients feel more pronounced about life."
One of the buried buried patients said: "When I got out of the coffin, I felt as if I had become a new person. It was strange."
The investigating police came to the conclusion that no criminal offense was constituted. A police spokesman said that participants in the "live burial" program participated voluntarily, no one was injured during the treatment, and there were no signs of criminal activity. be found.
Some netizens think this therapy is dangerous."What if the person who was" buried alive "suddenly panicked? A person could die from panic," said one commenter.
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