What did our ancestors understand when they named parts of our physiology?
Consider:
Language is understanding. We name objects/phenomena in order to create a "meme" for quickly accessing a truth.
The Indo-European word for "soul" is "atemn." It is related to "atmos," the word for "breath." You might recognize "atmos" as later becoming "vapor/steam" in Greek (as in atmosphere).
In German, "Atem" (originally soul) means breath.
What is the connection between soul and breath?
>heart and mind"Brain" is "ker∂srom". "Heart" is "krdi"/"krdjom." It's where we get "cardio/cardiac/cardium."
"Ker" means "head" (cerebrum/corymb), "grow" (as in create) and "heat" (carb).
We see the identical nature linguistically. What did our paleolithic ancestors understand in their common tongue that seems a mystery to us?
>Master your breathing to build connection through your heart and mind>The strengthening of this connection is the strengthening of the soulhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RW1C_3OXhEs