bem lembrado

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

Já adicionaria uma calda de lobo também :wolf_eyes:

CALDO DE LOBO!?

ufa, li errado

Eu que escrevi errado também

Cauda*

Nooooooo lol

sim, eh bom pra epiplesia, segundo vovo Ivana 👌

https://oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2020/01/goropad.html

Among the Serbs in Kosovo and Metohija, epileptics drank water through the boiled throat or larynx of a wolf, which they ate afterwards; a wolf’s heart may also be eaten (raw or roasted) or worn (dried) on the body so as to cure epileptic fits.

In Zaječar (East Serbia) the testicles of a wolf were eaten for the same purpose. And in Central Serbia wolf’s eyes are worn sewn into the clothes as a prophylactic or curative medicine against epilepsy...

In North Croatian, almanac from the first half of the 19th century recommended drinking the powder of a wolf’s heart or liver (dried, pounded, and mixed with water) or eating wolf’s meat as a cure for apilepsy. A folk prescription in a Bosnian medicinal manuscript dated 1749 advises epileptics to drink rainwater found in a wolf's footprint...

In Metohija, Serbs wore the skin cut from around a wolf’s jaws, called vučji zev (wolf’s yawn) around the neck for three days as the cure for epilepsy. In North Croatia belts of wolfskin were worn on the body. In the Kučaj region of East Serbia, epileptic children are placed inside a circle formed with a string of wolf’s hair, which was then set on fire.

In the area of Leskovac (South East Serbia), the ‘falling’ of children due to fras ‘convulsions, spasms, eclampsia’, the symptoms of which are associated with epilepsy, is believed to be cured by the exclamation "Vuk, sine, vuk, majko!" (Wolf, o son, wolf, o mother!).

só existe uma maneira de resolver esse problema