“Its Amrit” Now Anu Aggarwal Confesses to Drinking Her Urine Swears By Its Health Benefits

Must read

- Advertisement -

After Paresh Rawal’s shocking revelation, Anu Aggarwal has backed urine therapy, describing it as a yogic practice with health and skincare benefits. Experts, however, urge caution due to lack of scientific evidence.

May 2, 2025: Actor Anu Aggarwal has lent her support to Paresh Rawal’s recent revelation about practicing urine therapy, claiming she too has followed the ancient yogic ritual and considers it a form of natural medicine. Calling it “amrit”, the Aashiqui actor spoke at a public event and shared her experience with the controversial practice.

Also Read: Australian Woman Spends ₹6.6 Lakh on Cosmetic Surgeries to Look Like a Cat! Now Regrets it

“Drinking urine, or Aamroli, is a gesture in Yoga. I’ve practiced it myself. You don’t consume all of it, only a specific part — it’s like amrit. It helps in anti-aging and keeps the skin wrinkle-free,” Anu said in a video shared by Instant Bollywood.

She added that despite the lack of modern scientific approval, ancient traditions held more weight.

“Science is only 200 years old. Yoga is 10,000 years old. Who would you trust?” she argued.


🔍 What Did Paresh Rawal Say?

Veteran actor Paresh Rawal, speaking to The Lallantop, revealed that he followed the advice of late stunt director Veeru Devgan, who recommended drinking urine to help heal his knee injury faster.

- Advertisement -

Also Read: Paresh Rawal’s Bizarre Health Claim of Drinking Urine Sparks Controversy, Liver Doc Calls It ‘Dangerous’

“I sipped my urine like beer every morning for 15 days,” said Rawal. “Even the doctor was shocked by the healing visible in the X-ray. I was discharged in half the expected time.”

His comments, however, triggered backlash from medical professionals.


⚠️ Expert Reaction

Dr. Cyriac Abby Philips, known as The Liver Doc on social media, strongly opposed the practice.

“Please don’t drink your urine (or anyone else’s). There is no scientific evidence to support any health benefits,” he warned.

Other medical experts have reiterated that while some ancient practices have value, urine therapy remains unproven and potentially unsafe, especially if practiced without understanding bodily functions or hygiene standards.

Also Read: New Health Trends: What Is the “Fart Walk”? The Viral Wellness Trend Doctors Are Backing


📌 Tags:

Paresh Rawal, Anu Aggarwal, Urine therapy, Health fads, Yogic practices, Bollywood wellness trends, Ancient vs modern medicine, Paresh Rawal urine comment, Anu Aggarwal urine benefits

📢 Hashtags:

- Advertisement -

More articles

- Advertisement -

Latest article