Talk:Sadhu Cuffs

Garnered from Wikipedia:

In Hinduism, sadhu is a common term for an ascetic or practitioner of yoga (yogi) who has given up pursuit of the first three Hindu goals of life: kama (pleasure), artha (wealth and power) and even dharma (duty). The sadhu is solely dedicated to achieving moksha (liberation) through meditation and contemplation of God. Although the term Sadhu has its roots in Hinduism it is also used for followers of other religions, if they live a Sadhu life. There are Sadhus in Sikhism as well.

Vedic textual data suggest that asceticism in India - in forms similar to that practiced by sadhus today - dates back to 1500 BCE; the present-day sadhus of India likely represent the oldest continuous tradition of monastic mystical practice in the world.

In Theravada Buddhism, the term is used from the ancient Pali root language to denote agreement with something which was said, or after a discourse of the Buddha was recited. It is repeated three times — "Sādhu! Sādhu! Sādhu!" — with the intended effect of "Well said, well put, we agree".[1]

Not much to go by, but given the rest benefits of the latent effects, it would be my though that the latent effects may be triggered upon resting.