8 Health Benefits of Kissing
By Dr. Mercola
Kissing is a uniquely human trait that’s said to have
emerged as a way to pass germs from one person to another, ultimately building
immunity. But that’s rather unromantic, isn’t it? While it seems plausible that
kissing would have an underlying biological function, there’s also no denying
its role in bonding… or overall health.
8 Health Benefits of Kissing
Kissing not only feels good, it’s good for you. It relieves
stress and releases epinephrine into your blood, making it pump faster, which
may result in a reduction of LDL cholesterol. Kissing may even be a novel way
to receive certain hormones, like testosterone:
“'Mucous membranes inside the mouth are permeable to
hormones such as testosterone. Through open-mouth kissing, men introduced
testosterone into a woman’s mouth,' which 'is absorbed through the mucous
membranes… and increases arousal and the likelihood that she will engage in
reproductive behavior.”
Interestingly, Andréa Demirjian, author of Kissing:
Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about One of Life's Sweetest Pleasures,
believes “a kiss a day really can keep the doctor away.” And she recently shared
eight reasons why with CNN:
1. Reduce Your Blood Pressure
Kissing helps to dilate your blood vessels, which may help
lower your blood pressure.
2. Relieve Cramps and Headaches
The blood-vessel-dilation effect described above also helps
to relieve pain, particularly from headache or menstrual cramps.
3. Fight Cavities
When you kiss, saliva production increases in your mouth,
and this helps to wash away plaque on your teeth that may lead to cavities.
That said, cavity-causing bacteria can also be transmitted via a kiss,
especially if the person you’re kissing has poor oral habits. It’s even been
shown that cavity-causing bacteria can spread from a mother’s kiss to her baby.
4. Release Your Happy Hormones
Kissing prompts your brain to release a happy elixir of
feel-good chemicals like serotonin, dopamine, and oxytocin. This isn’t only
important for your happiness, it also may also help to strengthen your
relationship. As MSN reported:
“’This [oxytocin] is the hormone of love, and the better the
oxytocin levels, the more capacity for love,’ explains psychotherapist Arthur
Janov, Ph.D., author of ‘The Biology of Love’ and the director of the Primal
Center in Santa Monica, Calif. ‘We have found that those who cannot commit in a
love relationship are low in oxytocin.’”
Interestingly, kissing activates the same areas in your
brain linked to reward and addiction. According to the researchers who revealed
this finding:
“Kissing may have evolved as a way to stimulate brain
systems associated with sex drive, romantic love, and attachment so that humans
are triggered to seek a variety of potential mates, then focus attention on one
for mating, and finally be able to tolerate that mate long enough to raise a
child as a team.”
Your lips are also densely packed with sensory neurons,
which are stimulated by the touch of another’s lips. This prompts the release
of sebum, which is thought to play a role in bonding.
5. Burn Calories
It’s not going to replace your workout session… but a
vigorous kiss may burn 8-16 calories. Not too shabby for a kiss.
6. Boost Your Self-Esteem
One study found that men who received a passionate kiss
before they left for work earned more money.8 This suggests the kiss (and
perhaps the happy home-life it suggests) makes people happier, boosts self-esteem
and, ultimately, more productive at work.
7. Tone Your Facial Muscles
A vigorous kiss helps you shape up your neck and jawline by
working out a number of facial muscles.
8. Check Out Your Partner’s Compatibility
A kiss can be a powerful measure of your initial attraction
to a person, so much so that the majority of men and women surveyed reporting
that a first kiss could be a turn-off. Women, in particular, place more
importance on kissing as a “mate assessment device” and as a means of “initiating,
maintaining, and monitoring the current status of their relationship with a
long-term partner.”
Kissing May Even Boost Your Immune System and Provide
Significant Stress Relief
The average person spends more than 20,000 minutes of their
life kissing, and for very good reason.
In addition to the benefits above, kissing has been shown to boost your immune
system and reduce allergic responses in people with skin or nasal allergies.
Separate research also revealed that people who spent six
weeks making kissing a priority with their partners reported significant
decreases in their levels of stress. In addition to improvements in stress, the
kissing participants also reported greater relationship satisfaction and improvements
in total cholesterol.
There may actually be an even more primal reason for why
“kissing” developed, however. Because some cultures don’t include kissing in
their mating rituals, it’s possible the first kiss was given by a mother to her
child rather than being shared between a couple.
Psychologists conjecture that kiss-feeding – exchanging
pre-masticated food from one mouth to another -- was how babies received the
nutrients needed to grow up strong and healthy either in addition to, or after,
breastfeeding. This jump starts the digestion process and makes vitamins like
B-12 more easily absorbable while also promoting attachment and bonding.
Article Credit: http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2014/01/30/8-kissing-benefits.aspx
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