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Christmas Kissing Good For Health

Christmas Kissing

Christmas Kissing Good for Health

Scientists in Amsterdam say couples transfer tens of millions of microbes when they kiss, encouraging healthy exposure to bacteria. Suzannah Butcher reports. Face it — a great kiss makes the world dissolve, makes us dizzy with desire.

“Kissing is passion and romance and what keeps people together,” says Michael Cane, author of The Art of Kissing, who “lectures” on kissing at colleges around the country.

“Women say they can tell if a relationship is going to work after the first kiss, after the first night of kissing,” he says. “They just get a feeling, an intuition.”

And while kissing may feel oh-so-good, it also has health benefits, too. It triggers a whole spectrum of physiological processes that boost your immunity and generally spruce up that body you work so hard to keep attractive.

Among the benefits of a good wet one: That extra saliva washes bacteria off your teeth, which can help break down oral plaque, says Mathew Messina, DDS, a private practice dentist in Fairview Park, Ohio, and consumer adviser for the American Dental Association. “Still, I would not go around advocating kissing after meals instead of brushing,” he says.

A serious, tongue-tangling French kiss exercises all the underlying muscles of the face — which some say could keep you looking younger, and certainly looking happier.

Kissing might even help you lose weight, says Bryant Stamford, PhD, professor and director of the health promotion center at the University of Louisville. “During a really, really passionate kiss, you might burn two calories a minute — double your metabolic rate,” he says. (This compares to 11.2 calories per minute you burn jogging on a treadmill.)

When you give sugar, you actually burn sugar. Sex sparks a good calorie burn, Stamford says, especially “if you’re passionately involved, thrashing around. If things were really hot and heavy, you might be looking at a caloric expenditure similar to a brisk walk.”

But don’t confuse great sex with a cardiovascular workout, he says.

“People tend to have the misconception that anything that raises your heart rate has the same effect as jogging, so it must be good for fitness. Not true,” he says. “Anything can get your heart racing … that’s just adrenaline.”

Tension relief — that’s what good lovin’ brings, says Stamford. “Sex and love are probably the Rodney Dangerfield of stress management. Because of all the negative energy we take in during the day, it’s a very positive benefit.”

All in all, kissing and everything it engenders keeps us going strong, living long, says Stamford. “The process of being active — and that can include kissing, sex, and any other whole-body activities — that’s what keeps you healthy.”

Sex, sensuality, and sensual touch have profound effects on well-being, says Joy Davidson, PhD, psychologist and clinical sexologist in Seattle, and former columnist for an online column called “Underwire.”

“Kissing is an exciting excursion into the sensual,” Davidson says. “If we happen to be connecting with someone we care about, it produces a sense of well-being and a kind of full-bodied pleasure.”

Kissing is also “a sensual meditation,” she says. “It stops the buzz in your mind, it quells anxiety, and it heightens the experience of being present in the moment. It actually produces a lot of the physiological changes that meditation produces.”

And while kissing may be nature’s way of “opening the door to the sexual experience,” she says, “it also has all that lusciousness that we need to pull us out of the mundane and the ordinary and take us into moments of the extraordinary.”

“We don’t know if bees do it,” says Helen Fisher, PhD, professor of anthropology at Rutgers University in Newark, N.J., and author of several books, including The Sex Contract and Anatomy of Love. Romantic love is her research specialty.


“All kinds of animals kiss,” says Fisher. “Insects will stroke each other with a leg, or stroke another’s abdomen. Even turtles, moles, and cats rub noses. Dogs lick each other’s faces. Elephants put their trunks in another elephant’s mouth.”

When chimpanzees kiss, “it’s with a deep French kiss,” she says. “They do it for all kinds of reasons — there’s social kissing, kissing to relieve tension, to express friendship, to make up after an argument. Two males will kiss, two females will kiss, a mother and child will kiss on the lips. They don’t choose mates; it’s whomever they’re interacting with.”

“By the time you’re kissing someone, you’re right up next to them, you are in their personal space,” she says. “That in itself means you have trusted them. You’re also learning quite a bit about them — you touch them, smell them, taste them, see the expressions on their face, learn something about their health status, learn a great deal about their intentions.”

The brain contains “a huge amount of receptors devoted to picking sensations from the lips,” Fisher says. “When people have been stabbed in the back, they often don’t know it. They think someone has pounded them with their fist, because there aren’t many receptor sites for nerve endings.”

Why? All these sensors aid our survival. They direct a baby toward milk; they helped our ancestors — for millions of years — to discern whether their food was poisonous or not. “The mouth is absolutely essential to survival — everything passes through there, and if it’s the wrong thing, you’re cooked,” she says.

“The receptors on the lips are incredible,” she tells WebMD. “I’ve heard hookers say they would rather copulate with somebody than kiss them because the intensity of kissing somebody is so meaningful. There’s tremendous intimacy. … Even the genitals do not have the sensitivity that the lips have.”

For man and animals, kissing is a bonding behavior, she says. “There are all kinds of social reasons that humans and animals kiss, and they don’t all have to do with sex. Most cultures in the world do kiss sexually. But some peoples in South America, some in the Himalaya Mountains, do not kiss. They find it revolting to exchange saliva.”

Kissing also engenders touch, often called “the mother of the senses, because of its power,” says Fisher. “We know that massaging someone produces increased levels of oxytocin, which is a calming hormone. So there’s every reason to think kissing is extremely calming, if you know the person well, or extremely stimulating if you are in love with somebody.”


Studies of rodents —
voles, specifically — have shown that oxytocin makes a mother vole become attached to its offspring, says Larry Young, PhD, professor of psychiatry in the Center for Behavioral Neuroscience at Emory University Medical School in Atlanta.

Whether a guy vole sticks around “afterward” seems to be driven by oxytocin, Young says.

Prairie voles are the only vole species that mate for life; their genetic makeup drives them to produce satisfying amounts of oxytocin. On the other hand, mountain voles are loners and breed promiscuously; they produce virtually no oxytocin.

In humans, this translates into the bonding benefits of kissing, foreplay, every bit of touching you do.

Here’s a tip: “One of most powerful releases of oxytocin is stimulation of the nipples,” Young says. It’s the same biological mechanism that triggers milk flow during nursing. Sucking triggers oxytocin release, and thus the bond is created.

Humans, interestingly enough, are the only species that includes nipple stimulation in lovemaking, he adds.

That rush that sweeps through your body, during those particularly great kisses? Fisher knows it well.

“Kissing is contextual,” she says. “A kiss can be wildly sexual, wildly romantic, or it can be deeply gratifying because it’s an affirmation of attachment. Kissing somebody for the first time, rather than the 200th or 2,000th time, creates a situation of incredible novelty.”

That rush you feel is probably from two natural stimulants — dopamine and norepinephrine, Fisher says. “They tend to be activated when you get into a novel situation.”

Fisher says there are three different stages one typically goes through:

lust —
the craving for sexual gratification
romantic love — the feeling of giddiness, euphoria, sleeplessness, and loss of appetite when you meet a new love
attachment — that sense of security you find with a with long-term partner.

“Each of these is associated with different chemical systems in the brain,” says Fisher. Sex drive and lust are triggered by testosterone, in both men and women. Dopamine and norepinephrine kick in when romance begins. Oxytocin is a factor in at the attachment phase, bringing the sense of calm and peace you find with “the one.”

If you’re in the midst of a “mad love affair, it’s quite possible you simply feel levels of dopamine, that zing of romantic infatuation,” Fisher tells WebMD. “If all you’re doing is having a sexual fling with someone you like very well — but are not in love with and don’t feel attached to — then all you may feel is sex drive, the effects of testosterone.”

Unless you’re kissing the wrong person, kissing quite likely is good for us, says Fisher.

“I’ve often thought it would boost the immune system,” she says. “If you’re sharing your germs with somebody, you’re adding to your internal defense system.” Kissing also stimulates the brain, and when the experience is a positive one, “you notice it,” she says. “That translates into the euphoria, or the sex drive, or the sense of calm and peace.

“Kissing helps your state of mind,” she adds. “Infatuation can be perfectly divine. If you’re madly in love with somebody, it’s perfectly wonderful to kiss them. It creates incredible intimacy. It boosts self-esteem. It’s wonderful to be kissed by somebody.”

There’s more to kissing than meets the eye! Not that you really need an excuse (or 10) to make kissing a priority, but you’ll be smearing on your Lip Smackers and puckering up after you discover some of the amazing health benefits of kissing.

1. Boosts bonding

Whether you’re smooching a baby or making out with your spouse, locking lips promotes intimacy and boosts bonding. Dawn Maslar, a biology professor and award-winning author sums it up like this: “When we kiss, both men and women produce the hormone oxytocin. It’s often called the ‘love hormone’ because it causes us (particularly females) to bond.” The fact is, we kiss the ones we love, and love the ones we kiss!

2. Spurs arousal and enhances sex

Frequent sex can enhance everything from heart health to your self-esteem, and there’s no better primer for sex than kissing! As Carol Queen, the staff sexologist at Good Vibrations, points out, “Kissing is a powerful type of foreplay… it helps increase the chances that both partners will have a good and pleasurable erotic experience.”


3. Fights illness

It may sound counter intuitive, but swapping spit is a great way to fend off viruses — especially if all that kissing leads to sex. Research from the journal Medical Hypotheses indicates that women build up immunity against the cytomegalovirus by kissing infected partners. Another study performed at Wilkes University found that study participants who had sex once or twice a week had higher levels of the infection-fighting antibody immunoglobulin A. So if you want to make it through cold season unscathed, it’s time to pucker up!

4. Makes better marriages

Seriously. It’s not just that frequent kissers may have stronger marriages (which is great for mental and emotional health), but kissing can actually help you choose the right partner. When you kiss someone, your body is subconsciously sharing information about your respective immune systems. The technical term is major histocompatibility complex (MHC). Biologically, it’s important for partners to bring different immune system genes to the table so that their offspring will have a better opportunity for survival. So if kissing your crush immediately douses the flames of love, you might be able to chalk it up to biological incompatibility.

5. Increases happiness

Kissing releases endorphins, and to quote Elle Woods from Legally Blond, “Endorphins make you happy.” Since depression affects an estimated 17.5 million Americans and costs approximately $30 billion each year, why not give yourself a free happiness boost with a little smooching?

6. Decreases pain

During a heated, heart-racing kind of kiss, your body releases adrenaline, which can actually reduce feelings of pain. Pair that with the similarly pain-reducing endorphins that are released during physical intimacy, and locking lips gives you a double whammy for fighting that nagging headache.

7. Lowers stress

How often do you feel frazzled and exhausted at the end of the day? Blame it on your body’s natural response to stress: cortisol. Dr. Sharon Stills, naturopathic physician and upcoming author of R.E.D. Alert — Get Real and Heal, points out that “kissing lowers cortisol levels. Cortisol is our stress hormone and it has a negative effect on our immune system, endocrine system and brain health, specifically the hippocampus.” So if you can lower stress and reduce those negative effects by simply stealing a kiss with your spouse, do it as often as you can!

8. Burns calories

Sure, kissing may not burn as many calories as, say, running a mile, but it does pump up your metabolism to about twice its usual rate. Most people burn about 1 calorie a minute at rest, but according to Dr. Stills, kissing burns about 2 to 3 calories per minute. You won’t want to skip Zumba in favor of a makeout session, but next time you’re lounging around on the couch with your spouse, turn up the heat with some calorie-boosting kisses.

9. Saves face

Kissing doesn’t just burn calories — it’s a workout for your face. If you fear your jowls are starting to sag, try tightening things up with some regular, vigorous kissing. It’s the perfect non-surgical prescription to enhance your youthful appearance: safe, free and fun!

10. Turns up the fun

Speaking of fun, kissing is a blast! According to Gina Cloud, women’s health advocate and creator of GinaCology, “There are more than 30 kinds of kisses in the Kama Sutra. Kissing is such an important way of expressing ourselves, and the many different ways we can do it bring it into the realm of creative. With so many ways to kiss and express ourselves through it, fun becomes part of the experience, and fun is a great tool for happiness!”

Hope this article on benefits of kissing brings more reason to enjoy kissing this Christmas.

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