Health Envoy's Blog
When the mood strikes, a kiss can
catch us in a mix of tastes, textures, mysteries—and scents. We kiss
nervously, flirtingly, angrily, or excitedly.
And a kiss is not just
all about sex: Hollywood celebs throw us air kisses, mobsters impart the
kiss of death, and an astronaut kisses the soil after a safe return
home. So why, then, are we so taken with the kiss?
Scientists agree our lips evolved first for eating—and then later for
speech.
Yet, with a kiss, a different kind of ‘hunger’ applies.
Kisses set off a whirlwind of neuro-chemical messages yielding anything
from sensations of
touch to sexual arousal; feelings of closeness to
even a wave of euphoria.
However, kissing is not a solo affair, and kissing transmits external
messages as well.
The bringing together of two bodies sets off
messages just as powerful with your partner (whether they are precisely
the same feelings is another matter altogether). Kisses pack quite a
punch: even one can transmit much information about the potential of a
relationship. Research proves that kisses are so powerful that a ‘first
kiss’ gone badly can derail even the most promising of relationships.
Scientists believe that lip-locking evolved as a means to promote
mate-selection. Kisses transmit olfactory, tactile and postural types
of information tapping into both the conscious and unconscious mind that
drives decisions, including a genetically-compatible mate! Some
researchers believe that a kiss can even disclose the extent to which a
partner might commit to raising children—central to our specie’s
survival.
Nearly 50 years ago, British zoologist and author Desmond Morris
posited that kissing probably evolved from primates: mothers chew food
for their young, and then feed them mouth-to-mouth. And since chimps
still feed this way, early man probably did so, as well.
This press of outturned lips against lips may have later progressed
as a way to comfort children in times of hunger—and eventually becoming a
general expression of affection. (Leave it to us humans to take these
first parental kisses down the myriad of paths we have today!)
It is believed that unseen chemical messengers named pheromones
helped along the evolution of the intimate kiss. Both animals and
plants use pheromones to communicate: insects, for example, emit
pheromones to signal alarms, point out a food trail or announce sexual
attraction.
In 1995, a Swiss researcher showed why pheromones are so important in
humans, too. He had women sniff t-shirts worn by men, and asked which
smelled best. The results were startling: the women did not choose
randomly, which was discovered by comparing the DNA of the women and
men. Instead, women overwhelmingly picked the scent of man whose
histocompatibility complex (MHC)—the genes that forge our immune
systems—differed from their own. (Different MHC’s mean less immune
overlap, and the increased likelihood of healthy, disease-resistant
kids.) Thus, kissing may be a woman’s way of assessing a potential
mate’s immune compatibility—without investing an excessive amount of
time, energy in (and not to mention sexual activity with) a man.
However, these scientists aren’t telling the average person anything
new: when it comes time to close your eyes and lean in, we all know that
a kiss is never just a kiss.
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