Must Read! These Are The 11 Things You Didn’t Know Kissing Does To You
We all enjoy a really good kiss, but did you know that locking lips
with someone makes you live longer, helps prevent tooth decay and burns
calories?
Apart from the obvious bacteria swapping and reducing stress
levels, it turns out there is plenty more to know about a good snog with
your partner, lover, or whoever else you happen to be swapping saliva
with.
Author David Wolfe has produced a video on the 11 thinks you never
knew about kissing, and these are the surprising facts, captured UK’s
The Sun.
1. It increases life expectancy
Men who kiss their wives in the morning live five years longer than men who don’t.
2. It prevents tooth decay
Kissing increases the mouth’s production of saliva, which helps to clean the mouth and prevent tooth decay.
3. We swap more than just germs
We swap an average of 9ml of water, 0.7mg of protein, 0.18mg of
organic compounds, 0.71mg of different fats and 0.45mg of sodium
chloride when we lock lips.
4. But there are still A LOT of germs involved
One millilitre of saliva contains about 100,000,000 bacteria.
5. It actually burns calories – get kissing, ladies
Couples can burn anywhere between 2 and 26 calories per minute while kissing and can use up to 30 muscles.
6. We do a lot of it
The average person will spend an estimated 20,160 minutes of their lifetime kissing. That’s 336 hours, or 14 whole days.
7. Some more than others, it seems
The longest kiss ever recorded was 58 hours, 35 minutes and 58 seconds – nearly two and a half days.
8. Our brains know how to find our lovers lips
Sixty-six per cent of people close their eyes during a kiss. Our
brains have special neurons that help us to locate each other’s lips in
the dark.
9. It can stop us falling ill
There is some evidence, from past studies, to suggest that kissing
provides us a means of protecting ourselves from certain viruses.
10. It’s more than just fun – it’s stress relieving
Holding hands and kissing reduces levels of the stress hormone
cortisol, thereby lowering blood pressure and optimising immune response
11. There’s a scientific reason for why we want more
When you kiss someone for the first time you get a spike in dopamine, which makes you crave more.
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