Why do we kiss? ‘I am not sure we have anything close to an explanation’

One new theory has been added to the mix about why many – but not all – humans lock lips in love

We do it sitting in a tree, under the mistletoe, at midnight to ring in the new year. In fairytales, the act transforms frogs into princes and awakens heroines from enchanted slumber. We make up with it, seal with it, and – in Romeo Montague’s case at least – die with it.

Such is the supremacy of the kiss in our culture that we’ve extended the term to describe actions that don’t even involve lip contact – butterfly kisses, say, or the “Eskimo kiss”, a nose rub better known in Inuit culture as kunik, and in Māori as hongi.

Continue reading...

from The Guardian https://ift.tt/NlhUef1

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Two years after Buffalo mass shooting, an art exhibit focuses on the victims

‘Join us’: Biden campaign urges Haley supporters to turn against Trump