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Monday, December 30, 2024

The Health Benefits of Physical Touch

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To improve your mind and body in 2019, you don’t have to tackle grandiose health goals. Instead, just try these simple activities with your loved ones:

  • Hold their hand
  • Hug them
  • Pet your cat or dog

Although we often take it for granted, the act of physical touch can have a profound effect on our health. For starters, it can increase the levels of oxytocin in our brain and therefore increase our feelings of trust, generosity and compassion.

In addition, studies have shown that:

  • Hugging or holding hands with another person can improve your heart health
  • Petting a dog or cat can reduce your blood pressure and stress levels

So even if you’re not a touchy-feely person, we strongly encourage you to be more affectionate.

The golden touch

As human beings, we’re naturally inclined to connect with other people through physical touch. But lately we’ve become so obsessed with using our cell phones, tablets and computers to connect with other human beings that many of us neglect to make physical touch a priority.

It’s important to be mindful of how important hugging and holding hands can be for a person’s well-being. After all, people who are deprived of physical touch are reportedly more likely to experience depression and anxiety disorders.

So for the sake of your overall well-being, you should strive to reap the benefits of physical touch. To inspire you, we’ve compiled a list of songs relevant to this topic that you should check out, maybe while reading the rest of this post:

• “Reach Out And Touch (Somebody’s Hand)” — Diana Ross
• “I Want To Hold Your Hand” — The Beatles
• “Hold My Hand” — Hootie & The Blowfish
• “Hug Me” — Trey Parker and Pharrell Williams (from the “Despicable Me 3” soundtrack)

Let’s hug it out

Scientific studies have shown that people improve the health of their brain and body when they regularly receive hugs from their loved ones. That’s because a good hug can:

  • Soothe you for several hours — even if you face a negative situation later in the day.
  • Reduce the stress of the person being comforted and reduce the stress of the person doing the comforting.
  • Lower your blood pressure and heart rate.
  • Protect you from getting sick.

In addition, here are alternatives that offer the same benefits as a good, old-fashioned hug:

  • Get a massage: A good massage can do more than relieve muscle tension and help heal injuries. It can also reduce stress, anxiety and insomnia.
  • Sleep with a weighted blanket: Weighted blankets offer deep pressure stimulation that feels like a firm hug, massage or swaddling. According to researchers, deep pressure stimulation can calm adults and children with anxiety, autism and attention difficulties.

Take my hand

Holding hands with another person is considered to be one of the most powerful forms of touch because it can have profound health benefits. The act of holding hands:

  • Is a pain reliever, a source of security and a cure for stress.
  • Can lower levels of stress hormones, such as cortisol, in a person’s body.

Pets are doggone important

Animal-assisted therapy is used in many medical settings to help people recover from or better cope with health problems. It’s also used in universities and community programs to help people deal with anxiety and stress.

So it’s no surprise that your furry friends can help you, too. Petting a dog or cat can lower your blood pressure, help you relax and reduce your stress.

If you enjoyed this post, you might also like:

  • 5 Lifestyle Choices to Reduce Your Stress
  • Why You Still Need Face-to-Face Communication
  • Ways to Celebrate Random Acts of Kindness Each Day
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