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Read before hanging out under the mistletoe
Sneaking a kiss under the mistletoe is a longstanding Christmas tradition, steeped in ancient lore. My favorite story surrounds Loki, who before he became a popular Marvel comic’s character, was known as the god of mischief in Norse mythology.
The story goes that Loki used a spear carved from mistletoe to kill the son of Frigga, the goddess of love. Frigga was able to revive her son and considered the plant sacred, so she decreed that anyone who stands under the mistletoe deserves not only protection from death, but also a kiss.
Depending on the health of your kissing partner, you may hope that decree for powerful protection under the mistletoe still stands after you read this…
You must remember this: A kiss is just a kiss, or is it?
More than 100 trillion microorganisms inhabit your body. And when you indulge in a 10-second kiss, say researchers in the Netherlands, you and your kissing partner exchange about 80 million bacteria.
Under normal circumstances, your mouth is home to over 700 types of bacteria. The genus and species of those inhabitants are strongly influenced by the people you live with.
The Dutch researchers investigated what happened when 21 couples kissed. They compiled data on how often they locked lips and then analyzed bacterial samples from their cheeks, tongues and saliva to analyze the bacteria populating their mouths.
Their results show that a kiss is not just a kiss.
They found that couples that kiss frequently have similar bacteria living in their saliva: Nine intimate kisses a day, they discovered, produce bacterial environments that are often just about identical in both members of a couple.
“Intimate kissing involving full tongue contact and saliva exchange appears to be a courtship behavior unique to humans and is common in over 90% of known cultures,” says researcher Remco Kort. “Interestingly, the current explanations for the function of intimate kissing in humans include an important role for the microbiota present in the oral cavity…”
The researchers also found that when you live with other people, the fact that you have similar lifestyle habits and eat similar foods also means that you share common bacteria throughout your body. This was particularly true for bacteria living on the tongue.
My advice, don’t stand under the mistletoe with anyone that may have a cold!