Dr. Sinatra's HeartMD Institute

A Hug: Powerful Medicine?

hug for health

Nobody knows when the first human hug took place, but we pretty much know when the first hug occurs in life: a newborn laying and nursing in the arms of its mother.

What a Hug Really Means!

To hug: from the Saxon and Teutonic words “hog” or “hagen,” meaning “to be tender of, to embrace.”

We now know that if hugging continues throughout childhood and throughout life, both the giver and the recipient can receive many benefits. It’s an effective feature of affectionate communication in our close relationships. We just don’t outgrow the positive response to warm physical contact, as research indicates.  

Without getting into the variables of hugging, here are a few findings on what hugs can do for your health.

Obviously, a modicum of discretion is necessary when initiating hugs – especially now during this COVID-19 pandemic. But, from a therapeutic standpoint, hugs are truly good medicine when dispensed among friends, loved ones, and spouses with whom you are not social distancing from (and you can always both wear masks as a safety precaution – I’d prefer that over no hugging at all!). Contact is wonderful, and perhaps even more so in our computerized, digitalized, electronic age. Unfortunately, today many people don’t even look at each other because their eyes are constantly fixated on some screen. And now, so many are simply avoiding eye contact with “strangers” who may be contagious.

I am a big hugger myself and I always recommended to my patients that they hug more often. It is good therapy for the heart and soul.

It is also very important to hug, if possible, and affectionately touch or stroke loved ones who are terminally ill or who may be dying. As I wrote in this article on dying, such contact intimately transfers love.

January 21 is celebrated by people around the world as an “international hugging day” to promote affection. My suggestion is that you don’t wait until January 21.

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© Stephen Sinatra, MD. All rights reserved.

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