Have You Hugged Anyone Lately?

by Maireid Sullivan | November 15, 2008 at 05:19 pm
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I remember the days of work place sexual harassment lawsuits. One story in particular seemed to mark the end of the peak in late 1990s, when a woman sued her company because she SAW two co-workers hugging. :)

I also remember two very interesting 'opinions' on the causes of the blight of sexual harassment cases. In 1995 or '96, I read the book "What Women and Men Really Want: Creating Deeper Understanding and Love in Our Relationships" by Aaron R. Kipnis and Elizabeth Herron, and the last chapter was titled "Courtship or Harassment". the idea was that because of the sudden influx of large numbers of women into the work place, the work-place protocols established by men had basically broken down.

Long story short, according to these writers, and Hugh McKay, the Australian 'expert' on work-place psychology, the "invasion" of women into the "multi-cultural" work place has broken down both courtship and social protocols: women have two agendas when they meet– to nurture or mate. - and in both, women hold people to their breast - they naturally want to hug - whether nurturing or mating. Men shake hands, as a method of establishing territory before bonding. But, back then, women hadn't developed that 'instinctive' work-place distancing habit, and, to make matters worse, when men don't get the 'right' (male) signals re. personal space, they can go to far - into hugging territory. ...and if the vibe isn't right - it is interpreted as sexual harassment.

The main point is the breakdown of 'traditional' courtship protocols in a multi-cultural society, where we are developing new rules for relationship, based on the fact that we are actually all equal. I think women are more confident in the work place now, so lets hope their friendly, compassionate,  "nurturing" agenda will help us all– and lead to an economics model that can reclaim the global commons for ALL living beings. Click on the GEONOMICS channel, under ENVIRONMENT, for articles on Classical Economics policies that can make poverty history - really! ...and feel like hugging everyone.:)

By Parveen Chopra

"We need 4 hugs a day for survival. We need 8 hugs a day for maintenance. We need 12 hugs a day for growth."—Virginia Satir, family therapist
You may laugh off the predilection of the psychiatry community in the USA for coining names such as dance or walk therapies, which are based, on pure common sense or on practices that have always been around in various cultures. But then you may feel like giving them a hug. For by calling it a therapy, giving it a name, and ardently promoting it, they often manage to create awareness about a healthy and wholesome habit that is endangered by the bustle of modern life. Hug therapy is a typical example.

Big deal, you say, when you hear the term for the first time. But try to recollect the last time you hugged somebody or somebody hugged you. In all likelihood, it was too long ago. Worse, the answer may be 'never' if you are the kind who flinches from physical contact.
Truly, urban India is becoming more of a hands-off culture. "It is unfortunate because Indians were never averse to touch," laments Dr Achal Bhagat, a Delhi-based psychiatrist, "particularly when sharing grief or joy." The hugging or pecking on the cheek you see nowadays at parties is very superficial, adds Delhi socialite Pommi Malhotra. She has a name for it: social hugging. And its practitioners obviously do not belong to the circle of healing huggers.
So what are we missing out on?

Reaching out and touching someone, and holding him tight—is a way of saying you care. Its effects are immediate: for both, the hugger and the person being hugged, feel good.

"Touch is an important component of attachment as it creates bonds between two individuals," says Dr Bhagat. For Malhotra, who describes herself as a friendly, warm, affectionate and demonstrative person, hugging is simply a natural expression of showing that you love and care.

Vikas Malkani, 29, a director at Avis International, an Indian denim wear company, wishes for much more touching and hugging in families, particularly between parents and their grown-up children. He states that it should not be forgotten that your skin is also a sense organ. Every centimeter of it—from the head to the tips of the toes—is sensitive to touch. In the mother's womb, each part of the fetus' body is touched by the amniotic fluid, says Malkani, which may be the origin of the yearning for touch all our lives.

"Cuddling and caressing make the growing child feel secure and is known to aid in self-esteem," agrees Dr Bhagat. The tactile sense is all-important in infants. A baby recognizes its parents initially by touch. Malkani points out cultural variations pertaining to hugging: in the West, hugging a friend of the opposite sex is common, while in India you see more physical contact between friends of the same sex.

Hugging comes naturally to Kajal Basu, a 37-year-old journalist. "It loosens you up and breaks the bonds of body as well as of society. The more ritualistic ways of greeting people, handshakes and namastes, are designed to keep us apart rather than bring us together," he argues.

Sensing the need, many people are creating their own personal growth courses for children. First-time entrants include Excel Training Forum and Sankalp, both run by retired defense personnel in Delhi, India.

Touch has come full circle in the West this century. Time was when parents and hospitals were advised to leave a crying baby alone. Today the pediatricians and psychologists tell us to pick up and cuddle our children. Toys, even teddy bears, whose use has been increasing in the recent decades, are a poor substitute for the human contact needed by children.

In psychoanalysis, developed early this century, the couch symbolized the distance from the patient that the therapist had to maintain. The taboo against touch was broken in the heady 1960s and '70s by the hippies' love-ins and professionally by some therapists who introduced it in the encounter groups. Since then many psychological counselors are expanding the definition of "hug" by even patting and massaging their clients in the course of normal therapy. The idea is to add touch to the powers of speech, listening and observation. The argument goes that the client's skin can perceive care and reassurance.

Dr Bhagat, however, strongly argues against the psychiatrist or psychotherapist touching his patients; "The therapist should never cross the boundaries set by the patient," he says. Another context of abuse, he points out, is when adults have sexual contact with children on the pretext of touching and cuddling.

But then, hugging is a tool that has to be used with the same care and sensitivity as any other form of therapeutic intervention. In Delhi, Sanjivini, a well-known center that offers help for troubled minds, has a day clinic for schizophrenics where "caring" (involving touch and holding) is routinely used as a therapy. "But it is done in a parent-child matrix," clarifies Dr Rajat Mitra in charge of Sanjivini, adding that only women volunteers handle female patients and men handle male patients. Mitra explains that schizophrenics are regressed. "And when a two-year-old cries, to comfort him, you do not philosophize but hold him on your lap."

Hugging is being used even as an aid in treating some physical illnesses, following research that it leads to certain positive physiological changes. For example, touch stimulates nerve endings, thereby helping in relieving pain. It is thus not uncommon for a chronic pain patient to be prescribed "Therapeutic touch" which involves placing the hands on or just above the troubled area in the patient's body for half-an-hour (shades of reiki). This pushes up the hemoglobin levels in the blood, increasing the delivery of blood to tissues, a study at the nursing department of New York University showed. Some nurses' associations in the USA have since endorsed therapeutic touch.

Any health problem makes the sufferer feel vulnerable, frightened, angry, frustrated and helpless. The patient usually needs to educate himself to make certain life changes. Hugging can give him the positive emotional state necessary to make these changes. In one study, pet ownership was seen to contribute to the survival of heart patients. The inference: the cuddling of pets has a soothing effect that reduces the stress levels in heart attack victims.

Tactile contact is very important for people with certain handicaps and can even be therapeutic. Imran Ali, a visually impaired telephone operator at the Steel Authority of India office in Delhi, says that if somebody says "Hi!" to him, it means nothing to him—a hug does. In Mario Puzo's latest novel, The Last Don, the heroine named Athena provides her autistic daughter with "a hug box", lying in which gives the child a feeling of being hugged by a person without having to connect or relate to another human being, which is a problem with autistics.

HOW TO HUG

Hugging may sound like the simplest thing on earth, but it will help to keep a few things in mind. Non-hugs are no good. In his book Caring, Feeling, Touching, Dr Sidney Simon describes five non-hugs:
I. The A-frame hug, in which nothing but the huggers' heads touch.
2. The half-hug, where the huggers' upper bodies touch—while the other half twists away.
3. The chest-to-chest burp, in which the huggers pat each other on the back, defusing the physical contact by treating each other like infants being burped.
4. The wallet-rub, in which two people stand side-by-side and touch hips.
5. The jock-twirl, in which the hugger, who is stronger or bigger, lifts the other person off the ground and twirls him.

The real thing, the full body hug, touches all the bases. Dr Simon describes it like this: "The two people coming together take time to really look at each other. There is no evasion or ignoring that they are about to hug... You try as hard as you can to personalize and customize each hug you give... With a full body hug there is a sense of complete giving and fearless. Communication, one uncomplicated by words.

"It is the attitude that is important," says Vikas Malkani. "It need not be a full, frontal hug. It could be sideways. Generally, hug only friends and people you know."

"Many people do not like their personal space to be invaded. Still others may feel too vulnerable at times to like to be touched," warns Dr Bhagat.

The stereotype of men being less demonstrative than women in their love and affection is by and large true. "But men are more open to hugging after a few drinks at parties," says Pommi Malhotra. From her experience she says that even the tough ones respond to hugging.

Many people feel embarrassed or uncomfortable when hugged, but Malkani's advice is to still go at it because they are bound to feel good afterwards and may even feel grateful to you. When you feel the need to be hugged, ask for one. Any place is good enough for hugging: home, office, school, church, a party, a conference. You may, however, feel uncomfortable hugging, for example, at work. In that case, prefer a more intimate environment, such as at home with friends or at a party.



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Amy Judd

I'm way behind on my hug quota.... :(

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Maireid Sullivan

Never too late to start being conscious of healthy hug opportunities. Children are the most constant huggers - they even carry teddy bears around to hug all day. :) ...because parents just aren't available enough, I suppose. ... it takes a village...

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panzerlawyer

Gday.  Great story Sheila.

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Maireid Sullivan

Haven't heard that one for a while –"Sheila"  ...that deserves a little hug. :)

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Uwe Paschen

The Laws that make us more non Human! As I was in Canada and toot there it was so bad in a way because of all the Political correct laws and law suit for nothing but vengeance in a way. Creating so much fear that teachers did not touch students out of fear to be persecuted and did not meet with there students unless some one else was present. Good post.

1
Maireid Sullivan

Lets hope we can develop a mind-set of 'psychic' awareness to hug without strange vibes. ...based on love and affection and warm feelings of appreciation of the person we are hugging.  I recently heard a radio interview with a child psychologist, (of all people) who said when he visits friends he doesn't dare to even look at their children for fear that he will be misinterpreted. Crazy!

1
mazevedo

Go Hugs! I definitely agree we need more hugs more human interaction and warmth! Every time I go back home to Brazil I notice people are way more open to hugs! There are just so many rules in our society today that makes us scared of hugging the next person.. pretty sad condition from my point of view! Good Story!

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Maireid Sullivan

I'm delighted you like this story! ...yes, it is a very good analysis. Hugging might well be a good way to help us get closer to each other as we navigate the current economic / political downturn. After all, the Buddha teaches that we must LEARN loving kindness. I think hugging is good practice! :) 

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HannahCrozierPhotography

If i wasn't allowed to give hugs i have no idea what i'd do... Hugs are my thing and if i survive on them... I give everyone hugs even if i've only just met them (only after i've asked if they'd like one). Is there a national hug day??

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Maireid Sullivan

Ah! that is so nice, Hanna, I want one too! You know, I think even talking about them like this is good for us. :)

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Amy Judd

Interesting addition with the part about blurring the lines between 'courtship and harassment', especially in relation to the work place. I think can still happen, and some work environments, such as non-office jobs, can blur the lines even more. I used to work in a restaurant, and that definitely has a different vibe to it than my current office job.

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Maireid Sullivan

Serving in shops or working in restaurants, you see people for a very short time, and there is very little room for getting to know them. You'd have to make snap judgments about their character.


Restaurants are a bit different because you talk to people often over the course of the meal. There is another factor that influences the 'relationship' in restaurants - especially in the USA restaurants, –because part of your income 'technically' comes from tips, so you are forced to make the customer feel good about you, above and beyond 'professional' service, in order to make a living.

Here in Australia tips are a rarity - mostly in tourist places. The wages are triple that of the States - AUD$15 to $22. per hour I think - depending on level of experience (a friend told me this last year).

I like to establish a 'meaningful' relationship with shop keepers and waiters if they look interesting - to me.

I'll have to pay attention to the rest of the room next time I go to a restaurant. :)



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Hale

I would like to state that when couples are interacting in India people should not interfere. It is really not against the culture, why are you all behaving like Muslims. Therefore, it should not be considered Taboo.

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aht

no one hug me befor but i'll try to feel it

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Amy Judd
First Flagged at 5:46 PM, Nov 15, 2008 by Amy Judd
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