Kissing and hugging have been with us for a long time. It comes as something natural when meeting or saying good-bye to loved ones and friends. But COVID-19 is changing all that. These days it is more standard to say “no kissing, no hugging please.” I am more pessimistic than most and fear we will develop an aversion to this practice because of the danger of contagion.
Rossella Lorenzi, a researcher, believes that kissing began millions of years ago as a result of mouth-to-mouth feeding, with mammal mothers chewing food and then “forcing it” into the mouths of their young.
“From these observations, it is claimed that humans also learned kissing from exchanging food between mothers and their offspring,” Texas A&M University anthropologist Vaughn Bryant, who has long researched the history and spread of kissing, told Discovery News.
“However, if this were true and it were innate, then why didn’t all humans kiss? We know that many cultural groups did not kiss and knew nothing about it until they were shown,” Bryant said.
While the true origin of kissing remains a mystery, historians have found in India the earliest references to the practice. I will venture to say that it may be an evolutionary phase when we will cease to be kissing and hugging creatures.
Four major texts in the Vedic Sanskrit literature suggest an early form of kissing. Dating from 1500 BC, they describe the custom of rubbing and pressing noses together.
“Eventually, someone slipped and found that the lips were very sensitive and found it pleasurable. That’s one theory on how it started,” Bryant said.
About 500 years later, the epic poem Mahabharata contained references of lip kissing.
“She set her mouth to my mouth and made a noise and that produced pleasure in me,” it said.
The historic reference continues with the Kama Sutra, a classic text on erotica written during the early fifth century AD, where descriptions of kissing techniques abound.
Around 326 BC, kissing began spreading from India, thanks to the conquering armies of Alexander the Great.
“They learned about kissing from the Indians. After the death of Alexander, his army split up and his generals went to various areas of the Middle East,” Bryant said.
The Romans were the ones who popularized kissing, spreading the practice to most of Europe and parts of North Africa.
“They were devoted ‘kissing’ missionaries,” Bryant said.
For them, a kiss wasn’t just a kiss. There was the osculum, which was a kiss of friendship often delivered as a peck on the cheek. There was the basium, a more erotic type of lips-to-lips kiss and, finally, the savium. This was the kiss of passion that later became known as the “French kiss.”
Kissing was so much a part of the ancient Roman culture that related laws were passed.
“One stated that if a virgin girl were kissed with passion in public, she could demand to be awarded full marriage rights from the man,” Bryant said.
In the Middle Ages, all of Europe was kissing. However, the practice was governed by one’s rank.
People of equal rank, both male and female, would kiss on the lips.
As many did not know how to read and write, a kiss was also used to seal contracts. People drew an “X” for their name on the document and kissed it to make it legal. That’s the origin of the X put on Valentines or letters to symbolize a kiss.
By the 1300s the Catholic Church became greatly concerned about kissing, fearing that it would lead to carnal acts.
At the Council of Vienna in 1311-1312, Pope Clement V forbade the so-called “holy kiss” during church services. Still today, a handshake is used as a gesture of peace in the Catholic Church in place of the holy kiss.
The great “age of kissing” in England and much of Europe ended in the mid- to late 1600s, when it was replaced by other gestures, such as bows, curtsies and topping one’s hat.
According to Bryant, the Great Plague of 1665 in London, rather than the strict Church laws, played a role in the change.
“It encouraged many to stop kissing for fear of spreading the disease,” he said.
Between 1760 and 1840, during the Industrial Revolution, the hand kiss became popular in England and eventually evolved into handshaking.
In 1896, a silent film called “The Kiss” showed for the first time two actors, May Irwin and John Rice, repeatedly kissing.
The scene caused a scandal, as this contemporary review testified: “The spectacle of the prolonged pasturing on each other’s lips was beastly enough in life size on the stage, but magnified to gargantuan proportions and repeated three times over – it is absolutely disgusting.”
Whatever its history was, I believe that this no kissing, no hugging please will become the new formal even when COVID-19 has gone. Kissing as I knew it as a child was done out of respect for older people. It was done by children by taking the hand of the elderly and pressing it to one’s forehead. But beso-beso among friends came with the Spanish influence.
In my own experience, because the roots were more provincial, the old fashioned “mano po” was the practice I grew up with until the family moved to Manila. It was an acquired practice from the aristocracy, especially among the mestizo class and passed on to the middle classes, to emulate the more modern and rich Manileños.
Thinking it was a show of more love than respect I asked my mother why she did not kiss me. We were raised as “mano po” children but eventually lost the practice to become more like Manileños.
That was true until today when beso-beso has become a dangerous practice. It is one of the anti-COVID protocols. So also was the hand-kissing. To be safe we just avoid physical contact and practice social distancing instead.
I don’t think the beso-beso practice will return even after the pandemic is over. We will get used to safe distancing as a more healthy practice. It is beso-beso that will go as time goes by.