The power of a hug

by | Feb 14, 2025 | Featured blog post, Lifestyle

“A hug is like a boomerang–you get it back”, said Bil Keane, an American cartoonist. And the best part? The power of a hug can not only lift your mood, but it’s also good for your health. How so?

It’s in your pulse

When we were learning pulse reading in ayurveda school, we did a social experiment. We took each other’s pulses before hugging, then went in for an embrace. After a good 20 or so seconds of hugging, we felt each other’s pulses again. Undeniably, our post-hug pulses were fuller, deeper and more stable. We were calm, relaxed, feeling at ease and smiling from ear to ear.

Ayurvedically speaking, hugging helps lower vata and pitta, and raise kapha dosha. It’s not uncommon that too much vata and pitta could suppress kapha in your body and when doshas go out of balance, you go out of balance. Grounding vata helps relieve stress and anxiety, and balancing pitta helps melt away anger and frustration. On the other hand, more kapha helps bring emotional stability and contentment.

The health benefits of hugging

What creates that calm, peaceful feeling in our bodies during hugging? A study that put women through a psychosocial stress test found that “women with positive physical partner contact before stress exhibited significantly lower cortisol and heart rate responses”. Putting stress aside, there’s also evidence that frequent hugs between partners contribute to lower blood pressure and higher oxytocin levels in premenopausal women.

Is hugging only beneficial to women?

When it comes to gender, hugging doesn’t discriminate. Hugging lowered blood pressure in a study where couples were instructed to hold hands for 10 minutes followed by a 20-second hug. The effects were comparable for men and women, and interestingly, were greater for African Americans than for Caucasians.

Additional studies confirmed the power of hugging for men and women, although women may realize more benefits. While higher plasma oxytocin levels were reported in both men and women after warm contact, the potential cardioprotective effects of oxytocin on stress reactivity and blood pressure may be more significant in women.

An immune system booster

Stress is known to lower immune functioning due to the undesired rise in cortisol levels and other bio-markers, opening the door to sickness and infections. Hugging helps relieve stress and reverse these elevated bio-markers.

So it’s not surprising, that due to its cortisol- and blood pressure-lowering, and oxytocin- and serotonin-increasing ability, hugging is also linked to improved immune system functioning, better sleep and less sickness. There’s even research around its positive effects on weight loss.

Next time you feel stress building in your body, consider hugging it out.

This blog is meant to provide information based on ayurveda and modern research, and is not intended as medical advice. Please consult your healthcare practitioner about your specific concerns. 

Image by Andrea Piacquardio, Pexels

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Upcoming events

There are no upcoming events.

Blog library

Kind words

MY24/7 face/lip/body butter

I am officially in love with the Face, Lip and Body Butter. It may even border on addiction. I started using it just on my

Valerie R., Los Gatos, CA