To Kiss and be Kissed - Get your Kisses Right for Dating
Kissing is not such a clear-cut subject as you may think. It depends
where you are sitting when reading this article. For many countries in Asia for example kissing is a private affair that almost never happens in public. I remember
a Filipino guy I worked with in Singapore who was completely amazed to
the point of hysteria that two men were seen kissing in public on the London
tube. He simply couldn't deal with that concept at all. I have lived in Asia for a while
and it was very rare the whole time I was there to meet indigenous people who kissed openly. Indeed in Thailand it was far more common to rub noses than to ever
touch lips.
Kissing is a sexual act to some degree and some societies simply do
not view kissing as appropriate behavior in public. Even in the UK
, overt kissing in public is often frowned upon by older members of the public, even if as a youngster its perfectly natural.
Then again on a summer evening in Rome, or a city park in Paris, I would expect to see couples of every age group kissing passionately as the most
natural thing in the world. It all depends on where you are you see.
In western society kissing is a pretty normal mainstream pastime and
rather lovely at that. The problem occurs when we start dating and are not sure when we should kiss and to what extent. The
crux appears to be that we want our first kiss with someone we like to be prefect. If we begin dating and we don't kiss its
unsettling, but if we are French Kissing (openmouthed) on day 1 the romance can dissolve too quickly. So it is a matter of
waiting.
There is no definite here but it is pretty much accepted that on a
first date, if it goes well then you should offer or accept a small kiss on the cheek and nothing more. This will occur when
you go your separate ways and says that a basic level of attraction has been built up. The desire may be to kiss the lips
off your date but hold back if you can. Anticipation is the mother of desire.
Of course by your second date, if you are both displaying all the
signs of attraction then it won't take long before you are kissing more passionately but again it depends on the situation,
culture and person you are with. Find the right place and wait as long as you cam I was dating a girl in Hong Kong and waited
two weeks , seeing her 4 times a week, before we kissed properly. Believe me the kiss was worth the wait because it happened
at the top of the mountain above Hong Kong called The Peak set against the lightening of
an electric storm. An electric kiss it surely was and totally memorable for all the right reasons.
One thing that amazes me even now is how many people can't kiss. What
I mean by that is that there are some people out there for who kissing means the oral Olympics. Having your tonsils pinned
against the back of your throat by a tongue hardened like a javelin is not pleasant. The other issue seems to be people who
purse their lips and make their mouth very hard when kissing. Kissing is a soft, delicate and sensual pastime savored slowly.
Follow the lips of your partner and take things slowly and gently, allowing lips to brush and move so much so that they hardly
touch. Kissing should make you shiver. Concentrate on the delicate corners of the mouth which are extremely sensitive and
generally let the force guide you. As many woman will tell a man, kissing can be undertaken for hours and many women prefer
kissing to anything else. It can be extremely sensual and sexual so don't ignore the technique.
I remember a date once telling me that she could never kiss passionately
until she was sure the man was in love with her. She felt that 'proper' kissing was so explicit that it was inextricably linked
to sex. If she began to kiss properly she wanted to go to bed. This tell us that kissing on dates means different things to
different people. Don't expect too much at first, a kiss to some people means a great deal more to some than it may to you.
Sometimes dates will be shy and require encouragement to kiss so once
you have had a few dates do take the initiative if you feel your date is being a little too shy and requires cajoling. The
problem with that though is that many men are convinced they have misread the signals and dare not try and kiss in case they
are wrong. This in turn can lead to a man appearing as lacking in confidence which can be critically bad. Take it from me
guys, if you are on your third or fourth date and you haven't kissed but you are getting on great you may be better taking
some small initiative.
Guys should also remember that kissing does not automatically lead
to any other physical contact for some time, so be patient and take things slowly.
- Make sure you know
how to kiss
- Ensure your hygiene
is spot on
- Carry some gum if
you need to freshen up
- Floss regularly
- Remember to kiss
gently and sensitively
- Wait until you are
ready to kiss and choose your moment
- Allow the passion
of kissing to build up slowly
- Remember that a
first kiss should be memorable
- take the initiative
if your partner is shy
- Learn the key body
signals that demonstrate conclusively that your date wants to be kissed
- Remember that good
kissing can be as sensual as sex
- Appreciate that
some people do not liked to be kissed in public
First Loves. Our Past Haunts Us Still
Are we searching for Miss or Mr. Right or have we already met them
before? Did your Mr. Right once exist in your former life? Were they childhood sweethearts?
First love isn’t a new topic but I realized that first love
is an emotionally potent one. With this in mind I realized that first love must have a much greater effect on the way we handle
our lives that we perhaps want to admit. Until we first fall in love we are in effect emotional virgins. True romance has
yet to touch us. We assume we know a great deal about life already and we assume we feel the same way that everyone else does,
but we do not. Only those who have been in love that first time know the world has far more to it than meets the eye. Like
death of an adult or parent or someone we love we can never be prepared and first love for many of us is a happy experience
tinged with lifelong sadness and oddly, an element of grief. Because unless we marry our childhood sweetheart, our very first
Mr. Right and live happily ever after, most of us will go on from our first love to be single again and learn from the experience.
I am not speaking here of first dates, first kiss or first sex. I
am speaking earnestly about one’s first true love, the person you first fall madly in love with and cannot live without.
It could be a childhood sweetheart but it doesn't have to be. Childhood sweethearts have a huge influence though and mustn't
be underestimated in the legacy they leave. However I accept here that child hood sweetheart is too specific. Personally speaking,
I was always kind of jealous of those who had childhood sweethearts as that was how it was supposed to be.
First love is the first time we learn to deal with pangs of angst,
stomach churning adoration, lust, love, anxiety, salty tears that know no end. It’s the first time you learn what a
deep communication with another person out-with your immediate family can be like on both a spiritual and physical level.
You cannot live without them, you feel alive like never before, you exist wholly for another human being. It is fantastic,
it is unbelievable, it’s the best thing in the world and it becomes your life, she becomes your life, he becomes your
life. And it ends. In an instant the best thing that ever happened to you …stops.
I may overplay this scenario and of course it doesn’t happen
to everyone, but amazingly, most of us have had some kind of experience like this. If we haven’t then we will so be
warned. I say this because this may just be the thing that governs who we are. For many of us, our first great love occurs
sometime between 16 to 21 years of age when we are still young and fresh and optimistic and ready for life. In that moment
we are most open to experience and we are also at our most vulnerable. In this moment we may love like we may never love again,
at least for quite a while.
During that time of first true love we open up ourselves to everything
that love can bring us, elation, defeat, passion, sincerity, communication and contact, all on levels we had never experienced
before. Our minds store away every small detail as part of our vertical new learning in love and romance and we cannot get
enough. But the issue is that it gets taken away. It may be we are making a wise decision, maybe it is we who decides too
much too young. It may not be our choice and our eternally loved partner walks away leaving us with life long questions that
may never be answered. But whatever happens and however the end of our first love occurs, it will and does leave a legacy
whether we like it or not.
Okay I hear you ask, what legacy, or is my legacy the same as your
legacy? Well no, we are all different. First love in many people often leaves us with lifelong happy memories that are tied
in with other close friends, with college and school, with times and places and particularly summers. For others, first love
is a series of memories of regret, bad decisions and choices from which they have learned and become stronger hopefully. For
everyone who has grown older with the legacy of a first love, future dating decisions are often too closely related to that
first true love experience.
The first legacy is often physical. We want to recapture the feelings of being with
our first love, our childhood sweethearts, our Mr. Right or Miss Right, and the easiest way for our brains to do that is to
find someone who looks like them. How often have you seen a friend partner with someone who looks like their first love. Amazingly
when I thought about this, there were quite a few people I knew who were dating the image of their childhood sweethearts.
So we find comfort in being with someone who resembles our first love.
Next, we find that we are left with a legacy of the need to recreate
a sense of love we have had time to heighten. What this really means is that if we have already experienced true love once,
we want it again. Not a little, but the same or more even, just like the first time. Secretly, we crave it. Now this is a
serious legacy from our past romance because what this really means is that we may not be satisfied by many relationships
that come our way afterwards. Every time we date we want it to be like the first time, full of new experience, full of innocent
love, with no preconditions. Yes we already now have preconditions because we have learned from our first love. We have set
a base line for the presence of love.
Next this means that we will be tough in our romantic and dating decisions.
Subconsciously we relate our first love to the perfect feeling of being in love and as such we crave it. We need and want
love and that overwhelming wave of romance to be as powerful and magical as it was the first time and if it doesn’t
come and come quickly, then the person we date will be penalized for this. We won’t want to date people who appear to
be dissimilar to the person who showed us love, we avoid selecting people who don’t show such heightened potential in
the early days of meeting. In other words, new dates are not reaching a perilously high love base line we have set and it
may be that no one can. We want to date our childhood sweethearts a second time.
Next, the first love legacy means that we may punish those from who
we don’t receive the same amazing love feelings by letting them go and continuing our search. In the end it can mean
that we have set our sights so high that finding comparable love and happiness becomes difficult. Date after date we are looking
for something we cannot find. I often here people say, “I don’t know what it is I am searching for but it’s
inside me but I just can’t find it but I will know it when I see (feel) it”. In other words, they know what love
feels like and want it again, but until it comes instantly they won’t accept, “I will not make do”, they
say. And dating becomes difficult.
Of course what we forget is that our first love, our Mr. Right, is
probably now some years older, a different person, maybe even looks different. That moment has gone now. It has been lost
in time, and only lives on inside of us. I think it can be a good thing if we control it and let it be part of us but not
take over. It governs some of the choices of who we are and who we wish to date, it guides and helps us in some ways because
it clarifies what we know allows us to be happy. Even better is that it reminds us that true love can and does exist but that
we are on a search to find it once again. To find true love in first love is an amazing thing and many say that to find that
twice in a lifetime is impossible.
I disagree, I think as long as we accept that we must not try and
recreate our first love, we are simply clear minded healthy people who know what we are about and are wise in knowing the
experience of love, both good and bad. We should remember not to let this affect the potential of future even more powerful
relationships than any that came before. Your Mr. Right, is somewhere waiting, just don't let him be the one in the past.