The Power Of Touch
The Singapore Women's Weekly|March 2020
From our first breath to old age, touch is central and beneficial to our lives. Here’s how the sense of touch works
The Power Of Touch

Touch is our very first sense connection to the world from birth and a fundamental human need throughout our entire life span. Yet, in this digital age, it seems we’re out of touch with this vital non-verbal connection.

Whether we receive a pleasant caress, a pat on the back, a massage or just a handshake, being touched by another human being can evoke positive emotions, healing physical sensations, spiritual growth and powerful cognitive responses. Here, we look at ways we can add positive human contact back into our lives and the benefits it offers.

The Silent Language

“Touch is a powerful form of nourishment that goes right to the core of the parts of ourselves where only that ‘silent’ language can fully express what we’re feeling,” says Cornelia Gerken, psychologist and founder of Core Evolution. “When this happens, the sensation we receive can play a role in putting us back on our feet in terms of trust, relaxation, deep connection, and it opens us up to all the other great things that may not be visible at that moment,” she adds.

But how does the sense of touch work? “When we’re touched, pressure receptors under that area of the skin become more active, and this increase in activity tells the nervous system that there has been contact in a specific skin area,” Cornelia explains. “These signals are then processed through the nervous system and travel along the spinal column, to reach the brain, which interprets the information through its somatosensory cortex.”

This story is from the March 2020 edition of The Singapore Women's Weekly.

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This story is from the March 2020 edition of The Singapore Women's Weekly.

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