
We say “I love you with all of my heart,” but what does that mean, really?“Heartfelt” comes from Aristotle’s philosophy that the heart collects input from the organs around it through the blood vessels and that causes thoughts and emotions to arise. A shortness of breath, a clenched stomach, these are all part of that input, your organs telling your heart how you feel.So then do you love someone with all of the 11-ounce messy muscle that pumps 2,000 gallons of blood through your body a day? Or do you love someone with all the nerves that surround the area of your body where that muscle lies?If love is held in our heart, what role does the blood rushing through it play? How much does a beating heart and a rush of blood play in lusting for something or someone?Arousal in its basic physiology is about blood and the swelling of genitals. In Chinese culture, it is thought that sexual desire can cause a man to get a nosebleed. Thankfully, I’m not a Chinese man, or I’d constantly be ruining scarves.If blood is at the core of arousal, it’s not surprising that blood itself can be arousing.Once I bit a lover so hard he bled. So I bit him again. And again. And again, until his back was covered in half-moon shaped puddles of warm blood. I poured ice water over his wounds and smeared the diluted red liquid across his back, my hands and our sheets. It was erotic, sensual, intimate, and intriguing, a moment I yearned to repeat.
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