Toronto Star

Could you use a hug? Here are some safe alternativ­es

Human touch isn’t just pleasant, it’s a need that’s been missing recently

- LILA SEIDMAN

Lying in afetal position next to my laptop on a lazy Saturday afternoon, a soothing voice wafts over Zoom and asks me if my body parts are “saying anything.”

The voice belongs to Jean Franzblau, a slim woman with greying hair and a warm presence who is a profession­al cuddler. She began offering virtual sessions in the wake of the coronaviru­s outbreak, when she realized the core of her service — to offer platonic touch outside of the scope of sex and romance — now comes with serious health risk.

The business’s “whole purpose is to help people to connect people, and this virus is basically saying that’s not going to be a safe thing for most people,” said Franzblau, the founder of Cuddle Sanctuary in Los Angeles. “And I had to face that and say, ‘Is there anything I can do?’ ”

What can any of us do? Social and physical distancing are the mantras of the moment. Public health guidelines advise people to stay at least two metres away from those outside of their household — too far for a hug, cuddle or handshake.

For some — like the happily partnered or the content recluse — the directive might not be difficult to follow. But for those living alone who thrive on physical connection, all that distance can be lonely. And humans do need touch. Dr. Steven Siegel, who chairs the University of Southern California’s psychiatry department, said that several studies show that pleasant, situationa­lly appropriat­e touch increases activity in parts of the brain associated with pleasure and enjoyment, as well as social interactio­ns.

“If that’s part of someone’s normal way of being … the deprivatio­n of that is going to be experience­d as a psychologi­cal loss,” Siegel said.

But there are alternativ­es.

Use your imaginatio­n To “hug” your grandma or immunosupp­ressed friend, you don’t necessaril­y need to get out of your chair. Imagery exercises — thinking about a pleasant physical or social experience — can have similar psychologi­cal benefits as the activity itself. They are frequently used in therapy, according to Dr. Emanuel Maidenberg, head of UCLA Health’s cognitive behavioura­l therapy program.

However, it requires two key qualities to be effective: vividness and specificit­y.

“If you just close your eyes and spend some time with a friend, that’s not likely to do it,” Maidenberg said. “But if you start thinking about very specific circumstan­ces” — including where it will take place, the time of day, what you look like, what your partner looks like — “that’s it. That’s likely to produce an emotional response that is likely to be close to what one would want.”

Go virtual Virtual reality holds an inherent promise to allow users to transcend physical space, to see — and potentiall­y touch — who and what’s not really there in front of them. But can a virtual hug from a friend or an AI entity offer the same warmth as an IRL embrace?

Jeremy Bailenson, founder of the Virtual Human Interactio­n Lab at Stanford, thinks there’s potential.

“Technologi­cally and psychologi­cally, it’s possible to convey emotion over virtual touch,” Bailenson said.

Bailenson pointed to a 2007 study he co-led that showed participan­ts were able to identify, above chance, the intended emotions in a virtual handshake from other human participan­ts. He noted that this was achieved through limited movements — mostly up and down, left and right — “meaning not as fancy as your hand is, with all the angles and the forces.”

The pandemic has inspired Bailenson to develop an app that will allow users to transmit virtual handshakes through a smartphone.

As envisioned, one user will shake his phone while standing at least two metres away from the intended recipient, who will feel the movement as vibrations through her own phone.

Hug an avatar Good news for “Animal Crossing” enthusiast­s: online interactio­ns can offer social and emotional support at a safe distance, according to Dmitri Williams, a US C professor specializi­ng in games and communitie­s.

Pre-pandemic, Williams said he wouldn’t recommend people seek out support in video games. He’d suggest those needs be fulfilled by “people in real space.” With greatly reduced offline social opportunit­ies, online interactio­ns could at least temporaril­y fill the void.

“Is it still a net positive to go online and hang out to get social and emotional support from people as opposed to nothing? And the answer there, I can tell you without any research, is yes,” Williams said. “Something is better than nothing. These are not negative experience­s.”

It’s still not the same Experts agree there is no perfect substituti­on for human touch. Thoughts, toys and multiplaye­r simulation­s: They’re all an approximat­ion of something irreplacea­ble.

That’s why Franzblau, the profession­al cuddler, was at first hesitant to attempt a virtual simulation.

“There’s something deeply moving about human touch,” Franzblau said. “The human element, the human attunement, cannot be duplicated.”

She’s since found creative ways to translate sensations and presence, while acknowledg­ing it’s “apples and oranges.”

During our session, she asked if it would be comforting to know she was watching as I drifted into a relaxed state. It was far from a hug, but it was something only human eyes — even mediated by a screen — could achieve.

 ?? JAY L. CLENDENIN TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Teacher Caitlin Hicks gives a “virtual hug” to Sid Solomon in California. Experts say there’s no perfect substituti­on to touch.
JAY L. CLENDENIN TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Teacher Caitlin Hicks gives a “virtual hug” to Sid Solomon in California. Experts say there’s no perfect substituti­on to touch.

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