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abcdan71
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- TL;DR Summary
- Hiccupping helped to remove the food stuck in my throat.
Hiccupping helped to remove the food stuck in my throat.
I get food stuck in my throat from time to time when I don't chew well enough and I am a bit parched. Primarily with rice or similar foods. Last night it happened again, and after 30 minutes of it being stuck, I began to hiccup. After five hiccups the food cleared my throat and entered into my stomach. And as soon as that happened the hiccups stopped.
Due to the fact that hiccupping started while I had food stuck in my throat, it cleared my throat after only five hiccups, and it immediately stopped once the food was cleared, this seems to me that it could be one of the plausible reasons (if not the only reason) for why we evolved to hiccup.
I wanted to share this because I know that the purpose of hiccups is unknown to science, and I wanted to share my experience to perhaps add to the conversation of this universal, yet mysterious biological process.
I get food stuck in my throat from time to time when I don't chew well enough and I am a bit parched. Primarily with rice or similar foods. Last night it happened again, and after 30 minutes of it being stuck, I began to hiccup. After five hiccups the food cleared my throat and entered into my stomach. And as soon as that happened the hiccups stopped.
Due to the fact that hiccupping started while I had food stuck in my throat, it cleared my throat after only five hiccups, and it immediately stopped once the food was cleared, this seems to me that it could be one of the plausible reasons (if not the only reason) for why we evolved to hiccup.
I wanted to share this because I know that the purpose of hiccups is unknown to science, and I wanted to share my experience to perhaps add to the conversation of this universal, yet mysterious biological process.
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