The Heart
The heart is a pumping system which intakes deoxygenated blood through
the veins, delivering it to the lungs for oxygenation and then pumping it
into the various arteries to be transmitted to where it is needed
throughout the body for energy.
The heart is about the size of a fist but delivers a more powerful
punch. Luckily for us, it contains a buffer zone to decrease its force or
we would be shaken by every beat. This buffer zone also protects the heart
from outside injury and keeps it from scraping against the chest wall.
In some instances, nightmares can seem so real that the heart will pound
in fear. In one study, the heart rate of the sleeper was timed at 150
beats per minute. Myth has it that the heart is the seat of the emotions,
but it is, instead, a pump to circulate the blood throughout the body and
only contributes to the emotions by sending oxygenated blood to our brain
cells; so, if you want to gain someone's affection, you may have to ask
Cupid to shoot them through the head rather than the heart. An arrow
through the heart (or through the head, for that matter) would stop all
bodily functions. The Medical Dictionary reports that the heart beats more
than 2.5 billion times in an average lifetime. Isn't that "thumping"?