[Korean Culture & Language] Blood Shoots Backward
Hello, this is Uptempo!
Have you ever felt like your blood shoots upward?
Aortic valve regurgitation, also known as aortic regurgitation, is a disorder that happens when the aortic valve in one’s heart does not close properly. As a result, part of the blood pumped out of one’s heart’s main pumping chamber (left ventricle) leaks backward instead of traveling in a one-way flow. This usually happens when a valve in the heart malfunction and various deadly symptoms may arise as a result.
Likewise, mental stress causes carotid artery dilation and increases brain blood flow. A series of ultrasound experiments also found that this dilatory reflex was absent in people with high blood pressure.
In Korea, there’s an expression ‘피가 거꾸로 솟는다(Blood shoots backward)’. The expression is used when someone is extremely angry. When a person is angry, blood flows backward, the face goes red, and the heart beats quickly. Shortness of breath creates headaches and increases blood pressure. This happens because anger causes the blood vessels near the skin’s surface to expand, which is the face. This enlargement makes one’s face redder.
Many these days use the term ‘피꺼솟’ which is an abbreviation of ‘피가 거꾸로 솟는다’.
The video below is titled ‘※피꺼솟 주의※ 화를 주체 못 하는 내 여자 친구 (※Warning: blood shoots backward※ My girlfriend doesn’t know how to control her anger’
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