'No good can come from eyeball licking'

Jun 13, 2013 - 14:24
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'No good can come from eyeball licking'
Eyeball licking, or worming, is causing problems in Japan. Picture: YouTube

EYEBALL licking, particularly in Japan, has seen an outbreak of people suffering conjunctivitis and eye experts waing against the practice.

\"Nothing good can come of this,\" San Diego ophthalmologist Dr David Granet told The Huffington Post. \"There are ridges on the tongue that can cause a coeal abrasion. And if a person hasn't washed out their mouth, they might put acid from citrus products or spices into the eye.\"

Alteatively called \"oculolinctus\" or \"worming,\" eyeball licking has been around since the mid-2000s.

It has gained popularity in Japan where in one classroom of 12-year-olds, a third of students confessed to worming or being wormed. ShanghaiList.com reports that officials discovered that the practice was rampant when students started coming to school with eyepatches.

Elektrika Energias, a 29-year-old environmental science student in the US Virgin Islands, said she found the fetish particularly erotic.

\"My boyfriend started licking my eyeballs years ago and I just loved it. I'm not with him anymore, but I still like to ask guys to lick my eyeballs,\" she told The Huffington Post. \"I just love it because it tus me on, like sucking on my toes. It makes me feel all tingly.\"

\"I don't ask just anyone to do it. Guys I like a lot are more likely to not think it's so weird. I've never had anyone tu me down though,\" she said. \"I got some weird offshoot of TB in my eye once. I ended up with coeal ulcers and I spent like a month in the hospital.

\"I'm just safer now, I guess ... Live and lea. I mean they don't really make tongue rubbers, but maybe they should,\" she said.

Eye experts wa that conjunctivitis or \"pink eye\" is just one of the conditions you can contract from eyeball licking.

 

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Mike Gallagher Mike Gallagher is a Georgia-based freelance journalist covering local news, community developments, and regional issues that matter most to residents across the state. Writing for Georgianewsday.com since 2016, Mike has built a reputation for clear, balanced reporting and a strong connection to the communities he serves. His work spans city council decisions, school board updates, small business features, public safety reports, and statewide policy changes. In addition to local coverage, Mike occasionally reports on state politics and national headlines, offering readers context on how broader decisions impact Georgia communities. Known for his steady, fact-driven approach, Mike prioritizes accuracy, fairness, and accessibility in every story. Whether covering a town hall meeting or breaking political developments, he aims to inform readers with clarity and integrity. Outside the newsroom, Mike remains actively engaged in Georgia’s civic landscape, always seeking the next story that shapes the state’s future.