It happened last year. We had this beautiful girl in our office. Age- around 20- in a relationship with her boyfriend. Everyone expecting the marriage- soon. Smiling and expressive personality.The unique feature was her face- fair, clear, soft and almost transparent skin. It was a usual morning rush hour and I was talking to her- at the reception. With customers around, telephones ringing, printer printing (and you know the usual noise of this heavy duty dot matrix printer) A perfect formal official environment. During discussion, I was staring at her, eye to eye contact- and I felt like her mind is off- somewhere else- distracted. I watched closely- noticed her nose tip was quite red and a soft red glow was spreading on her cheeks. I was about to comment if she had any cold or infection, when she lowered her eyes, and her mouth watered all of a sudden. Clearly I could see her saliva- wetting her lips and in and around her teeth. I was little puzzled and felt it little gross. Very soon, wrapping up in few words, I left. Till this day- I am not sure what happened. I guess she was blushing- if this is what blushing is. And again, if so- why? It was a perfectly formal and official environment. Nothing romantic about it. What made her blush? Anyway, I know so little about women! But for sure- they puzzle me a lot.
Some people have a problem with the valve between their esophagus and stomach. It is unpleasant and sometimes reflux going up and down their esophagus may cause salivation. They know they aren't well and it could easily explain the blushing. It can feel as if one had to throw up, but it isn't the real thing. The discomfort can be enough to cause salivation. Men have this, too. It isn't about women and their ways. It is about humans and their illnesses.