As far as facial features go I really enjoy crows feet. Tell you why later.!
Perhaps you’ve heard the expression “stone faced”. If you’ve ever known a person possessing such rigid facial features, the chances are it’s not only their face that is rigid. Probably, along with the face comes a stiff body and a person who has trouble being expressive or animated. Underneath the facial skin and fascia lie the muscles which give shape to the facial features above. Those taut muscles tell a story of emotions trapped inside, becoming toxic.
As a massage therapist, I do “face lifts” all the time. Unlike the plastic surgeon, I don’t force a permanent look on your face. If you come in with a “long face”, I massage you in an upward direction, pulling the cheeks upward, relaxing your jaw muscles, removing that stress from around your eyes, and when I complete the massage, your “baby face”, that youthful appearance, has returned. You feel good, in an honestly healthy way. Instead, you could go the “plastic” way and construct a smile that lasts long after you have shed your mortal coil. What kind of “smile” are you going to opt for?
A few years back, Duke University Medical Center conducted a study of men who had already had heart attacks. The researchers were monitoring the patients’ hearts with a special imaging technique, asking questions, all while videotaping facial expressions.
The scientist predicted that when they asked the patients questions that angered them (angry facial expression) it would have a negative effect on the heart. They did. Many patients experienced silent ischemic episodes; the left ventricle of their hearts partly collapsed which caused blood to be restricted to the heart. This could easily precipitate another heart attack.
What surprised these researchers while correlating facial expressions, questions and heart monitoring, was that only one other facial expression gave rise to this silent ischemic episode- when the patient smiled! Not just any kind of smiles, but those fake smiles, the ones with no real enjoyment behind them.
When you smile you use the zygomaticus major muscles; it is what raises up the corners of your lips. For the smile to be genuine, another muscle, orbicularis oculi, must also be engaged. This muscle, which circles around the eyes, lifts our cheeks and creates the crow’s feet effect.
So when you smile, smile from the heart, so to speak. Make it real, not painted on. Now for my most favorite expressive guy……Marcel Marceau!