Woman avoids smiling for 50 years to avoid wrinkles. (girl, filler, extension)
Please register to participate in our discussions with 2 million other members - it's free and quick! Some forums can only be seen by registered members. After you create your account, you'll be able to customize options and access all our 15,000 new posts/day with fewer ads.
Forget blaming it, initially, on nuns; I'm not buying that. And what's the military secret about where she's from?I've opened four articles (that's it for me) and none included that tidbit.
What do you think?
Did it really work for her,or does she still look her age?
I personally think it is a tad bit excessive.
That link seems broken but a reverse image search reveals her name and most headlines say 40 years, not 50 (that's her age). 40 years is still extreme, if we can believe her claim. It looks like her original motivation was she didn't like her "hamster" cheeks when smiling. She doesn't look much younger than a lot of well-kept 50 year-olds. Just more human weirdness but she seems to have a Mona Lisa smile.
All I can say is that I love seeing older people that have happy, wrinkled old faces that have seen and heard some funny things in life.
My grandmother had a great sense of humour and she had the most beautiful wrinkles and a smile that lit up the room. How my cherished memories would be so different if she'd not smiled and laughed all through her 99 years.
Who wants to live with or be friends with a dour-faced person? Life is too short to worry about keeping wrinkles at bay. I love laughing and I smile often. So what if I have laugh lines?
There is a thing called Botox injections, and you can have plastic surgery if getting rid of wrinkles is high on a person's list of vanity.
It reminds me of a friend's daughter who is well endowed. She wears a bra to bed in hopes to keep them "perky". I don't know whether it works or not, but I know that taking off my bra at night is an instant wonderful relief from the binds that held me all day. There's NOT a chance I'd keep it on 24/7!
I don't really smile or laugh that much, it's not that I'm angry or anything, it's just the way I am. I've still developed smile lines though, so I don't think that's the cause. You're going to age no matter what.
That link seems broken but a reverse image search reveals her name and most headlines say 40 years, not 50 (that's her age). 40 years is still extreme, if we can believe her claim. It looks like her original motivation was she didn't like her "hamster" cheeks when smiling. She doesn't look much younger than a lot of well-kept 50 year-olds. Just more human weirdness but she seems to have a Mona Lisa smile.
That's what I read, too. Why would this even enter the mind of 10-year-old. Anyway, she looks older than 50.
Please register to post and access all features of our very popular forum. It is free and quick. Over $68,000 in prizes has already been given out to active posters on our forum. Additional giveaways are planned.
Detailed information about all U.S. cities, counties, and zip codes on our site: City-data.com.