Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Put A Smile On :)

            “Ding, Ding, Ding”, the alarm clock goes off and for once you wake up with a big smile on your face. Why? Well of course because today is your birthday silly. Later on the night you come home, put the key in the door and hear “SURPRISE!”  A big, wide grin flashes across your face, the biggest grin you’ve made in a long time. A few days prior to all of this your best friend asked you what your favorite flavor of cake is and you say strawberry. When it is time to cut the cake you notice it is strawberry and you’re filled will all kinds of joy and happiness inside, you don’t necessary smile outright, but just to know that someone went through all that trouble just for you makes you smile inside. When you’re presented with your gift, it turns out your brother flew home from out of town just to see you and you are in such shock you cry or your heart just melts all together. 
            So now I guess you can tell me… do you necessarily need smiles in order to be happy or to show your happiness? Emotion is controlled by part of the cortex and the limbic system together. When you’re afraid, sad, angry, excited, or happy it is the limbic system that is working in order for you to FEEL these particular emotions. Therefore, you can feel happy without actually smiling, or showing it in any way. Although, it is pretty difficult to conceal your emotions, it is possible.  There are some individuals who this particularly speaks to, because they can feel emotion, but they are not physically capable of displaying it.
   People with Mobius syndrome are physically incapable of smiling. They are unable to move their facial muscles in order to smile, although they may feel joy and excitement. These children and older adults, have trouble connecting and making friends, because of their condition.  The disorder affects 1 in 50,000 to 1 in 500,000 newborns, and eventually they may be eligible to undergo surgery for an artificial smile.

So smiling doesn’t all necessarily have to lead to happiness but it can. Studies even show that smiling can increase serotonin levels in the brain and alleviate depression.

This video details a little bit of why smiling can have an effect on your mood.


"Sometimes your joy is the source of your smile, but sometimes your smile can be the source of your joy." ~Thich Nhat Hanh

3 comments:

  1. Super Cool! I found this blog to be interesting and made me relate to it.
    People with the Möbius Sydnrome, now that.... that is something. Its super sad to see this but even more sad that people don't really know how to accept an individual for who they are on the inside. It must be very strange to see a happy and excited person not smile and this can seriously weird some of us out, but we should show our selves to be accepting of their condition and accept them for who they are. Maybe we can't see an external smile, but lets bring them many internal ones.

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  2. It's easier to accept this truth: If you try to explain to someone that an inherent and biological mechanism can actually cause physical manifestations of happiness, like laughing. But when you reverse that explanation, such that physical actions of happiness, like laughing can actually cause you to be internally and mentally happier, is fascinating to me... This illustrates a strong intimate bond between the physical and the biological/chemical aspects of our holistic self. I mean not having to smile is a debilitating characteristic because it can cause you to have less social interaction and thus lead you to feel more depressed...

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  3. I personally think that smiling causes people to be happy when there having a rough day. I can have a bad day over something that happens to me but when a friend/family makes me laugh, I can’t help but smile. Hearing about the Mobius Syndrome, makes me think what those specific individuals go through. Not be able to smile, not able to show any type of expression must be very difficult. My question is even though there is a solution such as surgery; can all the individuals pay for that much of expense? If not, is there funding?

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