
TryingtoLoseWeight
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I have asymmetrical eyes due to my other cheekbone being much higher and prominent then the other should I get surgery to shorten it or is there an another way to fix it?
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That’s a super real concern, and you’re not alone — asymmetry in cheekbones and eyes is incredibly common, even in models and celebrities. The key thing is figuring out what’s causing the imbalance — and whether it’s bone structure, muscle tension, fat distribution, or habitual posture — before jumping to surgery.I have asymmetrical eyes due to my other cheekbone being much higher and prominent then the other should I get surgery to shorten it or is there an another way to fix it?
chatgpt ass answer , anything for the reps thoThat’s a super real concern, and you’re not alone — asymmetry in cheekbones and eyes is incredibly common, even in models and celebrities. The key thing is figuring out what’s causing the imbalance — and whether it’s bone structure, muscle tension, fat distribution, or habitual posture — before jumping to surgery.
You're 16, still developing, which means your face is still actively remodeling, especially with things like mewing, posture correction, and muscle balancing. Here's a breakdown to help you make a smart move:
What Might Be Causing Your Asymmetry
1. Skeletal
- If one zygomatic bone (cheekbone) is genuinely higher and more prominent, it can lift the eye socket, making one eye seem smaller, droopier, or uneven.
- Usually congenital or from birth trauma — but often exaggerates with posture or chewing habits.
2. Muscular
- One side may be more active, tighter, or overtrained — especially if you chew, sleep, or lean on that side more.
- This can tilt the face subtly, and cause eye asymmetry, puffiness, and uneven smile/cheek projection.
3. Fat Distribution / Fluid Retention
- Puffiness or lymphatic backup can make one cheek seem “fuller” and the eye above it more hooded.
- Easy to fix with drainage, massage, and facial fat loss.
Should You Get Surgery?
In 95% of cases, no — not at 16.
Here’s why:
- Your facial bones aren’t done developing until around 21–23.
- Surgery (like zygomatic osteotomy or shaving) is invasive, often expensive, risky, and sometimes causes new asymmetries.
- Even top surgeons won’t touch this kind of asymmetry at your age unless it’s extreme (like a trauma case or syndrome).
Better First Steps (You Might Be Shocked How Well These Work)
Let’s optimize everything that contributes to symmetry and midface balance first.
1. Facial Posture + Mewing
- You might be pushing one cheekbone up with asymmetrical tongue pressure or sleeping on one side.
- Fix posture: Tongue flat on palate, head level, shoulders back, don’t tilt neck while looking at your phone.
- Mew evenly and lightly push up on the weaker side, 5–10 minutes of focused pressure daily.
2. Facial Massage / Gua Sha
- Use a gua sha or fingers to massage down the higher cheekbone and lift the lower one.
- This soft-tissue remapping can balance out fascia tension, especially if done daily.
3. Unilateral Chewing + Gum Training
- Use hard gum (mastic/falim) and chew only on the weaker side for 10–20 min/day.
- This helps bulk the underdeveloped cheek, and over time brings better balance.
- Don’t overdo it — it’s slow progress.
4. Lymphatic Drainage
- Puffy eye or cheek on one side? Massage from under-eye > cheek > ear > neck.
- Add cold compresses / ice rolling to reduce swelling and make asymmetry less visible day-to-day.
Reality Check: Most “Perfect Faces” Are Asymmetrical
Take a close look at:
- Timothée Chalamet
- Cillian Murphy
- Bella Hadid (before surgery)
- Even Brad Pitt
They all have some facial imbalance — but it’s managed well with angles, muscle balance, grooming, and lighting. In fact, slight asymmetry is more natural and attractive than a perfectly mirrored face (those look uncanny).
What You Can Do Now
If you want, I can build you a custom symmetry correction plan, including:
- Which side to chew/train
- Mewing adjustments
- Daily face massage strategy
- Skincare & puffiness control
- Posture corrections
It can even include exercises to realign your eyes a bit more (yes, you can adjust the look of your orbital area naturally to a degree).
Would you like that?
ye ik nigga tonight im feeling lazychatgpt ass answer
assymetrical in what way?I have asymmetrical eyes due to my other cheekbone being much higher and prominent then the other should I get surgery to shorten it or is there an another way to fix it?
ure braindead sleeping on ur back will prevent further asymmetry , wont fix ur bad asymmetry. u need to sleep on ur bad side to fix itsleep on your back for a few years, if its still that assymetrical you can think about surgery. What i have to say is that it actually worked for me
Isn't that cope?ure braindead sleeping on ur back will prevent further asymmetry , wont fix ur bad asymmetry. u need to sleep on ur bad side to fix it
no , gravity shifts ur face so if u sleep on 1 side too much it will affect it. this is also why old people have stretchy skin , gravity pulls their skin downward making it look similar to thisIsn't that cope?
What i need to do then if my one eye is higher than another one + more hoodingno , gravity shifts ur face so if u sleep on 1 side too much it will affect it. this is also why old people have stretchy skin , gravity pulls their skin downward making it look similar to this View attachment 3747122
probably nothing without surgery lmao , got the same thing. i have a pimple in one of my eyebrows (under the skin so not visible) and it removes upper eyelid exposure almost completely and the other has uee. though i dont have an eye higher than the other. that is caused by an uneven sphenoid bone pretty sure. also rep me or jew cause i just blessed u with this infoWhat i need to do then if my one eye is higher than another one + more hooding
Lol broni got exactly same problem, but at least im 14 yr old so i got a lot of time to softmaxxprobably nothing without surgery lmao , got the same thing. i have a pimple in one of my eyebrows (under the skin so not visible) and it removes upper eyelid exposure almost completely and the other has uee. though i dont have an eye higher than the other. that is caused by an uneven sphenoid bone pretty sure. also rep me or jew cause i just blessed u with this info