ethansm
Meth Microdoser
- Joined
- Sep 7, 2025
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Wolfe’s Law means that bone adapts to the stress placed on it over time. When a bone is exposed to repeated mechanical load within safe limits, it becomes denser and slightly stronger. When it is not loaded at all, it weakens. This is why lifters have higher bone density, why athletes have thicker bones in stress heavy areas, and why people lose bone density in zero gravity. Bone does respond to force, but the way it responds matters a lot.The first problem with bonesmashing logic is the type of force. Wolfe’s Law applies to slow, repeated, controlled loading. Walking, lifting, chewing, running. Bonesmashing is not controlled loading. It is sudden blunt impact trauma. That is not how you stimulate healthy remodeling. That is how you cause micro fractures, inflammation, nerve damage, scar tissue, and in some cases permanent deformity. The second problem is age. Wolfe’s Law works best when the skeleton is still growing. During childhood and the teen years, bones are more responsive to stress and can change shape more easily. Once growth plates close in adulthood, bones do not change size or shape in any meaningful way without medical intervention. They mainly remodel internally for density and repair. This means that even if bonesmashing did trigger some remodeling, it would not create forward growth, wider jaws, or higher cheekbones in an adult. At best, you get minimal density change. At worst, you get damage.Another issue people ignore is how facial bones are structured. The face is made of thin, complex bones with sinuses, nerves, and blood vessels running through them. Repeated blunt force to areas like the cheekbones, nose, or jaw does not magically push bone outward.It risks cracking thin bone plates, bruising nerves, and causing swelling that some people then mistake for permanent growth. Once the swelling goes down, so does the so called result.There is also the illusion factor. After bonesmashing, people often see redness, puffiness, and temporary inflammation. This can create the appearance of sharper cheekbones or a more projected jaw for a short time. That is not bone growth. That is tissue trauma. When the inflammation settles, the face usually returns to baseline or worse.The darkest pill is this. If bonesmashing actually worked the way people claim, boxers and fighters would all have model tier facial structure. In reality, many of them end up with flattened noses, asymmetries, nerve issues, and long term damage rather than better bone structure.Real bone change in the face as an adult comes from orthodontics, palate expansion under medical supervision, surgical procedures, or fat loss that reveals existing structure. Not from hitting your own face with objects.So the reality is simple. Wolfe’s Law does not justify bonesmashing. Controlled load builds bone density. Blunt impact breaks tissue. Adult facial bones do not expand from trauma in a way that makes you more attractive.If you still think it does you are a retard just rope at this point it is probably done for you.