Bonesmashing is real, but not in the way you think.

reeven

reeven

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First.
It’s not bone remodeling:
Adult chin bone has NO growth plates and it cannot grow outward from a single trauma.

What is it then?:
Scar tissue / organized hematoma / adaptive tissue from the trauma. Dense collagen forms during healing and can feel rock-hard.
VID319 230119 Keloid 01 3P2A5321  aCFfytNmax 600x600
1536863 Test2

This can last years or even a lifetime.

So, good?, if you are willing to risk not feeling anything in whatever area you're hitting due to nerve damage.


If your jaw/chin muscles or fascia are under tension or mild daily load, they can thicken slightly.
This gives a firmer feel but is still soft tissue, not bone. Scar tissue usually feels firm but slightly irregular, may be tethered to skin, and is painless.

Bone would be rigid, immovable, and not change with facial expression.
 
Last edited:
This doesn't look too good
it's basically what happens under your skin, tho that picture is a extreme case but just to put the idea of what it's actually your "new bone"
 
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First.
It’s not bone remodeling:
Adult chin bone has NO growth plates and it cannot grow outward from a single trauma.

What is it then?:
Scar tissue / organized hematoma / adaptive tissue from the trauma. Dense collagen forms during healing and can feel rock-hard.
View attachment 4545993
This can last years or even a lifetime.

So, good?, if you are willing to risk not feeling anything in whatever area you're hitting due to nerve damage.


If your jaw/chin muscles or fascia are under tension or mild daily load, they can thicken slightly.
This gives a firmer feel but is still soft tissue, not bone. Scar tissue usually feels firm but slightly irregular, may be tethered to skin, and is painless.

Bone would be rigid, immovable, and not change with facial expression.
 
Yes, bonemsashing something like the chin could probaby result in something like this. The thing is if the resulting hematoma calcifies and effectively becomes new bone
 
same post once every week for the past year
 
Yes, bonemsashing something like the chin could probaby result in something like this. The thing is if the resulting hematoma calcifies and effectively becomes new bone
yeah, i look asymmetrical tho, and there was an OG bonesmasher that sadly deleted his youtube account. His face tho... looked like that picture on the thread. Ew.
 
First.
It’s not bone remodeling:
Adult chin bone has NO growth plates and it cannot grow outward from a single trauma.

What is it then?:
Scar tissue / organized hematoma / adaptive tissue from the trauma. Dense collagen forms during healing and can feel rock-hard.
View attachment 4545993View attachment 4546011
This can last years or even a lifetime.

So, good?, if you are willing to risk not feeling anything in whatever area you're hitting due to nerve damage.


If your jaw/chin muscles or fascia are under tension or mild daily load, they can thicken slightly.
This gives a firmer feel but is still soft tissue, not bone. Scar tissue usually feels firm but slightly irregular, may be tethered to skin, and is painless.

Bone would be rigid, immovable, and not change with facial expression.
Bone is already rigid and immovable dude
 

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