Eye area and zygos changing

fortniteLover5

fortniteLover5

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I started having insane pains in my face over the last few weeks and I also began bonesmashing (thougg I don’t think that’s the cause) and my eye area and zygos changed insanely. I’m 17 so still in puberty but idk why the change was quite drastic and I’m worried I look too uncanny now. Lmk if it was an ascension or descension
 

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  • JFL
Reactions: Sceptical
Btw the first pic is 7 months old
 
jfl another grey fell for the bonesmash propaganda
 
jfl another grey fell for the bonesmash propaganda
I do it as a temporary softmaxx to puff out my zygos before scgool or brfore I go out ik it doesn’t actually change bones
 
  • JFL
Reactions: Sceptical
jfl another grey fell for the bonesmash propaganda
ik it doesn’t actually change bones

Between 1975 and 1980, a study was conducted on 56 forearms from rodeo contestants, including 8 high school students, 6 amateurs, and 42 professionals. Among the professionals, there were 6 saddle bronc riders and 36 bareback riders, some of whom also rode bulls. X-rays were taken of both forearms.

The surprising finding? Ulna hypertrophy occurred only in all professional bareback riders, and was not seen in saddle bronc riders or high school contestants, and was minimal in amateurs.

The reason?
The reason is that bareback riding forces the rider to hold the horse with only one hand, while the forearm stays pressed against the pelvis and the chaps throughout the ride. Each movement of the horse makes the ulna strike the pelvis continuously and directly (as if the bone is being hit directly). This happens due to trauma (the scientists used this exact term), meaning very strong, repeated impacts over a period of time.


Interestingly, this extreme bone hypertrophy occurred after only about eight seconds of mechanical loading per ride!
 
well you didn't look good before and don't look good after
 
Between 1975 and 1980, a study was conducted on 56 forearms from rodeo contestants, including 8 high school students, 6 amateurs, and 42 professionals. Among the professionals, there were 6 saddle bronc riders and 36 bareback riders, some of whom also rode bulls. X-rays were taken of both forearms.

The surprising finding? Ulna hypertrophy occurred only in all professional bareback riders, and was not seen in saddle bronc riders or high school contestants, and was minimal in amateurs.

The reason?
The reason is that bareback riding forces the rider to hold the horse with only one hand, while the forearm stays pressed against the pelvis and the chaps throughout the ride. Each movement of the horse makes the ulna strike the pelvis continuously and directly (as if the bone is being hit directly). This happens due to trauma (the scientists used this exact term), meaning very strong, repeated impacts over a period of time.


Interestingly, this extreme bone hypertrophy occurred after only about eight seconds of mechanical loading per ride!
Wow so bonesmashing does work, I thought wolfs law was more for tension put on bones not direct hitting and fracturing hinestly, I doubt it did make much of a difference as I think it was just puberty but maybe it did change my structure
 
well you didn't look good before and don't look good after
You look genuinely disgusting and acne ridden no girl would ever want you jfl I mog you to gandy
 

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