Modified Chewing Patterns

Martian

Martian

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MODIFIED CHEWING
The jaw elevator muscles develop the main forces used in mastication. The force generated during routine mastication of food such as carrots or meat is about 70 to 150 newtons (16 to 34 lbf). The maximum masticatory force in some people may reach up to 500 to 700 newtons (110 to 160 lbf). Being consistent we can train to be able chew 5+ pieces of hard gum Falim and build up the strength of our masseters from constant chewing, it is not unreasonable to expect to be able to exert 350+ Newtons of force per mastication.

To compare how significant this is maxilla protraction is generally done with 10 Newtons, and the tongue can exert around 5 while hard mewing, so it is safe to say that chewing is 60x more force than your tongue, making it an extremely potent change for actual bone change, many people when thinking of chewing only look at it as a way to build masseters, but this is simply a bonus.

Daily spurts of cyclic load caused sutural strain throughout the skull. The regime likely enhances suture growth and may be therapeutically useful.

This means that sutural growth is possible from forces that only take place for few minutes a day, and sutural growth is essentially what you need to make change in bone, past age 12 the sutures begin mature (and while they don’t fuse till very late in life, they become very hard to stimulate growth from), chewing opens up an opportunity with the insanely high forces as a gateway to awaken these dormant sutures.

While that should have provided some helpful background info on chewing, this is part of the thread that will help you actually change your bone, based on your method(s) of chewing, you can get any of the following assuming you follow the proper protocol:

  • Decreased midface length (or increase if your midface is overly compact)
  • Increasing orbitals more compact
  • Making cheekbones higherset
  • Increasing forward growth (maximizing really)
  • Can make your sutures more responsive to generating new growth
  • Remodels the jawbone itsself to be more robust

There is also the possibility of increasing the length of your maxilla laterally, some studies also talk about the association of masseter muscles and maxillary transverse width.

The chewing exercises and their function in question:
1706292763495

  • Decreasing midface length- chew with the incisors
  • Increasing midface length- chew with back molars
  • Making cheekbones higherset- chew with first molar to first premolar
  • Making orbitals more compact- chew with first molar to first premolar and incisors
  • Maximizing forward growth- chew with the incisors
  • Weakening sutures for moving the maxilla forward (will give much quicker mewing/facepulling results)- chew with incisors
  • Remodelling mandible to be more robust- any chewing method will give this change
You can combine methods as long as they dont contradict each other, incisor chewing vs back molar chewing, personally i will be chewing falim for one hour on incisors and one hour on my molar-premolar for an hour as well.

Mechanisms: Chewing on your incisors will apply an upward force to the anterior part of the maxilla inducing a CCW(counter clockwise rotation) rotation, while inversely molar chewing will cause a CW maxilla rotation, CCW rotation will also move the orbitals upwards

The upper/middle part of the maxilla are located relatively at around the center of the maxilla (the center of resistance is here as well), meaning that for a upwards translation of the cheekbones you need to chew with the teeth located in the middle part of the maxilla, as tipping the ends will not influence the center, this is the same mechanism that pertains to the orbitals becoming more compact, as the maxilla translates upward, so do the orbitals and zygos which will lead to highset zygos + more compact orbitals

Since when developing we are lacking the support of the tongue which would cause us to grow vetically instead of forward, we all have a bit of CW rotation built into us, when there is CW rotation it lessens forward growth, by correcting it you will gain forward growth as well, it is similar to gaining height from fixing posture, you aren't actually growing, just maximizing what you have.
 
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  • Decreased midface length (or increase if your midface is overly compact)
  • Increasing orbitals more compact
  • Making cheekbones higherset
  • Increasing forward growth (maximizing really)
  • Can make your sutures more responsive to generating new growth
  • Remodels the jawbone itsself to be more robust

  • Decreasing midface length- chew with the incisors
  • Increasing midface length- chew with back molars
  • Making cheekbones higherset- chew with first molar to first premolar
  • Making orbitals more compact- chew with first molar to first premolar and incisors
  • Maximizing forward growth- chew with the incisors
  • Weakening sutures for moving the maxilla forward (will give much quicker mewing/facepulling results)- chew with incisors
  • Remodelling mandible to be more robust- any chewing method will give this change
Would you know if any of that changes with a different type of bite/occlusion? I have a deep bite/overbite and I'm not sure if the logic would be different due to that. Great post btw.
 
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good post, seems high IQ since ur using physics terms. But seems to good to be true ill try anyways
 
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how much time i chew in each one?
 
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I use mastic gum which is harder than falim
If you say use 5 pieces of falim gum then how many average size pieces of mastic gum shall I use boss?
 
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I use mastic gum which is harder than falim
If you say use 5 pieces of falim gum then how many average size pieces of mastic gum shall I use boss?
1 falim gum is 1.4 grams
 
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should i do this while im in puberty
 
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also great thread op
 
Mike mew actually advises chewing hard for 2 hours when expanding maxillas of adults
 
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MODIFIED CHEWING
The jaw elevator muscles develop the main forces used in mastication. The force generated during routine mastication of food such as carrots or meat is about 70 to 150 newtons (16 to 34 lbf). The maximum masticatory force in some people may reach up to 500 to 700 newtons (110 to 160 lbf). Being consistent we can train to be able chew 5+ pieces of hard gum Falim and build up the strength of our masseters from constant chewing, it is not unreasonable to expect to be able to exert 350+ Newtons of force per mastication.

To compare how significant this is maxilla protraction is generally done with 10 Newtons, and the tongue can exert around 5 while hard mewing, so it is safe to say that chewing is 60x more force than your tongue, making it an extremely potent change for actual bone change, many people when thinking of chewing only look at it as a way to build masseters, but this is simply a bonus.

Daily spurts of cyclic load caused sutural strain throughout the skull. The regime likely enhances suture growth and may be therapeutically useful.

This means that sutural growth is possible from forces that only take place for few minutes a day, and sutural growth is essentially what you need to make change in bone, past age 12 the sutures begin mature (and while they don’t fuse till very late in life, they become very hard to stimulate growth from), chewing opens up an opportunity with the insanely high forces as a gateway to awaken these dormant sutures.

While that should have provided some helpful background info on chewing, this is part of the thread that will help you actually change your bone, based on your method(s) of chewing, you can get any of the following assuming you follow the proper protocol:

  • Decreased midface length (or increase if your midface is overly compact)
  • Increasing orbitals more compact
  • Making cheekbones higherset
  • Increasing forward growth (maximizing really)
  • Can make your sutures more responsive to generating new growth
  • Remodels the jawbone itsself to be more robust

There is also the possibility of increasing the length of your maxilla laterally, some studies also talk about the association of masseter muscles and maxillary transverse width.

The chewing exercises and their function in question:
View attachment 2702232
  • Decreasing midface length- chew with the incisors
  • Increasing midface length- chew with back molars
  • Making cheekbones higherset- chew with first molar to first premolar
  • Making orbitals more compact- chew with first molar to first premolar and incisors
  • Maximizing forward growth- chew with the incisors
  • Weakening sutures for moving the maxilla forward (will give much quicker mewing/facepulling results)- chew with incisors
  • Remodelling mandible to be more robust- any chewing method will give this change
You can combine methods as long as they dont contradict each other, incisor chewing vs back molar chewing, personally i will be chewing falim for one hour on incisors and one hour on my molar-premolar for an hour as well.

Mechanisms: Chewing on your incisors will apply an upward force to the anterior part of the maxilla inducing a CCW(counter clockwise rotation) rotation, while inversely molar chewing will cause a CW maxilla rotation, CCW rotation will also move the orbitals upwards

The upper/middle part of the maxilla are located relatively at around the center of the maxilla (the center of resistance is here as well), meaning that for a upwards translation of the cheekbones you need to chew with the teeth located in the middle part of the maxilla, as tipping the ends will not influence the center, this is the same mechanism that pertains to the orbitals becoming more compact, as the maxilla translates upward, so do the orbitals and zygos which will lead to highset zygos + more compact orbitals

Since when developing we are lacking the support of the tongue which would cause us to grow vetically instead of forward, we all have a bit of CW rotation built into us, when there is CW rotation it lessens forward growth, by correcting it you will gain forward growth as well, it is similar to gaining height from fixing posture, you aren't actually growing, just maximizing what you have.
Raw meat
66DDB3AE F200 47AE B2A2 C62717B6F4CE
 
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How does one chew with the incisors
 
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MODIFIED CHEWING
The jaw elevator muscles develop the main forces used in mastication. The force generated during routine mastication of food such as carrots or meat is about 70 to 150 newtons (16 to 34 lbf). The maximum masticatory force in some people may reach up to 500 to 700 newtons (110 to 160 lbf). Being consistent we can train to be able chew 5+ pieces of hard gum Falim and build up the strength of our masseters from constant chewing, it is not unreasonable to expect to be able to exert 350+ Newtons of force per mastication.

To compare how significant this is maxilla protraction is generally done with 10 Newtons, and the tongue can exert around 5 while hard mewing, so it is safe to say that chewing is 60x more force than your tongue, making it an extremely potent change for actual bone change, many people when thinking of chewing only look at it as a way to build masseters, but this is simply a bonus.

Daily spurts of cyclic load caused sutural strain throughout the skull. The regime likely enhances suture growth and may be therapeutically useful.

This means that sutural growth is possible from forces that only take place for few minutes a day, and sutural growth is essentially what you need to make change in bone, past age 12 the sutures begin mature (and while they don’t fuse till very late in life, they become very hard to stimulate growth from), chewing opens up an opportunity with the insanely high forces as a gateway to awaken these dormant sutures.

While that should have provided some helpful background info on chewing, this is part of the thread that will help you actually change your bone, based on your method(s) of chewing, you can get any of the following assuming you follow the proper protocol:

  • Decreased midface length (or increase if your midface is overly compact)
  • Increasing orbitals more compact
  • Making cheekbones higherset
  • Increasing forward growth (maximizing really)
  • Can make your sutures more responsive to generating new growth
  • Remodels the jawbone itsself to be more robust

There is also the possibility of increasing the length of your maxilla laterally, some studies also talk about the association of masseter muscles and maxillary transverse width.

The chewing exercises and their function in question:
View attachment 2702232
  • Decreasing midface length- chew with the incisors
  • Increasing midface length- chew with back molars
  • Making cheekbones higherset- chew with first molar to first premolar
  • Making orbitals more compact- chew with first molar to first premolar and incisors
  • Maximizing forward growth- chew with the incisors
  • Weakening sutures for moving the maxilla forward (will give much quicker mewing/facepulling results)- chew with incisors
  • Remodelling mandible to be more robust- any chewing method will give this change
You can combine methods as long as they dont contradict each other, incisor chewing vs back molar chewing, personally i will be chewing falim for one hour on incisors and one hour on my molar-premolar for an hour as well.

Mechanisms: Chewing on your incisors will apply an upward force to the anterior part of the maxilla inducing a CCW(counter clockwise rotation) rotation, while inversely molar chewing will cause a CW maxilla rotation, CCW rotation will also move the orbitals upwards

The upper/middle part of the maxilla are located relatively at around the center of the maxilla (the center of resistance is here as well), meaning that for a upwards translation of the cheekbones you need to chew with the teeth located in the middle part of the maxilla, as tipping the ends will not influence the center, this is the same mechanism that pertains to the orbitals becoming more compact, as the maxilla translates upward, so do the orbitals and zygos which will lead to highset zygos + more compact orbitals

Since when developing we are lacking the support of the tongue which would cause us to grow vetically instead of forward, we all have a bit of CW rotation built into us, when there is CW rotation it lessens forward growth, by correcting it you will gain forward growth as well, it is similar to gaining height from fixing posture, you aren't actually growing, just maximizing what you have.
tldr: chew with incisors
 
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Summary, chew hard gum/ always try to chew with incisors when you can.

Also, where did this research come from? there is no source linked?
 
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arent you supposed to tear off with incisors and chew with molars?
 
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MODIFIED CHEWING
The jaw elevator muscles develop the main forces used in mastication. The force generated during routine mastication of food such as carrots or meat is about 70 to 150 newtons (16 to 34 lbf). The maximum masticatory force in some people may reach up to 500 to 700 newtons (110 to 160 lbf). Being consistent we can train to be able chew 5+ pieces of hard gum Falim and build up the strength of our masseters from constant chewing, it is not unreasonable to expect to be able to exert 350+ Newtons of force per mastication.

To compare how significant this is maxilla protraction is generally done with 10 Newtons, and the tongue can exert around 5 while hard mewing, so it is safe to say that chewing is 60x more force than your tongue, making it an extremely potent change for actual bone change, many people when thinking of chewing only look at it as a way to build masseters, but this is simply a bonus.

Daily spurts of cyclic load caused sutural strain throughout the skull. The regime likely enhances suture growth and may be therapeutically useful.

This means that sutural growth is possible from forces that only take place for few minutes a day, and sutural growth is essentially what you need to make change in bone, past age 12 the sutures begin mature (and while they don’t fuse till very late in life, they become very hard to stimulate growth from), chewing opens up an opportunity with the insanely high forces as a gateway to awaken these dormant sutures.

While that should have provided some helpful background info on chewing, this is part of the thread that will help you actually change your bone, based on your method(s) of chewing, you can get any of the following assuming you follow the proper protocol:

  • Decreased midface length (or increase if your midface is overly compact)
  • Increasing orbitals more compact
  • Making cheekbones higherset
  • Increasing forward growth (maximizing really)
  • Can make your sutures more responsive to generating new growth
  • Remodels the jawbone itsself to be more robust

There is also the possibility of increasing the length of your maxilla laterally, some studies also talk about the association of masseter muscles and maxillary transverse width.

The chewing exercises and their function in question:
View attachment 2702232
  • Decreasing midface length- chew with the incisors
  • Increasing midface length- chew with back molars
  • Making cheekbones higherset- chew with first molar to first premolar
  • Making orbitals more compact- chew with first molar to first premolar and incisors
  • Maximizing forward growth- chew with the incisors
  • Weakening sutures for moving the maxilla forward (will give much quicker mewing/facepulling results)- chew with incisors
  • Remodelling mandible to be more robust- any chewing method will give this change
You can combine methods as long as they dont contradict each other, incisor chewing vs back molar chewing, personally i will be chewing falim for one hour on incisors and one hour on my molar-premolar for an hour as well.

Mechanisms: Chewing on your incisors will apply an upward force to the anterior part of the maxilla inducing a CCW(counter clockwise rotation) rotation, while inversely molar chewing will cause a CW maxilla rotation, CCW rotation will also move the orbitals upwards

The upper/middle part of the maxilla are located relatively at around the center of the maxilla (the center of resistance is here as well), meaning that for a upwards translation of the cheekbones you need to chew with the teeth located in the middle part of the maxilla, as tipping the ends will not influence the center, this is the same mechanism that pertains to the orbitals becoming more compact, as the maxilla translates upward, so do the orbitals and zygos which will lead to highset zygos + more compact orbitals

Since when developing we are lacking the support of the tongue which would cause us to grow vetically instead of forward, we all have a bit of CW rotation built into us, when there is CW rotation it lessens forward growth, by correcting it you will gain forward growth as well, it is similar to gaining height from fixing posture, you aren't actually growing, just maximizing what you have.
For this to work you either have to do this for most part of puberty starting very early at age of 10 or somehow make it when you chew that only your targeted bone takes the energy generated whole (impossible since your whole face is connected and you are targeting a bone and not a muscle) chewing can help maximize genetic potential in puberty and grow you masseters nothing else unless you are very young.
 
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For this to work you either have to do this for most part of puberty starting very early at age of 10 or somehow make it when you chew that only your targeted bone takes the energy generated whole (impossible since your whole face is connected and you are targeting a bone and not a muscle) chewing can help maximize genetic potential in puberty and grow you masseters nothing else unless you are very young.
does chewing woRk foR masseter hypertrophy after puberty? I want to increase bigonial width
 
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does chewing woRk foR masseter hypertrophy after puberty? I want to increase bigonial width
Yes but masseter insertions that look good are very rare and are mainly connected, for instance if you are recessed theres 90% chance they won't look good.
 
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will this lead to hypertrophy in the rest of the facial muscles?
 
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For this to work you either have to do this for most part of puberty starting very early at age of 10 or somehow make it when you chew that only your targeted bone takes the energy generated whole (impossible since your whole face is connected and you are targeting a bone and not a muscle) chewing can help maximize genetic potential in puberty and grow you masseters nothing else unless you are very young.
Thats not correct actually. Some skull sutures dont close until 30-40 years. Some fuse at a younger age tho of about 20.
 
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MODIFIED CHEWING
The jaw elevator muscles develop the main forces used in mastication. The force generated during routine mastication of food such as carrots or meat is about 70 to 150 newtons (16 to 34 lbf). The maximum masticatory force in some people may reach up to 500 to 700 newtons (110 to 160 lbf). Being consistent we can train to be able chew 5+ pieces of hard gum Falim and build up the strength of our masseters from constant chewing, it is not unreasonable to expect to be able to exert 350+ Newtons of force per mastication.

To compare how significant this is maxilla protraction is generally done with 10 Newtons, and the tongue can exert around 5 while hard mewing, so it is safe to say that chewing is 60x more force than your tongue, making it an extremely potent change for actual bone change, many people when thinking of chewing only look at it as a way to build masseters, but this is simply a bonus.

Daily spurts of cyclic load caused sutural strain throughout the skull. The regime likely enhances suture growth and may be therapeutically useful.

This means that sutural growth is possible from forces that only take place for few minutes a day, and sutural growth is essentially what you need to make change in bone, past age 12 the sutures begin mature (and while they don’t fuse till very late in life, they become very hard to stimulate growth from), chewing opens up an opportunity with the insanely high forces as a gateway to awaken these dormant sutures.

While that should have provided some helpful background info on chewing, this is part of the thread that will help you actually change your bone, based on your method(s) of chewing, you can get any of the following assuming you follow the proper protocol:

  • Decreased midface length (or increase if your midface is overly compact)
  • Increasing orbitals more compact
  • Making cheekbones higherset
  • Increasing forward growth (maximizing really)
  • Can make your sutures more responsive to generating new growth
  • Remodels the jawbone itsself to be more robust

There is also the possibility of increasing the length of your maxilla laterally, some studies also talk about the association of masseter muscles and maxillary transverse width.

The chewing exercises and their function in question:
View attachment 2702232
  • Decreasing midface length- chew with the incisors
  • Increasing midface length- chew with back molars
  • Making cheekbones higherset- chew with first molar to first premolar
  • Making orbitals more compact- chew with first molar to first premolar and incisors
  • Maximizing forward growth- chew with the incisors
  • Weakening sutures for moving the maxilla forward (will give much quicker mewing/facepulling results)- chew with incisors
  • Remodelling mandible to be more robust- any chewing method will give this change
You can combine methods as long as they dont contradict each other, incisor chewing vs back molar chewing, personally i will be chewing falim for one hour on incisors and one hour on my molar-premolar for an hour as well.

Mechanisms: Chewing on your incisors will apply an upward force to the anterior part of the maxilla inducing a CCW(counter clockwise rotation) rotation, while inversely molar chewing will cause a CW maxilla rotation, CCW rotation will also move the orbitals upwards

The upper/middle part of the maxilla are located relatively at around the center of the maxilla (the center of resistance is here as well), meaning that for a upwards translation of the cheekbones you need to chew with the teeth located in the middle part of the maxilla, as tipping the ends will not influence the center, this is the same mechanism that pertains to the orbitals becoming more compact, as the maxilla translates upward, so do the orbitals and zygos which will lead to highset zygos + more compact orbitals

Since when developing we are lacking the support of the tongue which would cause us to grow vetically instead of forward, we all have a bit of CW rotation built into us, when there is CW rotation it lessens forward growth, by correcting it you will gain forward growth as well, it is similar to gaining height from fixing posture, you aren't actually growing, just maximizing what you have.
good thread but what do you mean with that "
  • chew with first molar to first premolar and incisors"
 
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theyre different teeth
yea but how do u do it do u first chew with molar to premolar to incisior or do u do all at once somehow
 
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theyre different teeth
yea but how do u do it, u said first do it with molar then premolar and incisor, do you do it all at once somehow or first go molar, then premolar and incisor then switch to other side?
 
yea but how do u do it, u said first do it with molar then premolar and incisor, do you do it all at once somehow or first go molar, then premolar and incisor then switch to other side?
No its not a sequence you chew in. With for example ”first molar” im reffering to the first molar meaning the molar closest to the front. When there is different teeth mentioned im saying chewing with any of these teeth could cause that specific result
 
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MODIFIED CHEWING
The jaw elevator muscles develop the main forces used in mastication. The force generated during routine mastication of food such as carrots or meat is about 70 to 150 newtons (16 to 34 lbf). The maximum masticatory force in some people may reach up to 500 to 700 newtons (110 to 160 lbf). Being consistent we can train to be able chew 5+ pieces of hard gum Falim and build up the strength of our masseters from constant chewing, it is not unreasonable to expect to be able to exert 350+ Newtons of force per mastication.

To compare how significant this is maxilla protraction is generally done with 10 Newtons, and the tongue can exert around 5 while hard mewing, so it is safe to say that chewing is 60x more force than your tongue, making it an extremely potent change for actual bone change, many people when thinking of chewing only look at it as a way to build masseters, but this is simply a bonus.

Daily spurts of cyclic load caused sutural strain throughout the skull. The regime likely enhances suture growth and may be therapeutically useful.

This means that sutural growth is possible from forces that only take place for few minutes a day, and sutural growth is essentially what you need to make change in bone, past age 12 the sutures begin mature (and while they don’t fuse till very late in life, they become very hard to stimulate growth from), chewing opens up an opportunity with the insanely high forces as a gateway to awaken these dormant sutures.

While that should have provided some helpful background info on chewing, this is part of the thread that will help you actually change your bone, based on your method(s) of chewing, you can get any of the following assuming you follow the proper protocol:

  • Decreased midface length (or increase if your midface is overly compact)
  • Increasing orbitals more compact
  • Making cheekbones higherset
  • Increasing forward growth (maximizing really)
  • Can make your sutures more responsive to generating new growth
  • Remodels the jawbone itsself to be more robust

There is also the possibility of increasing the length of your maxilla laterally, some studies also talk about the association of masseter muscles and maxillary transverse width.

The chewing exercises and their function in question:
View attachment 2702232
  • Decreasing midface length- chew with the incisors
  • Increasing midface length- chew with back molars
  • Making cheekbones higherset- chew with first molar to first premolar
  • Making orbitals more compact- chew with first molar to first premolar and incisors
  • Maximizing forward growth- chew with the incisors
  • Weakening sutures for moving the maxilla forward (will give much quicker mewing/facepulling results)- chew with incisors
  • Remodelling mandible to be more robust- any chewing method will give this change
You can combine methods as long as they dont contradict each other, incisor chewing vs back molar chewing, personally i will be chewing falim for one hour on incisors and one hour on my molar-premolar for an hour as well.

Mechanisms: Chewing on your incisors will apply an upward force to the anterior part of the maxilla inducing a CCW(counter clockwise rotation) rotation, while inversely molar chewing will cause a CW maxilla rotation, CCW rotation will also move the orbitals upwards

The upper/middle part of the maxilla are located relatively at around the center of the maxilla (the center of resistance is here as well), meaning that for a upwards translation of the cheekbones you need to chew with the teeth located in the middle part of the maxilla, as tipping the ends will not influence the center, this is the same mechanism that pertains to the orbitals becoming more compact, as the maxilla translates upward, so do the orbitals and zygos which will lead to highset zygos + more compact orbitals

Since when developing we are lacking the support of the tongue which would cause us to grow vetically instead of forward, we all have a bit of CW rotation built into us, when there is CW rotation it lessens forward growth, by correcting it you will gain forward growth as well, it is similar to gaining height from fixing posture, you aren't actually growing, just maximizing what you have.
Do you check with open or closed mouth'+
 
The chewing exercises and their function in question:
  • Decreasing midface length- chew with the incisors
  • Increasing midface length- chew with back molars
  • Making cheekbones higherset- chew with first molar to first premolar
  • Making orbitals more compact- chew with first molar to first premolar and incisors
  • Maximizing forward growth- chew with the incisors
  • Weakening sutures for moving the maxilla forward (will give much quicker mewing/facepulling results)- chew with incisors
  • Remodelling mandible to be more robust- any chewing method will give this change
Complete nonsense. First of all its not even possible to chew on one specific tooth. Second its completely idiotic to think that where you chew the gum in your mouth will have some crazy discrepancy in effect to the point where the back molars will increase midface length and first molar will make orbitals more compact. Zero science, zero proof, not even any logical mechanism of action. 100% bullshit larping
 
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MODIFIED CHEWING
The jaw elevator muscles develop the main forces used in mastication. The force generated during routine mastication of food such as carrots or meat is about 70 to 150 newtons (16 to 34 lbf). The maximum masticatory force in some people may reach up to 500 to 700 newtons (110 to 160 lbf). Being consistent we can train to be able chew 5+ pieces of hard gum Falim and build up the strength of our masseters from constant chewing, it is not unreasonable to expect to be able to exert 350+ Newtons of force per mastication.

To compare how significant this is maxilla protraction is generally done with 10 Newtons, and the tongue can exert around 5 while hard mewing, so it is safe to say that chewing is 60x more force than your tongue, making it an extremely potent change for actual bone change, many people when thinking of chewing only look at it as a way to build masseters, but this is simply a bonus.

Daily spurts of cyclic load caused sutural strain throughout the skull. The regime likely enhances suture growth and may be therapeutically useful.

This means that sutural growth is possible from forces that only take place for few minutes a day, and sutural growth is essentially what you need to make change in bone, past age 12 the sutures begin mature (and while they don’t fuse till very late in life, they become very hard to stimulate growth from), chewing opens up an opportunity with the insanely high forces as a gateway to awaken these dormant sutures.

While that should have provided some helpful background info on chewing, this is part of the thread that will help you actually change your bone, based on your method(s) of chewing, you can get any of the following assuming you follow the proper protocol:

  • Decreased midface length (or increase if your midface is overly compact)
  • Increasing orbitals more compact
  • Making cheekbones higherset
  • Increasing forward growth (maximizing really)
  • Can make your sutures more responsive to generating new growth
  • Remodels the jawbone itsself to be more robust

There is also the possibility of increasing the length of your maxilla laterally, some studies also talk about the association of masseter muscles and maxillary transverse width.

The chewing exercises and their function in question:
View attachment 2702232
  • Decreasing midface length- chew with the incisors
  • Increasing midface length- chew with back molars
  • Making cheekbones higherset- chew with first molar to first premolar
  • Making orbitals more compact- chew with first molar to first premolar and incisors
  • Maximizing forward growth- chew with the incisors
  • Weakening sutures for moving the maxilla forward (will give much quicker mewing/facepulling results)- chew with incisors
  • Remodelling mandible to be more robust- any chewing method will give this change
You can combine methods as long as they dont contradict each other, incisor chewing vs back molar chewing, personally i will be chewing falim for one hour on incisors and one hour on my molar-premolar for an hour as well.

Mechanisms: Chewing on your incisors will apply an upward force to the anterior part of the maxilla inducing a CCW(counter clockwise rotation) rotation, while inversely molar chewing will cause a CW maxilla rotation, CCW rotation will also move the orbitals upwards

The upper/middle part of the maxilla are located relatively at around the center of the maxilla (the center of resistance is here as well), meaning that for a upwards translation of the cheekbones you need to chew with the teeth located in the middle part of the maxilla, as tipping the ends will not influence the center, this is the same mechanism that pertains to the orbitals becoming more compact, as the maxilla translates upward, so do the orbitals and zygos which will lead to highset zygos + more compact orbitals

Since when developing we are lacking the support of the tongue which would cause us to grow vetically instead of forward, we all have a bit of CW rotation built into us, when there is CW rotation it lessens forward growth, by correcting it you will gain forward growth as well, it is similar to gaining height from fixing posture, you aren't actually growing, just maximizing what you have.
I am going to try this seriously as I have a gap year straight thumb pulling (8 times a day 1-3 minutes per session realistically I’ll probably do 6 some or 5 some days tho) mewing 24/7 obviously, mouth tape and incisor chewing for 2-3 hours a day with mastic gum I will report back as atleast one of these should in theory work (age 16)
 
Complete nonsense. First of all it’s not even possible to chew on one specific tooth. Second its completely idiotic to think that where you chew the gum in your mouth will have some crazy discrepancy in effect to the point where the back molars will increase midface length and first molar will make orbitals more compact. Zero science, zero proof, not even any logical mechanism of action. 100% bullshit larping
I think same I only think thumb pulling and mewing to decrease mid face I don’t understand how incisor chewing is applying a force on the maxilla to move it forward which would obviously shorten the mid face. I am gonna try tho with non cope results with no bs
 
  • +1
Reactions: lowtiernormiechad
I think same I only think thumb pulling and mewing to decrease mid face I don’t understand how incisor chewing is applying a force on the maxilla to move it forward which would obviously shorten the mid face. I am gonna try tho with non cope results with no bs
Any results
 

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