Renaming bonesmashing

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The name brings to mind a caveman smashing his face with a rock. I honestly think the name is why it's such a polarizing technique. Rather, it is one of the most well-established techniques.

Most of you are aware of Wolff's Law, which is very vague and simply states that bone adapts to loads, most sources are vague on whether this adaption is in width or density. We are of course interested in width, increasing the volume of bone.

Appositional growth is exactly that, an increase in width due to load.

Even though bones stop growing in length in early adulthood, they can continue to increase in thickness or diameter throughout life in response to stress from increased muscle activity or to weight. The increase in diameter is called appositional growth. Osteoblasts in the periosteum form compact bone around the external bone surface. At the same time, osteoclasts in the endosteum break down bone on the internal bone surface, around the medullary cavity. These two processes together increase the diameter of the bone and, at the same time, keep the bone from becoming excessively heavy and bulky.


Different bones respond differently. Force to facial bones is actually pretty rare in the day to day, the only people who see that kind of force are professional fighters and some contact sport athletes. Anecdotally speaking, these people usually have more bone mass in their face.

Now this load to facial bones could be done in several different ways. The most common, and the one that comes to mind when hearing bone smashing is to just strike the face. I would argue though that striking is unnecessary, rather force could be applied just as effectively from a clamping or rubbing motion. Making the "smashing" part of bonesmashing a misnomer.
 
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BoneSymmetry Therapy
 
bone sculpting >>
 
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name it something abhorrent, so that it automatically gatekeeps normies and other people from trying it
 
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name it something abhorrent, so that it automatically gatekeeps normies and other people from trying it
Exactly, OP we need to continue to have shit like eyelid pulling and bone smashing be completely retarded to normies, so they never ascend.
 
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I bonesmashed my cock in hot water that shit grew 12 inches no joke
 
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bone jews
btw this is not an antisemitic remark it is simply a humorous reference to the fact that this name would sound increasingly confusing to normies
 
The name brings to mind a caveman smashing his face with a rock. I honestly think the name is why it's such a polarizing technique. Rather, it is one of the most well-established techniques.

Most of you are aware of Wolff's Law, which is very vague and simply states that bone adapts to loads, most sources are vague on whether this adaption is in width or density. We are of course interested in width, increasing the volume of bone.

Appositional growth is exactly that, an increase in width due to load.

Even though bones stop growing in length in early adulthood, they can continue to increase in thickness or diameter throughout life in response to stress from increased muscle activity or to weight. The increase in diameter is called appositional growth. Osteoblasts in the periosteum form compact bone around the external bone surface. At the same time, osteoclasts in the endosteum break down bone on the internal bone surface, around the medullary cavity. These two processes together increase the diameter of the bone and, at the same time, keep the bone from becoming excessively heavy and bulky.


Different bones respond differently. Force to facial bones is actually pretty rare in the day to day, the only people who see that kind of force are professional fighters and some contact sport athletes. Anecdotally speaking, these people usually have more bone mass in their face.

Now this load to facial bones could be done in several different ways. The most common, and the one that comes to mind when hearing bone smashing is to just strike the face. I would argue though that striking is unnecessary, rather force could be applied just as effectively from a clamping or rubbing motion. Making the "smashing" part of bonesmashing a misnomer.
Skibbidy boneing
 

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