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Smiling Can Boost Your Mood, Even When It’s Forced

FAKE IT TILL YOU MAKE IT! When we’re happy, we smile. The corners of our mouths move out and up, our cheeks lift up and the skin around our eyes…

LauRen And Cash

FAKE IT TILL YOU MAKE IT!

When we’re happy, we smile. The corners of our mouths move out and up, our cheeks lift up and the skin around our eyes crinkles. But according to Stanford University, and scientists smiling, in general, can boost your mood. And a new study of nearly 4-thousand volunteers in 19 countries finds that it can.

An international collaboration of researchers led by Stanford research scientist Nicholas Coles wanted to know whether facial expressions influence our emotional experience, a concept known as the facial feedback hypothesis. Based on their studies, they found that smiling - even forced smiles - can, in fact, make us feel happier. So why does it work? Coles says the mechanics of that aren’t yet known, but one possible explanation is that “if you activate a smile, the peripheral nervous system tells the rest of the system that happiness is happening and it tries to catch up.”

So when people’s facial muscles come together to form a smile - even if they’re not thinking about smiling - something in the mind-body connection results in the feeling of happiness. While the effect isn’t strong enough to overcome something intense like depression, there’s really no downside to trying it. “Smiling in hopes it will make you feel happier is probably worth a shot,” Coles explains. “It’s not going to cost you anything and maybe it will work.”

written by
LauRen Merola Strager is a former NFL & NBA cheerleader turned radio host. LauRen is a former Miss Pennsylvania USA and is a proud wife and mother of two. She is the owner and chief editor for her fashion and lifestyle Blog “All Of The F-Words” and is a champion for the Autism community. You can read all about LauRen’s thoughts on motherhood, pageant life, and everyday life through her online content.