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World Smile Day - How Smiling Affects

Your Brain

Few things can brighten someone’s dreary day like a well-placed smile.
Whether it’s the barista who handed you your morning coffee or a friend
or coworker flashing their pearly whites, smiling is an easy way to improve
not only the world around you, but the feelings within you as well. And
because today is World Smile Day (the first Friday in October each year),
we’d like to dive into what exactly happens in the mind when you smile.
Let’s start with the brain chemistry. Smiling activates tiny molecules in
your brain that are designed to fend off stress. These molecules, called
neuropeptides, facilitate communication between neurons in your brain.
Also, when you smile, your brain releases dopamine, endorphins and
serotonin. These neurotransmitters are associated with lowering your
anxiety and increasing feelings of happiness. In fact, serotonin is often the
chemical that anti-depressant medications attempt to regulate. This
natural, feel-good chemical cocktail that your brain serves up helps you
feel happier and more relaxed, and it can even lower your heart rate and
blood pressure.
If that wasn’t enough, how would you like to be more attractive? You don’t
have to plan any exercise routine or put on fancy clothing – all you have to
do is put on a smile. A study at a Scotland University found that those who
smiled and made eye contact were consistently rated higher on the
attractiveness scale than those who didn’t.
We’ve all heard that smiling is contagious, but is that just an old cliché or is
it true? The part of your brain that aides in smiling when happy or
mimicking someone’s smile resides in an unconscious automatic response
area. In other words, smiling truly is contagious. When someone smiles at
you, you are behaviorally and psychologically conditioned to return the
favor. Or when you’re feeling happy, you have to make a conscious effort
to suppress the smile that unconsciously wants to spread across your
face. And when smiling boosts your mood, makes you more attractive and
can easily spread to others, why would you want to?
Regardless of how you’re feeling today, try putting on a smile and seeing
how it affects your internal and external experience. You might be
pleasantly surprised. It might even put another smile on your face.
Source: https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/cutting-edge-
leadership/201206/there-s-magic-in-your-smile

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