Smiling, like viral infections, is both contagious and prevented by masks. It’s hard not to catch a smile when the person you’re interacting with is in a good mood, but since masks came into style I’ve smiled a lot less. I can’t see anyone’s faces so I’ve caught many fewer smiles, and I’ve smiled less myself--why bother if no one can see it? With the lessening of smiles though, comes less of the benefits of smiling.
And all of this is, of course, on top of the increased anxiety I’ve been feeling anytime I leave my house. With the everyday stress of living through a pandemic, it’s no wonder we’re smiling less.
But laughter is the best medicine, and the health benefits of smiling is a close second. By allowing ourselves to smile less deeply and less frequently, we may have unknowingly been depriving ourselves of an effective solution for our mental and physical health worries.
But what are the benefits of smiling an laughing? Apparently, it's a lot!
Why should I smile?
Reduce Stress
Nothing resolves the tension in a stressful situation like a bit of humor or the thought of a loved one, but the relationship between positive mood and smiling isn’t one-way. We smile when we’re happy, but we also become happy when we smile. Recent research has shown that faking a smile while performing stressful tasks has comparable stress relief and recovery benefits to a genuine smile. Another study has found that the benefits of smiling and laughing before or after negative self-thoughts can reduce negative mood and boost positive mood.
Promote Immunity
When you’re more relaxed and less stressed, your immune system gets a boost, so smiling for increased well-being will land you a healthier immune function too. This is because stress is part of the sympathetic nervous system, better known as the fight-or-flight response, in which all body functions non-essential to immediate survival are put on hold. Those non-essential functions include digestion, immunity and other crucial parts of long-term health. By calming your stress response and activating your parasympathetic, or rest-and-digest, nervous system you can introduce long-term gains in immunity.
Relieve Pain
The release in endorphins caused by smiling leads to a higher pain threshold, and can have relieving effects on both acute and chronic pain. If you want to take less pain-killers, laughter might actually be the answer to your problems. Like it has been said, laughter is in fact the best medicine in some cases.
Boost Mood + Well-being
Smiling when you’re down can trick your body into thinking you’re in a better mood, which actually brings about that better mood. Make a conscious effort to smile more and smile randomly, and you’ll find yourself in a more positive frame of mind.
Fake it until you make it with laughter and smiles, making you an overall happier person than before! If you want a mood boost for a gloomy day and a frown, a smile may actually be the best way to turn a bad day into a much better one than expected!
Build Strong Relationships
People prefer to be around positive individuals, and our facial expressions are the primary way we communicate our positivity. A genuine smile will help you to forge new and stronger relationships. Worried about producing a genuine smile? Follow the advice above and smile your way into a genuinely positive outlook.
Strong relationship should be positive, and if you begin connection with smiles and laughter, there's a better chance that that's how the relationship with carry on, leaving you in an even happier place than before.
Support Longevity
It’s no secret that decreasing your stress levels can boost your overall health, but a 2010 study concluded that the frequency and intensity of your smiles are linked directly to your lifespan.
Smile, laugh and spread positivity to improve your health and achieve a new quality of life. Life should be lived to the fullest, so smile and laugh your heart away!