El “mentón arrebatado”: tendencia estelar del 2023.

Mentón arrebatado

Consigue un mentón arrebatado con DLM (Drenaje Linfático Manual), una técnica utilizada para ayudar con el cuidado postoperatorio después de la cirugía de mentón.

El mentón arrebatado es el look que todo el mundo busca. Si bien existen muchas técnicas que prometen ayudar a esculpir la línea de la mandíbula, la liposucción es una opción muy popular. La liposucción submentoniana es un procedimiento estético que tiene como objetivo eliminar el exceso de grasa localizada debajo del mentón.

If you’re looking for my snatched chin post in English, here it is.

Drenaje Linfático Manual

¿Qué es un mentón arrebatado?

Un mentón arrebatado es una línea de la mandíbula definida y apretada, sin papada ni tambaleo. Ariana Grande y Bella Hadid son dos celebridades que destacan por sus barbillas perfectamente esculpidas, convirtiéndolas en auténticos íconos de la belleza.

Mentón arrebatado - snatched chin

El mentón arrebatado en los medios de comunicación

TikTok

El hashtag #chinlipo en TikTok es muy popular, con más de 60 millones de visitas. Muchos jóvenes creadores de contenido están optando por deshacerse de la papada de forma permanente.

Los filtros de TikTok son geniales y muchos jóvenes son creadores de contenido. Sin embargo, la papada puede ser un problema para algunos.

La Prensa

Incluso el venerable periódico británico “The Guardian” escribió un artículo sobre la tendencia. Aquí está el enlace (se abre en una nueva pestaña)

‘Mandíbula arrebatada’: cómo la barbilla se convirtió en el nuevo punto de presión de la moda

Facebook

Puede ser difícil ver nuestros rostros devolviéndonos la mirada, una y otra vez. Algunas personas eligen procedimientos faciales para verse mejor en cámara. Pamela Madsen, una mujer positiva para el cuerpo si alguna vez hubo una, escribió en una publicación de Facebook de 2021:

 “…pero mi barbilla y mi cuello. No coincidían con mis entrañas. Y me enfrentaba a eso todo el tiempo, ya que paso mucho tiempo frente a la cámara. Durante unos tres años quise una intervención quirúrgica. Y si me han estado siguiendo — Ahora tengo unos 10 días después de la operación. Ya no me siento mal por mi cuello. De hecho, estoy teniendo la reunión más gloriosa con mi perfil. Incluso puedo decir que Amo mi cuello”.

Pamela Madsen, publicación de Facebook, 14 de agosto de 2021.

La apariencia importa, incluso para aquellos de nosotros que sabemos que lo que realmente importa es lo que hay dentro.

La importancia del cuidado posterior

Para obtener ese aspecto levantado, los rellenos inyectables son otra opción. El procedimiento que elija requerirá diferentes cuidados postoperatorios. No estoy calificado para asesorar sobre qué procedimiento es el mejor. Lo que sí sé es que el cuidado postoperatorio de la liposucción de mentón es importante. MLD (drenaje linfático manual) es el tratamiento estándar de oro para la hinchazón de todo tipo. La terapia de oscilación profunda HIVAMAT 200® ayuda a reducir las cicatrices, la inflamación y la hinchazón, facilitando una curación más rápida y menos molestias.

Contáctame para asesoramiento

Contact Rose Tint Your LIfe to make a booking. Contacta conmigo para concertar tu cita de drenaje linfático manual.

Utilice el botón de WhatsApp en la parte inferior derecha para enviarme un mensaje. Estoy felíz de ayudar.

#1 post-op care for Snatched Chin: Miraculous MLD

Snatched Chin

MLD (Manual Lymphatic Drainage) is a technique used to help with post-operative care after chin surgery.

MLD (Manual Lymphatic Drainage) is a technique used to help with post-operative care after chin surgery.

The snatched chin is the look everyone is going for. While there are many techniques that promise to help sculpt your jawline, liposuction is a very popular option. “Submental liposuction” involves the removal of fat deposits below the chin.

The snatched chin in the media

TikTok

“The TikTok hashtag #chinlipo has nearly 60 million views with other young content creators ditching their double chins for good.”

Although the TikTok filters are amazing, and many of the content creators are young, the double chin is prominent, and thus problematic, for some.

The Press

Even the venerable British newspaper “The Guardian” wrote a piece about the trend. Here is the link (opens in a new tab)

‘Snatched jawline’: how the chin became fashion’s new pressure point

Facebook

It can be hard to see our faces staring back at us, over and over. Some people choose facial procedures to look better on camera. Pamela Madsen, a body-positive woman if there ever was one, wrote in a Facebook post from 2021:

“…but my chin and neck. It didn’t match my insides. And I was confronted with it all the time, as I spend so much time in front of the camera. For about three years I wanted a surgical intervention. And if you have been following along — I am now about 10 days post-op. I don’t feel bad about my neck anymore. In fact, I am having the most glorious reunion with my profile. I can even say that I love my neck.”

Pamela Madsen, Facebook post, August 14, 2021.

Appearance matters, even to those of us who know that what really matters is what’s inside.

The Importance of Aftercare

To get that lifted look, injectable fillers are another option. Which procedure you choose will require different post-operative care. I am not qualified to advise on which procedure is best. What I do know is that post-operative care for chin liposuction is important. MLD is the gold-standard treatment for swelling of all types. Alongside the use of HIVAMAT 200® Deep Oscillation Therapy, scars, inflammation and swelling can be significantly reduced, leading to faster healing and less discomfort.

Contact me for advice

Please use the WhatsApp button on the bottom right to send me a message. I am happy to help.

Rhythmic Breathing, lymphatic drainage and cerebrospinal fluid – 3 mind-blowing facts!

Did you know that

Read on….

HI everyone, it’s Rachel here again, Rose Tint Your Life.

Rhythmic Breathing

So, I thought I would do a little video about one of my favourite topics, which is breathing. I’m actually feeling a great need to share this information. I am feeling pretty sad right now because one of my longest-standing patients, or clients, has just left. He received a few months ago a very sad diagnosis of ALS which is a progressive, neurodegenerative disease. Most people might know it as Lou Gehrig’s disease, I think it’s what Stephen Hawking had. Anyway, ALS is incurable, we don’t know why people develop it, and obviously as it’s progressive, people get sicker and sicker. Some people have a longer period of living with it and some people have a shorter one.


He’s just left and I was giving him a lesson on breathing. His breathing is becoming increasingly troubled, he’s having difficulty swallowing, difficulty speaking. I gave the same piece of advice to him as I give to a lot of my yoga students, especially when I’m at SHA, where I do private classes, but also here when I do massage. I told him about rhythmic breathing.

The importance of rhythmic breathing.

A lot of people have been told at one point or another to breathe into their belly or whatever. They know that breathing is really important but maybe haven’t heard about rhythmic breathing. The way I try to describe it is by likening it to the pistons in a car. That’s an image that a lot of people can connect with. If you have four pistons in a car, they have to be moving in a synchronised rhythm because otherwise the car is either not going to go, or it’s going to shudder and judder all over the place.

Irregular breath rate

What I have observed in my many years of working as a therapist is that most people have a very, very irregular breathing rate. Rhythmic breathing without breath work or pranayama education is almost non-existent. Not only do people breathe too fast, 15-20 breaths per minute even in states of deep relaxation like whilst receiving a massage. I observe patterns where people will breathe in for 1-2 then out for 3…it’s all over the place, and people are just not conscious of the incredible impact that this has on the body.

Why should breathing be rhythmic?

The breath is like a pump. It’s like a piston. The diaphragm is moving up and down in the body and as it does so, it creates pressure differences in your thorax. The reason I know about this is from lymphatic drainage.

The lymphatic system

In lymphatic drainage we put a lot of emphasis on the breath and that’s because we know that deep breathing is one of the main if not the main motor of lymphatic flow. The lymphatic system doesn’t have a heart. It needs rhythmic breathing to push the lymph around the body. Of course there is also the muscle pump and there are little muscles on some lymph vessels. But what really moves the lymph is the pressure differences of the diaphragm pumping and pulling the lymph in the middle of your body. This push and pull, this pump, is created by rhythmic breathing.

Coming back to the piston thing, if you want to have an effective pump, say pumping water out of a well…you wouldn’t be going randomly, you would be pumping 1-2-1-2…because you need that rhythmic element.

Back to the case of ALS, which is a neurodegenerative disorder, and there are a lot of them out there, Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, even Brain Fog, we don’t know what’s going on there.

Glymphatic System

The brain is a highly specialised organ, it is the prime user of oxygen and glucose in the human body. Every thought is a neurotransmitter…but the interesting thing about the brain is that it doesn’t have lymphatic drainage, or practically none. Now a couple of years ago some researchers were finally able to elucidate the glymphatic flow, or the glial lymphatic system. What they were able to understand is that there are these spirals that come down the nerves coming out of the brain and that helps to clean the brain.

Why is that important? The lymphatic system in the garbage collection system of the body. The way I just described it to the gentlemen is that it’s like leaves that fall off the trees in autumn. Of course if you leave them there on the ground they will eventually decompose, but they will rot, and smell bad and clog your drain, so it’s probably in your best interest to rake them up and put them in the compost.

By-products of metabolism

Well, it’s the same with the broken down neurotransmitters and all the by-products of metabolism of the human brain. Every single thought is a neurotransmitter, and when we metabolise we produce metabolic waste. In the rest of the body, the lymphatic system picks up this waste, but in the brain the lymphatic drainage is extremely limited. But, we are lucky because we have another system that can help to flush the brain: the cerebrospinal fluid.

Cerebrospinal fluid

The cerebrospinal fluid is somewhat similar to lymph (NOTE: It does not have lymphocytes). It is a clear, somewhat dense fluid that sits both in the sinuses inside of the head. Your brain isn’t completely full, there are some pockets of liquid, cerebrospinal liquid, and it sits in these sinuses but it also runs in the meninges.

Meninges

Most people know the word “meningitis”. Meningitis is swelling of the meninges. What are the meninges? The meninges are membranes. There are three of them. One of them is only in the brain but two of them go all the way down the spinal column. One of them goes all the way down to the tail bone!

These membranes are carrying lymph-like liquid that somehow has to move all the way from the top to the bottom and back. Now, we talked about the pump. Are you with me? What do you think moves the cerebrospinal fluid? The breath!

Cerebrospinal fluid flow in Alzheimer’s

There was an interesting piece of research published not too long ago about cerebrospinal fluid flow in Alzheimer’s patients. When there is deep breathing, the cerebrospinal fluid instead of just trickling along like a sewer or a river begins to flow in a wave-like motion—woosh! And they think that this could be more efficient to flush the brain and when we flush the brain we get rid of the by-products of metabolism.

I am not a physiologist and that’s as much as I know. I guess that if we are flushing these by-products out of the brain there must be linkages from the spinal column to the peripheral circulation or the central circulation. that’s something that I will have to check out for the next video.

Rhythmic breathing pranayama breath work lymphatic system cerebrospinal fluid.

For the time being, what I want you to understand is that rhythmic breathing moves the lymphatic system, moves the cerebrospinal fluid and it gives us a much better chance of cleaning up all the by-products of metabolism.

Rhythmic Breathing technique

It’s simple! The simplest technique of rhythmic breathing is this: All you do is you breathe in and out through your nose, and as you breathe in you count 1-2-3-4 and as you breathe out you count 4-3-2-1….

So you have some homework, try doing that, let me know in the comments how it goes for you, I would be happy to help you.