Imretarded?
Equinox
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2024
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Many people here don't understand wolf's law or how it actually works. Im going to provide a guide that will be minimally painful (no smacking a hammer into your zygos) with real benefits.
We'll be applying the same method dentists use to fix teeth. When you get braces, your teeth are wired so there is a constant pressure remodeling your teeth. This is why your mouth hurts like a bitch after getting them..
For example, if you want to fix nose asymmetry. All you will need to do is apply a constant pressure forcing it into the direction needed for increased symmetry. Making a hardened claw cast that goes over your nasal bridge when you're sleeping will work perfectly, best part is you can do it at home.
Alternatively, if you can't build such a device, simply using your hand and pressing on the bone in the direction you want it to move should work too (keep in mind it has to last a while).
Keep in mind remodeling your nose for example shouldnt be too big of a challenge since teeth often shift a lot before and after, they often move full cms and are rotated significantly. Moving the nasal bridge a few mm is nothing in comparison.
I don't want to hear 'cope' in the replies, bone remodeling happens all the time and billions of people have had it done before, we're just using the same methods on a different spot.
We'll be applying the same method dentists use to fix teeth. When you get braces, your teeth are wired so there is a constant pressure remodeling your teeth. This is why your mouth hurts like a bitch after getting them..
For example, if you want to fix nose asymmetry. All you will need to do is apply a constant pressure forcing it into the direction needed for increased symmetry. Making a hardened claw cast that goes over your nasal bridge when you're sleeping will work perfectly, best part is you can do it at home.
Alternatively, if you can't build such a device, simply using your hand and pressing on the bone in the direction you want it to move should work too (keep in mind it has to last a while).
Keep in mind remodeling your nose for example shouldnt be too big of a challenge since teeth often shift a lot before and after, they often move full cms and are rotated significantly. Moving the nasal bridge a few mm is nothing in comparison.
I don't want to hear 'cope' in the replies, bone remodeling happens all the time and billions of people have had it done before, we're just using the same methods on a different spot.